It's called the global savings glut theory and it's been around since 2005 when US central banker Ben Bernanke started talking about it.
The theory was that some types of savers, such as those in the Middle East and China, "over-saved" and were pumping those savings into assets perceived to be safe, such as US Treasury bonds. That, in turn, drove down long-term interest rates and helped fuel the US housing boom of the mid-2000s. Back then, the glut was caused by surplus cash from sky-rocketing oil prices and China's huge trade surpluses.
Things have moved on since then, thanks to the Global Financial Crisis and the savings glut is now an entrenched feature of the financial landscape. The thinking has evolved to include the effects of ageing populations in Europe and North America, the effects of increased income and wealth inequality, the nervousness (still) that many savers have because of the 2008/09 crisis, and the surprisingly small amount of money businesses need to invest in new products and services.
Ageing savers become more conservative as they get closer to retirement. That means they're more likely to put those savings into a bank or a bond than into a risky start-up company or new venture.
Second, when more income goes to the very wealthy they struggle to spend it all and they put it into banks and other low-risk assets, such as property and bonds.
Third, the world's biggest corporates are sitting on enormous cash piles because they don't have to invest much to grow their businesses.
This glut is most pronounced in the Northern Hemisphere, but it's becoming more evident here. Reserve Bank figures show household term deposits have more than doubled to $144 billion since the beginning of the financial crisis in 2007/08. The collapse of finance companies scared many savers into the arms of banks, but the impending retirement of many baby boomers is also pumping up these savings.
Over the same time, bank lending to businesses in New Zealand has risen just 19 per cent to $85b and businesses have built their own "cash piles" in term deposits by 54 per cent to $73b.
This has meant the banks have been flush with cash and have been able to reduce term deposit rates, particularly after 2013, when the banks had "filled up" their quotas for local savings to meet Reserve Bank requirements.
This is great news in many ways. New Zealand banks don't need to borrow so much from overseas to fund their lending here. That has made our banks safer, although it has also helped make them much more profitable. Shareholders and the Reserve Bank are happy about that because some of those profits have been diverted into capital reserves, which gives the banks bigger buffers in the event of a downturn.
But this savings glut has also helped pump up the prices of assets seen as safer by older savers and dragged interest rates lower. That means property prices and the prices of shares that produce regular and high dividends are at record highs because more conservative savers want these types of assets and banks are keen to lend their ample deposits to owners of these assets.
But will it last? These global trends of ageing population, more inequality, cheap technology and fear of riskier investments are not going away any time soon.