National Income & Business Cycles accounting identities for the open economy the small open economy model what makes it small how the trade balance and exchange rate are determined how policies affect trade balance & exchange rate 0 1 Net exports Trade balance Capital mobility Net capital outflow Small open economy World interest rate Nominal exchange rate Real exchange rate Purchasing power parity Trade policy Large open economy Percent of GDP 60 50 40 30 20 Exports Imports 10 2 0 Australia China Germany Greece S. Korea Mexico United States 3
spending need not equal saving need not equal Y = C + I + G + NX EX = exports = foreign spending on domestic goods IM = imports = domestic spending on foreign goods NX = net exports (a.k.a. the trade balance ) = EX IM 4 trade surplus: output spending and EX IM trade deficit: spending output and IM EX 5 Net capital outflow net outflow of loanable funds net purchases of foreign assets the country s purchases of foreign assets minus foreign purchases of domestic assets When, country is a When, country is a implies = Thus, a country with a trade deficit ( < 0) is a net (). 6 7
Saving, Investment (% of GDP) 25% 2 15% 1 5% saving trade balance (right scale) investment 1960 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 15% 1 5% -5% -1 8 Trade Balance (% of GDP) An open-economy version of the loanable funds model from Chapter 3. Includes many of the same elements: production function consumption function investment function exogenous policy variables 9 As in Chapter 3, national saving depend on the interest rate a. domestic & foreign bonds are perfect (same risk, maturity, etc.) b. perfect capital : no restrictions on international trade in assets c. economy is : cannot affect the world interest rate, denoted r* a & b imply c implies r* is 10 11
Investment is still a -sloping function of the interest rate, but the exogenous world interest rate determines the country s level of. 12 13 Trade balance is determined by saving and investment at the world interest rate. 1. Fiscal policy at home 2. Fiscal policy abroad 3. An increase in investment demand when S I the country K the rest of the world when S I the country K the rest of the world 14 15
An increase in G or decrease in T saving. 1 8% 6% Budget deficit (left scale) 2% Results: 4% 2% -2% -2% Net exports (right scale) -4% 16-4% 1965 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010-6% 17 Expansionary fiscal policy abroad the world interest rate. Results: ANSWERS: net capital outflow and NX 18 19
e = nominal exchange rate, the relative price of domestic currency in terms of foreign currency (e.g. Yen per Dollar) = real exchange rate, the relative price of domestic goods in terms of foreign goods (e.g. Japanese Big Macs per U.S. Big Mac) 20 21 one good: Big Mac price in Japan: P* = 200 Yen price in USA: P = $2.50 nominal exchange rate e = 120 Yen/$ To buy a U.S. Big Mac, someone from Japan would have to pay an amount that could buy Japanese Big Macs. U.S. goods become more expensive relative to foreign goods EX, IM NX The net exports function reflects this inverse relationship between NX and : NX = 22 23
4% 2% Trade-weighted real exchange rate index 140 120 NX (% of GDP) -2% -4% 100 80 60 40 Index (March 1973 = 100) -6% Net exports (left scale) -8% 1970 1975 1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 20 0 24 25 The accounting identity says We saw earlier how is determined: depends on domestic factors (output, fiscal policy variables, etc) is determined by the world interest rate So, must adjust to ensure Neither nor depend on, so the net capital outflow curve is. adjusts to NX with net capital outflow,. 1 26 27
1. Fiscal policy at home 2. Fiscal policy abroad 3. An increase in investment demand G 4. Trade policy to restrict imports 28 29 G abroad I 30 31
At any given value of, an import quota IM NX demand for dollars Start with the expression for the real exchange rate: Solve for the nominal exchange rate: Trade policy affect S or, so capital flows and the supply of dollars. 32 33 So e depends on the real exchange rate and the price levels at home and abroad and we know how each of them is determined: Rewrite this equation in growth rates (recall arithmetic tricks for working with % changes ) For a given value of, the growth rate of e equals the difference between. 34 35
% change in nominal exchange rate 8% 6% 4% Mexico Iceland Pakistan 2% U.K. S. Africa Sweden S. Korea -2% Japan Denmark Canada -4% Singapore Australia -6% Switzerland New Zealand -4% -2% 2% 4% 6% 8% inflation differential 36 If international arbitrage is possible, then $ must have the same purchasing power in every country equalizes purchasing power: Does PPP hold in the real world? No entirely, for two reasons: 1. International arbitrage not possible. - - 2. Goods of different countries not. Why is PPP then important? 37 G T S r I NX 1970s 2.2 19.6 1.1 19.9-0.3 115.1 1980s 3.9 17.4 6.3 19.4-2.0 129.4 actual change closed economy small open economy Data: decade averages; all except and are expressed as a percent of GDP; is a trade-weighted index. 38 So far, we ve learned long-run models for two extreme cases: closed economy (chap. 3) small open economy (chap. 5) A large open economy like the U.S. falls these two extremes. The results from large open economy analysis are a of the results for the closed & small open economy cases. For example 39
A fiscal expansion causes national saving to fall. The effects of this depend on openness & size: r I NX closed economy large open economy small open economy 40 1. Net exports--the difference between exports and imports a country s output (Y ) and its spending (C + I + G) 2. Net capital outflow equals purchases of foreign assets minus foreign purchases of the country s assets the difference between saving and investment 3. National income accounts identities: Y = C + I + G + NX trade balance NX = S - I net capital outflow 41 4. Impact of policies on NX : NX increases if policy causes S to rise or I to fall NX does not change if policy affects neither S nor I. Example: trade policy 5. Exchange rates nominal: the price of a country s currency in terms of another country s currency real: the price of a country s goods in terms of another country s goods. the real exchange rate equals the nominal rate times the ratio of prices of the two countries. 42 7. How the real exchange rate is determined NX depends negatively on the real exchange rate, other things equal The real exchange rate adjusts to equate NX with net capital outflow 43