Class Notes. Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Learning Objectives

Similar documents
Chapter 5: Saving and Investment in the Open Economy

Chapter 5. Saving and Investment in the Open Economy. Copyright 2009 Pearson Education Canada

6 The Open Economy. This chapter:

Chapter 5. Saving and Investment in the Open Economy. Copyright 2009 Pearson Education Canada

International Trade in Goods and Assets. 1. The economic activity of a small, open economy can affect the world prices.

Numerical problem. Balance of Payment

INTERNATIONAL FINANCE. Objectives. Financing International Trade. Financing International Trade. Financing International Trade CHAPTER

GLOBAL EDITION. Macroeconomics EIGHTH EDITION. Abel Bernanke Croushore

International Finance

TOPIC 9. International Economics

Goals of Topic 8. NX back!! What is the link between the exchange rate and net exports? How do different policies affect the trade deficit?

Macroeconomics II. The Open Economy

The classical model of the SMALL OPEN economy

Intermediate Macroeconomics

Long Run vs. Short Run

Rutgers University Department of Economics. Midterm 1

Chapter 13 Exchange Rates, Business Cycles, and Macroeconomic Policy in the Open Economy

The classical model of the SMALL OPEN

Slides for International Finance Macroeconomic Accounting (KO Chapter 12)

Y = C + I + G + NX Y C G = I + NX S = I + NX

Closed vs. Open Economies

!!! Current account balance =!!!!!! + (!!!!!! ) Capital account balance =!!!!!!, which is also equal to current account balance when!! =!!!!

Macroeconomics in an Open Economy

Homework Assignment #6. Due Tuesday, 11/28/06. Multiple Choice Questions:

The Financial System. FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS IN THE U.S. ECONOMY Financial Markets Stock Market Bond Market

Open Economy. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () Open Economy 1 / 66

Opening the Economy. Topic 9

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

The Open Economy. (c) Copyright 1998 by Douglas H. Joines 1

Problems. units of good b. Consumers consume a. The new budget line is depicted in the figure below. The economy continues to produce at point ( a1, b

Open Economy. Sherif Khalifa. Sherif Khalifa () Open Economy 1 / 70

Macroeconomics, Spring 2007, Final Exam, several versions, Early May

Lecture 1: Intermediate macroeconomics, autumn Lars Calmfors

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM

(welly, 2018)

Saving, Investment, and the Financial System

A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy

Slides for International Finance Macroeconomic Policy (KOM Chapter 19)

INTERNATIONAL FINANCE TOPIC

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics Chapter 6

Homework Assignment #6. Due Tuesday, 11/28/06. Multiple Choice Questions:

BOP Statistics. Aspects of the BOP Accounting System

AGGREGATE DEMAND. 1. Keynes s Theory

Trade led Growth in Times of Crisis Asia Pacific Trade Economists Conference 2 3 November 2009, Bangkok. Session 1

Lecture #2: Notes on Balance of Payments and Exchange Rates

Slide 1. MACR Unit 12: Open Economy: Exchange Rates. An Open Economy

Monetary Systems and Macro Policy Slides for KOMIF Ch08 (KOMIE Ch19)

Chapter 16: Payments among Nations

Chapter 11 An Introduction to International Finance Adapted by H. Dellas

Australian National University. Graduate Diploma Macroeconomics Econ Rod Tyers. 5: The Balance of Payments

Macroeconomics I International Group Course

LECTURE XIII. 30 July Monday, July 30, 12

EC 205 Lecture 20 04/05/15

Econ 100B: Macroeconomic Analysis Fall 2008

Macroeconomcs. Factors of production. Outline of model. In this chapter you will learn:

3/9/2010. Topics PP542. Macroeconomic Goals (cont.) Macroeconomic Goals. Gold Standard. Macroeconomic Goals (cont.) International Monetary History

Chapter 1: The Balance of Payments (BoP)

The Balance of Payments

A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy. Chapter 30

Flows between sectors. Over a given period of time, income flows and spending flows run within each sector and between sectors.

