Bop & International Economics Linkages
Bop & International Economics Linkages
Bop & International Economics Linkages
5
BOP and International Economic Linkages
Definition:
The balance of payment is a systematic record of all
economic transactions between the residents of the
reporting country and the residents of foreign
countries (the rest of the world) during a given period
of time - usually 1 year.
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On Services and Investment Incomes:
Exports and imports of services are treated analogously to
those of merchandise.
For example, when a foreign airline (e.g., British Airways)
pays for baggage handling and aircraft maintenance at a
U.S. airport (e.g., NY, Chicago, Atlanta) it is doing much
the same thing as a foreign firm that buys computers in the
U.S.
It is using the services of American factors of production
and incurring an obligation that must be discharged by
payment to the U.S. owners.
Also when an American tourist buys tickets from a foreign
airline, he/she is doing much the same thing as an
American firm that buys oil from Saudi Arabia, Nigeria,
or Kuwait. 12
Exports and imports of services are sometimes
described as “Invisible Trade” because they
cannot be seen to cross the border but they have
the same effect as visible merchandise trade.
Inflows and outflows of investment income
(factor income) are recorded in the current
account because they share two characteristics
with exports and imports of goods and services:
(a) They give rise to claims that must be
discharged by payments.
13
(b) They reflect the use, by one country, of another
country's capital, a factor of production, and the
rent, compensation, interest, or reward payment
thereof adds to the national income of the country
that owns it.
14
In general, therefore, inflows of investment
income into the U.S. represent additions to U.S.
national income earned by U.S. capital "working"
abroad and outflows from the U.S. represent
additions to the national income of other countries
earned by foreign capital "working" in the U.S.
Every transaction in the current account is an
income related flow.
Every transaction in the capital account is an asset
related flow.
15
Capital transaction can be viewed in terms of
trade in paper, deeds to real property, corporate
securities, and various debt instruments.
When an American company acquires a plant in
the UK, it is importing the deed to the plant.
When an American pension fund buys bonds in
Tokyo, it is importing securities.
In each case the importer must make payments to
the foreigner just like merchandise imports.
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The Official Settlement Account
Measures the change in a nation's (liquid and non-
liquid) liabilities to foreign official holders and the
change in a nation's official reserve assets during
the year.
A nation's official reserve asset refers to its gold,
convertible currencies, special drawing rights
(SDR), and reserve position in the IMF.
17
An increase in a nation's liabilities to foreign
official holders and a decrease in a nation's official
reserve assets are credits (inflows) while a
decrease in a nation's liabilities to foreign official
holders and a increase in its official reserve assets
are debts (outflows).
The change in official reserves measures a nation's
surplus or deficit on its current and capital account
transactions by netting reserve liabilities from
reserve assets.
18
Errors and Omissions (Statistical Discrepancy)
Theoretically, double entry bookkeeping should cause
total credits to equal total debts when all accounts are
taken together.
However, because of recording errors and omissions
this equality does not always hold.
A special entry to make a nation's BOP "balance" is
necessary, hence the statistical discrepancy.
19
Special Drawing Rights (SDR)
Is an "artificial" currency or a unit of account.
It is an
international reserve asset created by the IMF and
allocated to member countries to supplement their
foreign currency reserves.
The SDR became a five currency composite in
1980, i.e., a weighted average of 5 major
currencies (U.S. Dollar, German Mark, French
Franc, Japanese Yen, British Pound).
(it was a 16 currency composite in 1974-1980)
20
✦ With the introduction of the euro, the SDR is now
essentially a four currency composite.
The SDR is primarily a means of payment only
among governments and/or central banks.
23
The BOP account identifies transactions along
functional lines. One useful classification is:
✦ (a) Current Account: include Merchandise; Services;
Investment Income: (factor income): e.g. royalties,
licensing fees, education, telecom, legal, computer and
data processing, management, medical, insurance etc, and
Unilateral Transfers (gifts and grants)
✦ (b) Capital Account: L-T capital & S-T capital.
