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

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, Exchange Rates, and 1 Introduction Open economy macroeconomics International trade in goods and services International capital flows Purchases & sales of foreign assets by domestic residents Purchases & sales of domestic assets by foreign residents Important component of economic activity Net exports are part of GDP Capital flows can be important source of financing government budget deficit and investment 2 Introduction (continued) Imbalances must be corrected Flexible exchange rates Macroeconomic adjustments Overview Introduction to the Balance of Payments Consequences of persistent surpluses or deficits Foreign exchange value of the dollar Adding an open economy to the IS-LM model 3 and International Indebtedness Introduction Balance of Payments» Record of the economy s international transactions Current Account» exports and imports of goods and services» receipts and payments of investment income» transfer payments Capital Account» purchases and sales of foreign assets by US residents» purchases and sales of US assets by foreign residents 4 and International Indebtedness (con t) Introduction (continued) Balance of payments generates credits and debits» these are the money flows Credits (money flows in)» exports of goods and services» investment income on US assets held abroad» transfers to US residents» purchases of US assets by foreigners Debits (money flows out) 5 and International Indebtedness (con t) The Balance of Payments: Surplus or Deficit? Balance of Payments = Current Account Balance + Capital Account Balance Capital account is how the current account is financed Balance of payments surplus: credits > debits Balance of payments deficit: credits < debits» Table 6-1 How is the Balance of Payments financed? 6 1

Figure 6-1 The U.S. Current Account Balance and Its Net International Investment Position, 1975 96 and International Indebtedness (con t) Foreign Borrowing & Int l Indebtedness A current account deficit must be financed: net borrowing from foreign households, businesses, and governments, and/or net borrowing from foreign central banks Change in net international investment position = current account balance» Figure 6-1 7 8 and International Indebtedness (con t) The Net International Investment Position and the Growth in the Standard of Living What are the implications of persistent current account deficits? Introduction International transactions require the exchange of one nation s currency for another s How are Quoted» Table 6-2 US dollar is the fixed currency except against the UK pound, Australian dollar, Euro 9 10 (continued) Changes in Appreciation: an increase in the foreign exchange value of a currency Depreciation: a decrease in the foreign exchange value of a currency The Market for Foreign Exchange Flexible and Foreign Exchange Trading» Figure 6-2 Supply and Demand for Foreign Exchange» Figure 6-3 11 12 2

Figure 6-2 Foreign of the Dollar Against Four Major Currencies, Quarterly, 1970 97 Figure 6-3 Determination of the Price in Deutsche Marks of the Dollar 13 14 The Market for Foreign Exchange (con t) Why People Hold Dollars and Marks Demand created by exports capital inflows» to repay previous dollar loans» to pay interest and dividends» to invest in dollar denominated assets Supply created by imports» capital outflows» Figure 6-3 15 The Market for Foreign Exchange (con t) Determination of the Foreign Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the foreign exchange market Disequilibrium dynamics 16 Nominal & Real Nominal (e ) and Real (e) e = e * P / P(f) Real exchange rate is equal to the nominal exchange rate adjusted for relative inflation rates Real exchange rates are relevant for determining net exports Real appreciation means exports become more expensive» Exports, output and employment fall, profits shrink and imports become less expensive Nominal & Real (con t) The Theory of Purchasing Power Parity Identical goods should cost the same in all countries after adjusting for the cost of transportation and import duties Arbitrage opportunities Implies e = 1 or e * P / P(f) = 1 e = P(f) / P 17 18 3

Nominal & Real (con t) PPP and Inflation Differentials Growth rate of nominal exchange rate = growth rate of foreign price level minus growth rate of domestic price level Nominal & Real (con t) Why PPP Breaks Down Absolute advantage in some good and/or service Preferences for certain currencies US dollar, Swiss francs Government policies Viewpoint is too narrow Traded goods sector Capital flows ignored Currency appreciates (depreciated) if inflation differential is positive (negative) 19 20 Exchange Rate Systems Flexible versus Fixed Flexible exchange rate system Exchange rate is free to change every day Exchange rate would adjust to the balance of payments surplus or deficit» until surplus or deficit disappears Fixed exchange rate system Exchange rate is fixed for long periods of time Central banks financed any balance of payments surplus or deficit» through changes in foreign exchange reserves 21 Exchange Rate Systems (continued) Workings of the Fixed Exchange Rate System Devaluations and revaluations The Breakdown of the Bretton Woods System Fixed exchange rate system International reserves were held as gold or dollars US persistent current account deficit toppled the Bretton Woods System in 1973 22 Exchange Rate Systems (continued) Characteristics of the Flexible Exchange Rate System Flexible exchange rates with central bank intervention Clean versus dirty or managed flexible exchange rate system Motivations of central banks The Exchange Rate of the Dollar since 1970» Figure 6-4» Figure 6-5 23 24 4

