dc.description.abstract | National savings rate is an important indicator of economic health. It indicates
the country’s ability to finance a greater share of its development needs using
domestic sources. As such, boosting national savings is an important ingredient
for growth. National savings rate has been fairly lower in Kenya compared to its
peers in the East African Community and the greater Sub-Saharan Africa. This
study examines the impact of monetary policy and fiscal policy on explaining the
national savings behaviour in Kenya by estimating the Kenyan savings function
with GDP growth, government budget deficit, inflation, tax revenue, money
supply and interest rate on bank deposits as its determinants. The analysis covers
the period 1980-2018 using dynamic Autoregressive Distributed Lag (ARDL)
approach. The study finds that GDP growth, growth in Government tax revenue
and real interest rate on deposits positively and significantly affect national
savings rate both in the short and long-run. Fiscal deficit and broad money
supply (M2) negatively and significantly affect national savings rate in long-run
whereas inflation exerts a positive effect suggesting increasing precautionary
motive to hold money during periods of inflationary pressures. In the short-run,
however, it is established that broad money supply positively affects national
savings rate while inflation slows savings rate. The study recommends increased
efficiency and effectiveness in tax administration and tax policy, increased
investment in activities that increase productivity and economic growth to
improve incomes and peoples’ savings ability. | en |