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Pré-Publication, Document De Travail Année : 2012

The missing wealth of nations: Are Europe and the U.S. net debtors or net creditors?

Résumé

This paper shows that official statistics substantially underestimate the net foreign asset positions of rich countries because they fail to capture most of the assets held by households in offshore tax havens. Drawing on systematic anomalies in portfolio investment positions and a unique Swiss dataset, I find that 8% of the global financial wealth of households is held in tax havens, 6% of which goes unrecorded. On the basis of plausible assumptions, accounting for unrecorded assets turns the eurozone, officially the world's second largest net debtor, into a net creditor. It also reduces the U.S. net debt significantly. The results shed new light on global imbalances and challenge the widespread view that, after a decade of poor-to-rich capital flows, external assets are now in poor countries and debts in rich countries. I provide concrete proposals to improve international investment statistics.
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Dates et versions

halshs-00565224 , version 1 (11-02-2011)
halshs-00565224 , version 2 (27-03-2012)
halshs-00565224 , version 3 (05-11-2012)

Identifiants

  • HAL Id : halshs-00565224 , version 2

Citer

Gabriel Zucman. The missing wealth of nations: Are Europe and the U.S. net debtors or net creditors?. 2012. ⟨halshs-00565224v2⟩

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