Figure 6-4 Nominal Effective Exchange Rate of the Dollar, 1970 96 Figure 6-5 Nominal and Real Effective of the Dollar, 1970 96 25 26 Net Exports Figure 6-6 U.S. Real Exports, Real Imports, and Real Net Exports, 1960 96 Determinants of Net Exports Endogenizing Net Exports Net exports will depend on: income exchange rates Exchange rate will depend on: interest rates The Foreign Trade Surplus and Deficit» Figure 6-6 27 28 Net Exports Figure 6-7 U.S. Real Net Exports and the Real Exchange Rate of the Dollar, 1970 96 Determinants of Net Exports (continued) Net Exports and the Foreign Exchange Rate Effect of Real Income NX = NX(0) - nx * Y Effect of the Foreign Exchange Rate» Figure 6-7 NX = NX(0) - nx * Y - u * e 29 30 5

The Real Exchange Rate & Interest Rate The Demand for Dollars To buy American goods and services Generally changes slowly over time To buy dollar denominated assets Main source of instability in exchange rate Dependent on interest rate differentials» US interest rates less foreign interest rates Real Exchange Rate & Interest Rate (con t) The Real Exchange Rate and the Monetary- Fiscal Policy Mix» Figure 5-5 Different monetary and fiscal policies will influence interest rates which will, in turn, influence exchange rates» Figure 6-8 Changes in real interest rates capture most of the important changes in exchange rates 31 32 Figure 5-5 The Effect on Real Income of a Fiscal Stimulus with Three Alternative Monetary Policies Figure 6-8 The U.S. Real Corporate Bond Rate and the Real Exchange Rate of the Dollar, 1970 96 33 34 Real Exchange Rate & Interest Rate (con t) Interest Rates and Capital Mobility Interest rates affect exchange rates because of capital inflows and outflows between countries Perfect capital mobility foreign & domestic financial assets are perfect substitutes purchases can be done» immediately,» in unlimited amounts,» with low transactions cost Interest rate differentials would disappear 35 Real Exchange Rate & Interest Rate (con t) The Two Adjustment Mechanisms: Fixed and Flexible Rates Perfect capital mobility implies domestic monetary and fiscal policy do not affect domestic interest rates With fixed exchange rates lower rates will lead to massive capital outflow higher rates will lead to massive capital inflow With flexible exchange rates lower rates will lead to an exchange rate depreciation higher rates will lead to an exchange rate appreciation 36 6

Real Exchange Rate & Interest Rate (con t) Is Perfect Capital Mobility Relevant? Small open economies (SOE) Domestic capital market is small relative to international capital flows Difficult/impossible to maintain interest rate differentials Large open economies (LOE) Domestic capital market is large relative to international capital flows Interest rate differentials can persist but lead to steady capital inflow or outflow The IS-LM Model in a Small Open Economy (SOE) The BP Schedule Perfect capital mobility implies that interest rate differentials must remain at zero. Domestic interest rate must equal foreign interest rate r = r(f) Balance of payments is zero at r(f)» Figure 6-9» Current account in balance» Capital account in balance 37 38 Figure 6-9 Effect of an Increase in the Money Supply with Fixed The IS-LM Model in a SOE (continued) The Analysis with Fixed Monetary expansion» Figure 6-9 The impotence of domestic monetary policy Fiscal expansion» Figure 6-10 Fiscal policy becomes very effective because monetary policy must become completely accommodating 39 40 Figure 6-10 Effect of a Fiscal Policy Stimulus with Fixed The IS-LM Model in a SOE (continued) The Analysis with Flexible Monetary expansion (Figure 6-11) Capital outflows cause depreciation of exchange rate which boosts net exports At equilibrium the current account is in balance Fiscal expansion (Figure 6-11) Capital inflows cause appreciation of exchange rate which leads to complete international crowding out. Higher fiscal deficit exactly offset by lower net exports Higher fiscal deficit financed entirely by foreign borrowing 41 42 7

Figure 6-11 Effect of a Monetary and Fiscal Policy Stimulus with Flexible The IS-LM Model in a SOE (continued) Conclusions With fixed exchange rates Fiscal policy is highly effective because of a forced accommodative monetary policy Monetary policy is totally ineffective With flexible exchange rates Monetary policy is highly effective because of exchange rate depreciation Fiscal policy is totally ineffective but leads to higher foreign borrowing 43 44 Capital Mobility and in a Large Open Economy (LOE) How a LOE Differs from a SOE Domestic capital markets are large relative to international capital flows Capital mobility is imperfect Domestic interest rates can differ from foreign interest rates Capital Mobility, in a LOE How a LOE Differs from a SOE (con t) The BP schedule is now positively sloped» Figure 6-12 With positive interest rate differential continuing capital inflow, i.e., capital account surplus» Capital account surplus means current account deficit» Need high level of income to draw in imports With negative interest rate differential continuing capital outflow, i.e., capital account deficit» Capital account deficit means current account surplus» Need low level of income to minimize imports 45 46 Figure 6-12 The BP Line in a Small and Large Open Economy 47 Capital Mobility, in a LOE Monetary and Fiscal Policy With fixed exchange rates Monetary policy ineffective (as with a SOE) Fiscal policy effect but less so than in SOE» Interest rates rise With flexible exchange rates Fiscal policy is totally ineffective» Net export response offsets fiscal stimulus Monetary policy is highly effective» Higher rates crowd out investment so more exchange rate depreciation needed to boost net exports 48 8

Conclusion: How should Policymakers React to Exchange Rate Movements? Domestic versus International Considerations The United States Europe Brazil, Thailand, etc.. 49 9