Retained Earnings, Foreign Portfolio Ownership, and the German Current Account: A Firm-Level Approach

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Abstract

In some countries, a sizable fraction of savings is derived from corporate savings. Although larger, traded corporations are often co-owned by foreign portfolio investors, current international accounting standards allocate all corporate savings to the host country. This paper suggests a framework to correct for this misleading attribution and applies this concept to Germany. For the years 2012-2020, our corrections retrospectively reduce German savings and consequently the German current account surplus by, on average, €11.5 bn annually. This amounts to lowering Germany's average official current account surplus (€226.6 bn) across these years by approximately five percent.

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Goldbach, S., Harms, P., Jochem, A., Nitsch, V., & Weichenrieder, A. J. (2024). Retained Earnings, Foreign Portfolio Ownership, and the German Current Account: A Firm-Level Approach. German Economic Review, 25(2), 127–145. https://doi.org/10.1515/ger-2023-0065

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