ECON2010 test 2 study guide

International Finance

1. The short-run asset market approach model assumes A) fixed money supply B) fixed nominal exchange rate C) sticky price D) growing national income

Openness in goods and financial markets. Chapter 18

S-18 Solutions Chapter 3 Exchange Rates I: The Monetary Approach in the Long Run

National Income & Business Cycles

Road-Map to this Lecture

Chapter 13 (2) National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments

Chapter 31 Open Economy Macroeconomics Basic Concepts

CHAPTER 17 (7e) 1. Using the information in this chapter, label each of the following statements true, false, or uncertain. Explain briefly.

The Balance of Payments

ECON 3010 Intermediate Macroeconomics. Chapter 3 National Income: Where It Comes From and Where It Goes

Chapter 17: Macroeconomics in an Open Economy

The Balance of Payments. Balance of Payments. Balance of Payments Accounts. Balance of Payments Accounts. They are composed of the following:

LECTURE XIV. 31 July Tuesday, July 31, 12

Balance of Payments and Exchange Rates. Ch12/BP&ER 1

International Trade. International Trade, Exchange Rates, and Macroeconomic Policy. International Trade. International Trade. International Trade

Session 2. Saving and Investment. The Real Interest Rate. National Accounting

QUIZ 4: Macro Winter Question 1. Would you expect a country to have a larger Deficit/GDP ratio or a Debt/GDP ratio?

Lecture #2: Notes on Balance of Payments and Exchange Rates

Macroeconomics II The Large Open Economy

Macroeconomics II The Large Open Economy. Net capital outflow Notes. Notes. Vahagn Jerbashian. Spring 2018

5. An increase in government spending is represented as a:

PAPER No. : 4 Basic Macroeconomics MODULE No. : 2- Circular Flow of Income and Expenditure

SAVING, INVESTMENT, AND THE FINANCIAL SYSTEM

Balance of Payments, Debt, Financial Crises, and Stabilization Policies

MACROECONOMICS - CLUTCH CH BALANCE OF PAYMENTS.

Title: Principle of Economics Saving and investment

Principles of Macroeconomics Module 7.1. Understanding Balance of Payments

Econ 222 Midterm exam Spring 2011 Group A

Chapter 18 - Openness in Goods and Financial Markets

The International Financial System

Gross National Expenditure

Chapter 19 Prices and Output in an Open Economy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

EconS 327 Test 2 Spring 2010

Chapter 19 (8) International Monetary Systems: An Historical Overview

GRA 6639 Topics in Macroeconomics

Consumption expenditure The five most important variables that determine the level of consumption are:

10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget

Economic 100B Macroeconomic Analysis Professor Steven Wood. Exam #3 ANSWERS

Transcription:

1 Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Learning Objectives A. Explain how the balance of payments is calculated (Sec. 5.1) B. Discuss goods market equilibrium in an open economy (Sec. 5.2) C. Describe the factors that affect saving and investment and determine the current account balance in a small open economy (Sec. 5.3) D. Describe the factors that affect saving and investment and determine the current account balance in a large open economy (Sec. 5.4) E. Analyze the relationship between the government budget deficit and the current account deficit (Sec. 5.5) Class Notes I. Balance of Payments Accounting (Sec. 5.1) A. Balance of payments accounts 1. The record of a country s international transactions 2. Any transaction that involves a flow of money into the United States is a credit ( ) item (enters with a plus sign); for example, exports 3. Any transaction involving a flow of money out of the United States is a debit ( ) item (enters with a minus sign); for example, imports B. The current account 1. Net exports of goods and services 2. Net income from abroad a. Income received from abroad is a credit item, since it causes funds to flow into the United States b. Payment of income to foreigners is a debit item c. Net income from abroad is part of the current account, and is about equal to NFP, net factor payments 3. Net unilateral transfers a. Payments made from one country to another b. Negative net unilateral transfers for United States, since United States is a net donor to other countries 4. Sum of net exports of goods and services, net income from abroad, and net unilateral transfers is the current account balance a. Positive current account balance implies current account surplus b. Negative current account balance implies current account deficit Current Account Net exports Exports of goods Exports of services Imports of goods Imports of services Net income from abroad Income receipts from abroad Income payments to foreigners Net unilateral transfers Debit ( ) Credit ( )

