Open economies also import goods for domestic consumption IM = C f + I f + G f

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Ch5 - The Open Economy in the Long Run The International Flows of Goods (Let d and f represents domestic and foreign goods respectively) In an open economy the domestic production (Y ) can be either used domestically or exported Y = C d + I d + G d + EX Open economies also import goods for domestic consumption IM = C f + I f + G f Combining the previous two equations yields Y = (C d + C f ) + (I d + I f ) + (G d + G f ) + EX IM 1

which can be written as Y = C + I + G + EX where C = C d + C f, I = I d + I f In the nal equality NX = EX IM and G = G d + G f IM is the net exports and can also be written as NX = Y (C + I + G) = Domestic Output Domestic Spending when NX > 0: the country produces more than it uses domestically, and lends the di erence to abroad when N X < 0: the country uses more than it produces, and borrows the di erence from abroad 2

The International Flows of Capital Interpretation of NX Now we think about the national income identity in an open economy in nominal terms If we rearrange the national income identity Y C G = I + NX where Y is the total income of a country in nominal terms and Y C G = S is the total savings in an economy Hence, S I = NX S I is the di erence between domestic saving and domestic investment (also called net capital out ow or net foreign investment) 3

Now we also call net exports as the trade balance (the di erence between the monetary value of exports and imports of output) The equation S I = NX indicates that the national saving can either be spent on investment goods, or lend abroad so that the foreigners are able to purchase the good and services not used domestically (NX). Hence, the international ow of funds to nance capital accumulation and the international ow of goods and services are two sides of the same coin. If our saving exceeds our investment, the saving that is not invested domestically is used to make loans to foreigners. Foreigners require these loans because we are providing them with more goods and services than they are providing us 4

In the future, we expect the foreign country to pay its debt back so that home country would enjoy from consuming their goods 5

Question 1: If saving may not be equal to investment any more, what determines the real interest rate? In an open economy we use perfect capital mobility assumption, meaning that residents of the country have full access to world nancial markets. Therefore, the interest rate in our small open economy, r, must equal the world interest rate r r = r This is because investors of the small open economy can always get a loan at r from abroad, so they would not pay higher than r to the residents of home country Similarly, residents of this economy need never lend at any interest rate below r because they can always earn r by lending abroad 6

Thus, the world interest rate determines the interest rate in our small open economy. World s investment and saving determines the world real interest rate A small open economy assumption: Savings decisions cannot a ect r A large open economy assumption: Savings decisions can a ect r 7

Question 2: If not the real interest rate, what brings the national income identity into equilibrium? It is the real exchange rate that secures the equilibrium in the national income identity by adjusting the net exports Y = C( Y T ) + I(r ) + G + NX() We start to discussion by examining the trade balance 8

Remember that S = Y C G Also that NX = S I(r ) In a closed economy, the real interest rate adjusts to equilibrate saving and investment. However, in a small open economy, the interest rate is determined in world nancial markets (r ) The di erence between saving and investment determines the trade balance 9

In the gure country saves more than it invests. The di erence is exported abroad Notice that NX can be negative as well 10

CASE STUDY: The U.S. Trade De cit The U.S. Trade Balance The U.S. Saving and Investment 11

A Fiscal Expansion at Home An increase in government purchases or a reduction in taxes reduces national saving The result is a trade de cit 12

A Fiscal Expansion Abroad A scal expansion in a foreign economy large enough to reduce world saving raises the world interest rate from r 1 to r 2 The higher world interest rate reduces investment in a small open economy, causing a trade surplus 13

Shifts in Investment Demand Suppose the government changed the tax laws to encourage investment thus the demand for investment goods at every interest rate increases The result is a trade de cit 14

Evaluating Trade Policies A trade de cit could be a re ection of low saving In a closed economy, low saving leads to low investment and a smaller future capital stock In an open economy, low saving leads to a trade de cit and a growing foreign debt, which eventually must be re-paid In both cases, high current consumption leads to lower future consumption; future generations bear the burden of low saving A trade de cit could be a sign of economic development When poor economies develop into modern industrial economies, they may nance their high levels of investment with foreign borrowing 15

