Loschiavo David, Graziano Mariano
Directorate General for Economics, Statistics and Research Bank of Italy.
Venice Branch Bank of Italy.
Rev Income Wealth. 2022 Jun;68(2):541-562. doi: 10.1111/roiw.12581. Epub 2022 Mar 7.
The COVID-19 pandemic led to a huge surge in deposits, although little is known about how this was distributed. This paper overcomes the lack of timely micro-data on households' liquidity by looking at supervisory data, introducing a new method to estimate the trend in liquidity distribution and the percentage of liquidity-poor households. We find that in 2020 there was a decrease both in the degree of deposit inequality among Italian households and in the share of liquidity-poor households, alongside government support measures that allowed some households at the bottom of the liquidity ladder to save out of their declining income. The increase in households' liquidity improved their ability to repay debts, and this could help spending patterns to rebound once confidence about the economic outlook is restored. Despite this, households with insufficient liquidity buffers still constitute a large share of population, making their debt repayment capacity dependent on the strength of the economic recovery.
新冠疫情导致存款大幅增加,尽管对于其分布情况知之甚少。本文通过审视监管数据,克服了缺乏关于家庭流动性的及时微观数据的问题,引入了一种新方法来估计流动性分布趋势以及流动性匮乏家庭的比例。我们发现,2020年意大利家庭存款不平等程度以及流动性匮乏家庭的比例均有所下降,同时政府采取了支持措施,使一些处于流动性阶梯底层的家庭能够从减少的收入中节省开支。家庭流动性的增加提高了他们偿还债务的能力,一旦对经济前景的信心得以恢复,这有助于支出模式反弹。尽管如此,流动性缓冲不足的家庭在人口中仍占很大比例,这使得他们的偿债能力依赖于经济复苏的力度。