Transfers from foreigners Transfers to foreigners Capital and Financial Account Capital account Financial account Increase in foreign-owned assets Increase in U.S.-owned assets abroad C. The capital and financial account 1. The capital and financial account records trades in existing assets, either real (for example, houses) or financial (for example, stocks and bonds) 2. The capital account records the net flow of unilateral transfers of assets into the country 3. Most transactions appear in the financial account part of the capital and financial account a. When home country sells assets to foreign country, that is a capital inflow for the home country and a credit ( ) item in the capital and financial account b. When assets are purchased from a foreign country, there is a capital outflow from the home country and a debit ( ) item in the capital and financial account 4. The official settlements balance a. Transactions in official reserve assets are conducted by central banks of countries b. Official reserve assets are assets (foreign government securities, bank deposits, and SDRs of the IMF, gold) used in making international payments c. Central banks buy (or sell) official reserve assets with (or to obtain) their own currencies d. Official settlements balance (1) Also called the balance of payments, it equals the net increase in a country s official reserve assets (2) For the United States, the net increase in official reserve assets is the rise in U.S. government reserve assets minus foreign central bank holdings of U.S. dollar assets e. Having a balance of payments surplus means a country is increasing its official reserve assets; a balance of payments deficit is a reduction in official reserve assets D. The relationship between the current account and the capital and financial account 1. Current account balance (CA) capital and financial account balance (KFA) 0 (5.1) 2. CA KFA 0 by accounting; every transaction involves offsetting effects 3. Examples given of offsetting transactions (text Table 5.2) 4. In practice, measurement problems, recorded as a statistical discrepancy, prevent CA KFA 0 from holding exactly E. Net foreign assets and the balance of payments accounts 1. Net foreign assets are a country s foreign assets minus its foreign liabilities a. Net foreign assets may change in value (example: change in stock prices) b. Net foreign assets may change through acquisition of new assets or liabilities 2. The net increase in foreign assets equals a country s current account surplus 3. A current account surplus implies a capital and financial account deficit, and thus a net increase in holdings of foreign assets (a financial outflow) 4. A current account deficit implies a capital and financial account surplus, and thus a net decline in holdings of foreign assets (a financial inflow) 5. Foreign direct investment: a foreign firm buys or builds capital goods a. Causes an increase in capital and financial account balance b. Portfolio investment: foreigners acquire U.S. securities; also increases capital and financial account balance

6. Summary: Equivalent measures of a country s international trade and lending Current account surplus capital and financial account deficit net acquisition of foreign assets net foreign lending (if NFP and net unilateral transfers are zero) net exports II. Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open Economy (Sec. 5.2) A. From Ch. 2, S I CA I (NX NFP) (5.2) 1. So national saving has two uses: a. Increase the capital stock by domestic investment b. Increase the stock of net foreign assets by lending to foreigners 2. To get goods market equilibrium, national saving and investment must equal their desired levels: a. S d I d CA I d (NX NFP) (5.3) b. Goods market equilibrium in an open economy c. Assuming net factor payments are zero, then S d I d NX (5.4) 3. Alternative method: a. Y C d I d G NX (5.5) b. NX Y (C d I d G) (5.6) Net exports equal output (Y) minus absorption (C d I d G) III. Saving and Investment in a Small Open Economy (Sec. 5.3) A. Small open economy: an economy too small to affect the world real interest rate 1. World real interest rate (r w ): the real interest rate in the international capital market 2. Key assumption: Residents of the small open economy can borrow or lend at the expected world real interest rate (Figure 5.1) 3. Result: r w may be such that S d > I d, S d I d, or S d < I d a. If r w r 1, then S d > I d, so the excess of desired saving over desired investment is lent internationally (net foreign lending is positive) and NX > 0 b. If r w r 2, then S d I d, so there is no net foreign lending and NX 0 c. If r w r 3, then S d < I d, so the excess of desired investment over desired saving is financed by borrowing internationally (net foreign lending is negative) and NX < 0 4. Alternative interpretation: in terms of output and absorption 5. Net exports equals net foreign lending equals the current account balance (assuming net factor payments and net unilateral transfers are zero) B. The effects of economic shocks in a small open economy 1. Anything that increases desired national saving (Y rises, future output falls, or G falls) relative to desired investment (MPK f falls, rises) at a given world interest rate increases net foreign lending, and vice versa