✦ (c) Statistical Discrepancy: Errors and omissions.
✦ (d) Official Reserve Account: Official reserve assets
and foreign official assets.
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✦ Services include such invisible items as military
expenditures, interests and dividends, travel and
transportation, fees and royalties, insurance
premiums.
25
Capital Account: Records
loans, investments and other transfer of financial assets
and creation of liabilities.
26
Portfolio Investment: Purchase of Stocks, bonds, and
other financial assets.
The asset owner does not control the
foreign firms.
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✦ Short-term Capital: Maturity of < 1 year, e.g.,
demand deposits, short-term loans, and short-term
securities.
✦ Short-term capital may be:
✦ An accommodating adjustment induced by
merchandise trade, service trade, unilateral
transfer, investments (to finance other items in BOP).
✦ An autonomous adjustment attributable to interest
rate differences among nations and expected
changes in exchange rates (purely economic reasons).
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Account Balances:
✦ The Trade Balance:
Records the balance on merchandise trade.
✦ The Balance on Current Account:
Indicates the balance on current spending.
It tells whether we are spending more abroad than
foreigners are spending in our country (ignoring
investment flows and accommodating flows).
The most important types of transactions included are
imports and exports of goods and services, receipt and
payment of interests, dividends, and investment
incomes and net transfer payments.
29
The Basic Balance:
Is the sum of the balance on current account
and the long-term investment account.
✦ It indicates the extent to which autonomous long-term
investments are affecting the balance of payments.
✦ When a country is a net recipient of long-term
investment funds, the basic balance should be more
positive than the current account balance.
Thus, long-term investment (net) may alleviate or
aggravate the pressure on the domestic currency.
30
The “Performance Balance”
31
✦ A negative performance balance means that
additional accommodating transaction will be
needed to meet payment requirements.
32
Accommodating transactions have two characteristics:
33
✦ The Net Liquidity Balance: Measures changes in
private domestic borrowing or lending required to keep
payments in balance without adjusting official
reserves.
✦ It includes the basic balance plus short-term private
non-liquid capital balance, the allocation of SDR and
errors and omissions.
✦ The Official Reserve Transactions Balance: Measures
the adjustment required in official reserves to achieve
balance of payments equilibrium.
Because double-entry bookkeeping ensures that debits
equal credits the sum of all transactions equal zero, i.e.
Current Account Balance + Capital Account Balance +
Official Reserve Balance = Balance of Payments. 34
✦ A drawing down of official reserves (credit entry)
measures a nation’s BOP deficit
✦ A building up of official reserves (debit entry)
measures a BOP surplus
✦ Deficits, while not necessarily bad, cannot be
sustained indefinitely because official reserves are
limited.
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✦ Each of these balances has its shortcomings mainly
because of the increasing complexity of international
financial transactions.
For example:
✦ Changes in official reserves may now reflect
investment flows as well as central bank interventions
✦ The distinction between short-term and long-term
capital flows has become blurred.
✦ While FDI is still determined by longer-tern factors,
portfolio investment can now be just as speculative as
bank deposits and liquidated just as quickly.
36
Relative to GDP, U.S. Imports have Topped Exports
Since 1976, and the Trade Deficit has Widened
37
U.S. Trade Deficits in 2003 by Country or Region
38
U.S. Balance of Payments 2003 ($B)
39
Some Typical Transactions (simplified form):
40
(b) The "debit" is a decrease in bank deposits of foreigners if
payment is made for U.S. exports in dollars against their U.S.
deposits, so that
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Short-term liquid liability (capital): $1000 Exports: $1000
( in U.S. liabilities to foreigners)
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Debit(-) Credit(+)
Merchandise Imports: $50m U.S. private short-term claims: $20m
( in U.S. claims on foreigners)
Foreign private short-term claims: $30m
( in U.S. liability to foreigners)
2. U.S. tourists in London spend $30m for hotel and meals.
When U.S. tourists cash dollar traveler's checks at hotels in the
U.K., the hotels deposit the checks in their U.K. banks and the
banks send them for deposit credits in U.S.