The Real Exchange Rate and the Trade Balance Just as the relative price of hamburgers and pizza determines which you choose for lunch, the relative price of domestic and foreign goods a ects the demand for these goods. The lower the real exchange rate, the domestic goods becomes cheaper relative to the foreign goods. Thus net exports increases and becomes positive 16

Örnek: Dolar ile yen aras ndaki döviz kuru 120 yen/dolar olsun. Bir amerikan arabas 10.000 dolar, benzer bir Japon arabas da 2.400.000 yen olsun. Bu iki ülke aras ndaki reel döviz kuru kaçt r? Cevap: Amerikan arabas 10.000 dolar de¼gerinde; 1 dolar ise 120 yen al yor. Dolay s yla Amerikan arabas 1.200.000 yen de¼gerinde. Ayn araba Japonya da 2.400.000 yen oldu¼gundan 1 Amerikan arabas ancak 0,5 Japon arabas alabiliyor (0,5 Japon arabas /Amerikan arabas ; yani Amerikan arabas daha ucuz), bu da iki ülke aras ndaki reel döviz kuru oluyor yen=$ = e yen=$ (P=P ) = 120 10:000=2:400:000 = 0; 5 17

(*) Ayn soruyu tersten de çözebilirdik $=yen = e $=yen (P =P ) = 1=120 2:400:000=10:000 = 2 Yani bir Japon arabas yat na (onu sat p) 2 Amerikan arabas al nabiliyor Not: Bu durumda insanlar Amerikan arabalar na talep ve de Amerika n n ihracat artar 18

The Determinants of the Real Exchange Rate Remember that: NX = S I(r ) This means the amount of net export has already been determined. We also know that there is one unique real exchange rate for each Net Export value. Thus we can nd the equilibrium real exchange rate 19

Financial Markets Interpretation of the Determination of the Real Exchange Rate The vertical line, S-I, represents the net capital out ow and thus the supply of domestic currency to be exchanged into foreign currency and invested abroad. The downward-sloping line, NX, represents the net domestic currency demand of foreigners to buy net exports from the home country. At the equilibrium real exchange rate, the supply of dollars available from the net capital out ow balances the demand for dollars 20

Expansionary Fiscal Policy at Home Increase in government purchases or a cut in taxes, reduces national saving. The fall in saving reduces the supply of dollars to be exchanged into foreign currency, from S 1 I to S 2 I. This shift raises the equilibrium real exchange rate from 1 to 2. 21

Expansionary Fiscal Policy Abroad The world saving is reduced and raises the world interest rate raises from r 1 to r 2. The increase in r reduces investment at home, which in turn raises the supply of dollars to be exchanged into foreign currencies The equilibrium real exchange rate falls from 1 to 2. 22

The Impact of an Increase in Investment Demand It reduces world saving and raises the world interest rate from r 1 to r 2. The increase in this rate reduces investment at home, which in turn raises the supply of dollars to be exchanged into foreign currencies The equilibrium real exchange rate falls from 1 to 2 23

The Impact of Protectionist Trade Policies Policies such as a ban on imported cars, raises the real exchange rate from 1 to 2 but leaves the level of net exports unchanged. It is because investment and savings (as long as imported car consumption is replaced by domestic car consumption) are unchanged 24

The Determinants of the Nominal Exchange Rate The equation = e (P=P ) is just an equality. Actually nominal exchange rate depends on the real exchange rate and the price ratios of two countries e = (P =P ) Taking natural logarithm (ln) of both sides which implies that ln(e) = ln() + ln(p ) ln(p ) %Change in e = %Change in +%Change in P %Change in P: 25

and %Change in e = %Change in + ( ) If a country has a high (low) rate of in ation relative to the home country, domestic currency will buy an increasing (decreasing) amount of the foreign currency over time In result: Private and public saving decisions of a country determines its net exports, which determines the real exchange rate The real exchange rate, combined with countries monetary policies, determine the nominal exchange rate. 26