2. A temporary adverse supply shock: Temporary drop in income leads to a drop in saving, so net foreign lending declines; shown in text Figure 5.4 3. An increase in the expected future marginal product of capital Desired investment rises, so net foreign lending falls; shown in text Figure 5.5 IV. Saving and Investment in Large Open Economies (Sec. 5.4) A. Large open economy: an economy large enough to affect the world real interest rate 1. Suppose there are just two economies in the world a. The home or domestic economy (saving S, investment I) b. The foreign economy, representing the rest of the world (saving S For, investment I For ) 2. The world real interest rate moves to equilibrate desired international lending by one country with desired international borrowing by the other (Figure 5.2) 3. Equivalent statement: The equilibrium world real interest rate is determined such that a current account surplus in one country is equal in magnitude to the current account deficit in the other 4. Changes in the equilibrium world real interest rate: Any factor that increases desired international lending of a country relative to desired international borrowing causes the world real interest rate to fall Application: The impact of globalization on high income economies 1. World s economies are increasingly interdependent more international trade and investment a. Should high income reign in globalization? 2. Costs of globalization: high income economies suffer job losses in particular sectors 3. Benefits of globalization: high income economies gained jobs in particular sectors a. High income economies exports increase b. Cheaper imported goods means more goods & services at lower prices gains from trade 4. Recent years: big changes in business services industry call centers, etc. a. Critics: moving jobs abroad b. Reality: high income economies are world leaders in exporting business services. c. So high income economies benefits from such activity far more than they lose C. Application: Recent trends in the U.S. current account deficit 1. U.S. current account deficit is large (text Fig. 5.8) 2. Why did U.S. current account deficit increase from 1991 to 2005? a. Lower foreign demand b. Better international investment opportunities c. Higher oil prices d. Increased saving by developing countries 3. Lower foreign demand a. Slower economic growth in Japan and Europe in early 2000s

b. People there are saving more and investing in U.S. more, but buying fewer U.S. goods 4. Better international investment opportunities (text Fig. 5.9) a. U.S. investors diversifying investments internationally b. Foreign investors investing more in U.S. 5. Higher oil prices a. U.S. imports much more oil than it exports b. Doubling of oil prices recently led to decline in current account balance of over 1% of GDP (text Fig. 5.10) 6. Increased saving by developing countries a. Many developing nations want to invest in safe places like U.S., rather than borrowing and getting into financial crises b. They changed from being international borrowers to being international lenders 7. Some people also blame U.S. government deficit twin deficits argument a. But in late 1990s, U.S. government ran surpluses, and current account deficit got larger b. Other countries with current account surpluses also run larger government budget deficits than U.S. V. Fiscal Policy and the Current Account (Sec. 5.5) Are government budget deficits necessarily accompanied by current account deficits? That is, are there twin deficits? A. The critical factor: the response of national saving 1. An increase in the government budget deficit raises the current account deficit only if the increase in the budget deficit reduces desired national saving 2. In a small open economy, if an increase in the government budget deficit reduces desired national saving, the saving curve shifts left, thus reducing the current account balance (text Fig. 5.11) B. The government budget deficit and national saving 1. A deficit caused by increased government purchases a. No question here: The deficit definitely reduces national saving b. Result: The current account balance declines 2. A deficit resulting from a tax cut a. S d falls only if C d rises b. So S d won t change if Ricardian equivalence holds, since then a tax cut won t affect consumption c. But if people don t foresee the future taxes implied by a tax cut today, they will consume more, desired saving will decline, and so will the current account balance C. Application: the twin deficits 1. Relationship between the U.S. government budget deficit and U.S. current account deficit 2. Text Figure 5.12 shows data 3. The deficits appear to be twins in the 1980s and early 1990s, moving closely together 4. But at other times (during World Wars I and II, and during 1975) government budget deficits grew, yet the current account balance increased