The resulting increase in U.K. banks' deposits in the U.S.
shows additions to U.S. short-term liquid liabilities.
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Service category (travel): $30m Short-term liquid liability: $30m
(or tourist expenditure) (an increase in U.S. liability to
foreigners)
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3. An English lady buys $5m American stocks, and pays: (a) by drawing
down her dollar deposits in a New York bank OR (b) by increasing
U.S. firms' demand deposit in U.K.
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Short-term liquid liabilities: $5m Portfolio investment: $5m
(a) ( in U.S. liabilities to foreigners)
(b) ( in U.S. claims on foreigners)
OR
(c) A receipt of a $5m of investment income by U.S. firms from their
foreign investments. Checks sent to U.S. firms are drawn on U.S.
account holdings of foreign firms.
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Short-term liquid liabilities: $5m Income from investment abroad:
( in U.S. liabilities to foreigners) $5m
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4.(a) a $20m Gifts sent by U.S. residents to families abroad .
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Private transfer payment: $20m Short-term liquid liabilities: $20m
( in U.S. liabilities to foreigners)
OR
(b) The U.S. government gives $20m cash aid to the government of
Maldives: same as above except that debit is to government transfer
payment.
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5. The IMF allocates $50m of SDR to the U.S.
Debit(-) Credit(+)
Acquisition of official reserves: $50m Allocation of SDR: $50m
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NOTE:
✦ Often one entry for a transaction is either a credit or a
debit to short-term liquid liabilities (capital) because in
U.S. transactions, most payments are made by
increasing or decreasing foreign deposits in U.S. banks.
✦ It is possible to have entries for short-term liquid assets.
When dollar traveler checks are spent in England,
British banks increase their dollar deposits in U.S.
banks.
This is a debit (an outflow) to short-term liquid assets in
the British BOP or a credit in U.S. BOP to record an
increase in U.S. liability to foreigners (the British) - a
capital inflow to the U.S.
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✦ A current account surplus is not necessarily a sign of
economic strength, nor is a current account deficit a sign
of economic weakness or lack of competitiveness.
✦ Economically healthy nations that provide good
investment opportunities tend to run trade deficits and
capital account surpluses.
✦ Nations that are growing rapidly will import more goods
and services while weak economies will reduce their
imports because imports are positively related to income.
Therefore, the faster a nation grows relative to other
economies, the larger its current account deficit tends to
be or the smaller its surplus.
✦ Conversely, the slower a nation grows the smaller will be
its current account deficit or the larger its current account
surplus. 47
✦ Current account deficits may, therefore reflect strong
economic growth or a low level of savings and current
account surplus may signify a high level of savings or
slow rate of growth.
✦ Since current account deficits are financed by capital
inflows, the cumulative effect of these deficits is to
increase net foreign claims against the deficit nation and
reduce the nation’s international wealth.
✦ On the other hand, a nation that consistently runs current
account surpluses will increase its net international wealth.
✦ A deficit country like the U.S. becomes net international
debtor and a surplus country like Japan or China becomes
net international creditor.
In 2006, the U.S. net international investment position = - $2.8 T
In 2006, Japan’s net international investment position = Y 215 T
In 2006, China’s net international investment position = $662 B48
Has the US become a spendthrift/prodigal nation? Discuss!
Recall that:
Private gross investment = savings (personal, business,
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Domestic Currency Value:
✦ The higher the domestic currency value in terms of
foreign currencies, ceteris paribus, the worse the current
account balance.
✦ This is because domestic goods become more expensive
to the importing countries. As a result, the demand for
such goods will decrease.
✦ On the other hand, an appreciating domestic currency
makes foreign goods (domestic imports) more attractive
to domestic residents who will increase their demand for
such goods.
✦ A decrease in export demand increase in import demand
has a negative effect on the domestic current account
balance. 52
✦ Government Restrictions
Tariff:
Tax on imported goods.