Appendix: How did we end up with % changes in the two previous slide? Let s take a quick look to the logarithm ln(e t ) = ln( t )+ln(p t ) ln(p t ) & ln(e t 1 ) = ln( t 1 )+ln(p t 1) ln(p t 1 ) If we subtract RHS from the LHS ln(e t ) ln(e t 1 ) = ln( t ) ln( t 1 ) + ln(p t ) ln( e t e t ) = ln( t 1 t ) + ln( P t 1 Pt ) ln( P t ) 1 P t 1 If g represents the growth rate of variables ln( e t 1(1 + g e ) ) = ln( t(1 + g ) ) + ln( P t (1 + g P ) e t 1 t 1 P t 1 ln(p t 1) (ln(p t ) ln(p t 1 )) ) ln( P t(1 + g P ) P t 1 ) 27

As for small c, exp(c) = 1 + c ln(exp g e ) = ln(exp g ) + ln(exp g P ) ln(exp g P ) and hence g e = g + g P %Change in e = %Change in + ( ) g P This analysis implies that as long as we assume price levels are constant over time, the changes in real and nominal exchange rates are similar and our analysis for real exchange rates are valid for the nominal ones as well 28

In ation Di erentials and the Exchange Rate The horizontal axis shows the country s average in ation rate minus the U.S. average in ation rate over the period 1972 2000. The vertical axis is the average percentage change in the country s exchange rate (per U.S. dollar) over that period 29

The Special Case of Purchasing-Power Parity The the law of one price states that the same good cannot sell for di erent prices in di erent locations at the same time If a dollar could buy more wheat domestically than abroad, there would be opportunities to pro t by buying wheat domestically and selling it abroad. Pro t-seeking arbitrageurs would drive up the domestic price of wheat relative to the foreign price The law of one price applied to the international marketplace (for all goods) is called purchasing-power parity. A dollar (or any other currency) must have the same purchasing power in every country Purchasing-Power Parity suggests that net exports are highly sensitive to small movements in the real exchange rate. This high sensitivity is 30

re ected here with a very at net-exports schedule Purchasing-Power Parity Result 1: Because the net-exports schedule is at, changes in saving or investment do not in uence the real or nominal exchange rate Result 2: Because the real exchange rate is xed, all changes in the nominal exchange rate result from changes in price levels 31

Is Purchasing Power Parity Theory True? Not totally consistent with the facts But does it make it wrong? No, just missing Many goods are not easily traded, so that their prices do not need to equate Second, even tradable goods are not always perfect substitutes There is home bias in the similar concept. The rate of return to investment is lower in the US compared to other developing countries, yet there is more FDI ow into US that out ow from this country. Conclusion: It is worth to know 32

APPENDIX: The Large Open Economy The Market for Loanable Funds Remember that in a small economy savings are used to nance investment or lend abroad so that the foreigners are able to purchase the good and services not used domestically S = I(r ) + NX If NX > 0, the domestic currency is lended abroad; if not, foreign currency is borrowed. We call these capital ows as the net capital out ow and denote with CF 33

In case of a small open economy the capital out ow is perfectly elastic around the world interest rate (r ) and the previous equation can be written as follows S = I(r ) + CF (r ) If the interest rate that is consistent with the closed economy is less than the world interest rate, the capital ows abroad and CF > 0 34

A large open economy can in uence world nancial market and world interest rate. Therefore the previous equation could be modi ed as S = I(r) + CF (r) If home interest rate rises, the capital ows into country 35

Therefore the equality: S = I(r) + CF (r) can be drawn as which determines the interest rate in a large open economy For instance if saving is lower than the investment, interest rate rises, which decreases investment and increases capital ow into the economy 36

The Market for Foreign Exchange National Income Identity tells that NX = S It can also be written as NX() = CF I At the equilibrium exchange rate, the supply of dollars from the net capital out ow, CF, balances the demand for dollars for the NX 37

A Reduction in National Saving in the Large Open Economy A reduction in savings reduces both investment and net exports 38

An Increase in Investment Demand in the Large Open Economy An increase in invetsment demand leads reduction in net exports 39

An Import Restriction in the Large Open Economy An import restriction reduces imports. But since net exports has to be the same, dollar appreciates so that exports are also reduced 40

A Fall in the Net Capital Out ow in the Large Open Economy If interest rates in Germany reduces, net capital ou ow and the interest rates in the US reduce too. Investment increases, net exports fall 41