The Pre- and Post-WWI Dynamics of Saving, Investment, and Interest Rates: A Cross-Country Comparison
The Pre- and Post-WWI Dynamics of Saving, Investment, and Interest Rates: A Cross-Country Comparison
Author(s): Ivan TodorovSubject(s): History, Economy, National Economy, Economic history, Social history, Recent History (1900 till today), Pre-WW I & WW I (1900 -1919), Interwar Period (1920 - 1939), Financial Markets, Public Finances, Socio-Economic Research
Published by: Център за стопанско-исторически изследвания
Keywords: saving–investment balance; economic reconstruction; war destruction; comparative economic history; natural rate of interest (r*); gold-exchange standard; safe assets
Summary/Abstract: The study examines the dynamics of interest rates over 1904–1929 through the joint behavior of investment and saving across a diverse set of economies. It compares belligerents and occupied countries (Belgium, France, Italy, Germany), neutrals (the Netherlands, Sweden, Norway), extra-European cases (Australia, Japan), and the United Kingdom as the principal financial center. We document a broad- based rise in interest rates after World War I but operating through different structural channels: destruction and reconstruction pressures in Belgium and France; fiscal/ budgetary burdens and the decision to return to gold in the United Kingdom and Italy; and institutional/market depth specificities in Japan. Methodologically, the study uses the Jordà–Schularick–Taylor Macrohistory Database (JST) Macrohistory Database (Release 6). Interpreting short-term nominal rate trends as informative about natural rate of interest (r*) rests on well-established money-demand/velocity relationships, while the post-war environment adds two additional layers: (i) the gold-exchange regime inaugurated after Genoa (1922) — the Genoa Conference on Economic and Financial Questions, which reconfigured the international hierarchy of “safe” assets without a single hegemonic issuer; and (ii) elevated macro-uncertainty, which raised risk premia even as reconstruction boosted capital demand. The findings speak to contemporary debates on safe-asset supply, fiscal capacity, and the identification of r* from market yields. Large, system-wide shocks can simultaneously shift saving–investment balances, risk premia, and the international monetary architecture—mechanisms that remain pertinent for interpreting interest-rate behavior in today’s crises.
Journal: Известия на Центъра за стопанско-исторически изследвания
- Issue Year: X/2025
- Issue No: 1
- Page Range: 67-81
- Page Count: 15
- Language: English