Quota:
Quantitative limit on amount of a particular
product imported.
S - Id = X - M ........ (8)
If = X - M ........ (9)
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Budget Deficits & Current Account Deficits
By decomposing aggregate domestic spending and income
into government and private sectors we can relate
government deficits to current account deficits:
Let:
E = National Expenditure (or Spending)
Ch = Household Spending
Id = Private Investment (Domestic)
G = Government Spending
T = Taxes; S = Savings
Then we have
E = C h + Id + G
E = Y - (S + T) + Id + G ....... (11) 65
Rearranging (11) we get a new expression for
excess spending:
66
Combining (7) and (12) we get:
X - M = S - Id - (G - T) ........ (13)
C/A Saving Government
Balance Surplus Budget Deficit
✦ A nation's current account balance is identically equal
to its private savings minus investment balance less
government budget deficit.
✦ Therefore a nation running a current account deficit,
X - M < 0, is not saving enough to finance its private
investment and its government budget deficit.
✦ Conversely a nation running a current account surplus is
saving more than is needed to finance its private
investment and government deficit. 67
Coping With Current Account Deficit:
1 - Devaluation
2 - Protectionism
3 - Restriction on Foreign Ownership of Domestic Assets
4 - Boosting the National Savings Rate
Other Issues:
✦ Current Account Deficit and Unemployment
✦ Current Account Deficits / Surpluses: Good or Bad?
✦ Is the Trade Deficit a Subtraction from GDP?
✦ Is the U.S. Spending too Much and Saving too Little?
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✦ The U.S. current account deficit can be viewed as an efficient
adaptation to different savings propensities and investment
opportunities in the US and the rest of the world.
The real problem, if any, may be either too much consumption and
too little savings or too much investment.
The hard fact is that the situation confronting the US and ROW
since the early 90s is an expression of national preferences to
which trade flows have adjusted in a timely manner .
✦ Long term consequences for a nation that runs a current account
deficit:
✦ (i) If the Current Account deficit and the resulting capital account
surplus finances productive domestic investments, then the nation
is better off as the returns from these added investments will help
to service the foreign debts with income left to improve domestic
living standards.
✦ (ii) If the capital account surplus finances current consumption, it
merely increases a nation's well being today at the expense of
future well being. 73
✦ In popular discussions, the U.S. trade deficit is often referred
to as a subtraction from the GDP.
Economic analysis suggests otherwise.
✦ Some imported goods (e.g. agricultural products, oil)
cannot be produced in the U.S., while other imports provide
low-cost products for consumers and firms.
✦ Production at some firms might even decrease if imported
products were not available.
✦ Furthermore, in a tight labor market, some firms might find it
difficult to hire enough labor to expand output by the size of
the trade deficit.
✦ The basic economics of trade deficit suggests that with
floating exchange rates, a trade deficit can persist only if
foreigners willingly accumulate financial claims issued by
a country’s household and firms (if foreigners continue
to invest in the country). 74
✦ Absent this, the value of domestic currency would fall and
the trade gap would tend to close as import prices increase
and export prices decrease.
✦ At the same time the yields available on domestic investments
must remain attractive especially to foreign investors.
✦ Economists view the trade deficit as part of an overall
general equilibrium involving domestic demand,
production, and investment opportunities, relative to
economic conditions in the rest of the world.
Therefore, the trade deficit is not a subtraction from GDP.
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The Case for Free Trade
✦ The case for free trade is based on the theory of
comparative advantage.
When countries specialize and trade based on
comparative advantage, consumers pay less and
consume more, and resources are used more
efficiently.
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The Case for Protection
✦ Protection saves jobs.
✦ Some countries engage in unfair trade practices.
✦ Cheap foreign labor makes competition unfair.
✦ Protection safeguards national security.
✦ Protection discourages dependency.
✦ Protection safeguards infant industries.
✦ Protection fights neo-colonialism
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