Chapter 17 Financing World Trade. Slide 34-2 Introduction The price of one currency in terms of another is set by the interaction of supply and demand.

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Presentation transcript:

Chapter 17 Financing World Trade

Slide 34-2 Introduction The price of one currency in terms of another is set by the interaction of supply and demand in international financial markets. Among the participants in these markets are governments seeking to change or maintain exchange rates.

Slide 34-3 Did You Know That... Exchange rates between currencies are a factor in determining the location of vehicle production? The recent decline in the value of the dollar against the yen and the euro led foreign automakers to locate more vehicle assembly in the U.S.?

Slide 34-4 Balance of Trade –The value of goods and services bought and sold in the world market –The difference between exports and imports of goods Balance of Payments –A summary record of a country’s economic transactions with foreign residents and governments over a year The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide 34-5 Surplus (+) and Deficit (-) Items on the International Accounts Surplus Items (+)Deficit Items (-) Exports of merchandiseImports of merchandise Private and government gifts fromPrivate and governmental gifts to foreigners foreigners Foreign use of domestically owned Use of foreign-owned transportation transportation Foreign tourists’ expenditures in this countryTourism expenditures abroad Foreign military spending in this countryMilitary spending abroad Interest and dividend receipts from foreignersInterest and dividends paid to foreigners Sales of domestic assets to foreignersPurchases of foreign assets Funds deposited in this country by foreignersFunds placed in foreign depository institutions Sales of gold to foreignersPurchases of gold from foreigners Sales of domestic currency to foreignersPurchases of foreign currency Table 34-1

Slide 34-6 Accounting Identities –Statements that certain numerical measurements are equivalent by accepted definition The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide 34-7 The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements When family expenditures exceed income, the family must do one of the following: –Reduce its money holdings, or sell stocks, bonds, or other assets –Borrow –Receive gifts from friends or relatives –Receive a public transfer from a government Cannot continue indefinitely

Slide 34-8 Three categories of balance of payments transactions –Current account transactions –Capital account transactions –Official reserve account transactions The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide 34-9 Current account transactions –Merchandise trade transactions Importing and exporting of merchandise Balance = merchandise exports - merchandise imports The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide Current account transactions –Service exports and imports Invisible or intangible items –Shipping –Insurance –Tourism –Banking –Income from investments The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide Current account transactions –Unilateral transfers Gifts by citizens Gifts by governments The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide Balancing the current account –Net exports plus unilateral transfers plus net investment income exceeds zero Current account surplus –Net exports plus unilateral transfers plus net investment income is negative Current account deficit The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements A current account surplus means the import of money or money equivalent which means a capital account deficit A current account deficit must be paid by the export of money or money equivalent which means a capital account surplus

Slide Capital account transactions –Deals with the buying and selling of real and financial assets The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide Official reserve account transactions –Foreign currencies –Gold –Special Drawing Rights (SDRs) Reserve assets created by the International Monetary Fund that countries can use to settle international payments The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide Official reserve account transactions –The reserve position in the International Monetary Fund –Financial assets held by an official agency such as the U.S. Treasury Department The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements

Slide The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements What affects the balance of payments? –Relative rate of inflation –Political stability

Slide The Balance of Payments and International Capital Movements What affects the balance of payments? –Inflation among trading partners –Political stability

Slide Determining Foreign Exchange Rates Foreign Exchange Market –The market for buying and selling foreign currencies Exchange Rates –The price of one currency in terms of another

Slide Determining Foreign Exchange Rates Demand for and supply of foreign currency –U.S. transactions involving imports constitute a supply of dollars and demand for some foreign currency –The opposite is true for export transactions

Slide Determining Foreign Exchange Rates The equilibrium foreign exchange rate –Appreciation An increase in the value of a currency in terms of other currencies –Depreciation A decrease in the value of a currency in terms of other currencies

Slide International Example: South Africa’s Currency Appreciation Gold and platinum are key South African exports. The increased demand for these commodities has also increased the demand for South African rand. As interest rates in South Africa became relatively higher, the demand for South African financial assets also increased.

Slide International Example: South Africa’s Currency Appreciation The result of these changes has been an appreciation of the rand. The dollar price of the rand has doubled since the end of 2001.

Slide Determining Foreign Exchange Rates Market determinants of exchange rates –Changes in real interest rates –Changes in productivity –Changes in product preferences –Perceptions of economic stability

Slide The Gold Standard and the International Monetary Fund Gold Standard –An international monetary system in which nations fix their exchange rates in terms of gold –All currencies are fixed in terms of all others, and any balance of payments deficits or surpluses can be made up by shipments of gold

Slide The Gold Standard and the International Monetary Fund Gold standard –A balance of payments deficit More gold flowed out than flowed in Equivalent to an restrictive monetary policy –A balance of payments surplus More gold flowed in than out Equivalent to an expansionary monetary policy

Slide The Gold Standard and the International Monetary Fund Problems with the gold standard –A nation gives up control of its monetary policy –New gold discoveries often caused inflation

Slide The Gold Standard and the International Monetary Fund Bretton Woods and the International Monetary Fund –1944—representatives of capitalist countries met in Bretton Woods, New Hampshire Created a new international payment system to replace the gold standard

Slide The Gold Standard and the International Monetary Fund End of the old IMF –On August 15, 1971, President Richard Nixon suspended the convertibility of the dollar into gold. –On December 18, 1971, the United States devalued the dollar relative to the currencies of 14 major industrial nations.

Slide Current Foreign Exchange Rate Arrangements Figure 34-7

Slide Fixed versus Floating Exchange Rates To maintain a fixed exchange rate, the central bank of a country can buy and sell currencies. It must use its own foreign exchange reserves to engage in these financial market transactions.

Slide A Fixed Exchange Rate Figure 34-8 The Bank of Malaysia buys ringgit with dollars shifting the demand for ringgit to the right The supply of ringgit shifts to the right as Thai residents demand more U.S. goods The value of the ringgit will fall

Slide International Example: Central Banks’ Currencies of Choice A central bank allocates foreign exchange reserves based on its perception of which currencies will be needed most frequently to alter the demand for its own currency. The U.S. dollar is the currency most commonly held in foreign exchange reserves; but the euro, the Japanese yen, and the British pound also comprise a measurable portion of these accounts.

Slide Fixed Exchange Rates Pros and cons of fixed exchange rates –Pros Limiting foreign exchange risk –The possibility that changes in the value of a nation’s currency will result in variations in market value of assets

Slide Fixed Exchange Rates Pros and cons of fixed exchange rates –Cons A country’s residents can avoid foreign exchange risk by hedging –A financial strategy that reduces the chance of suffering losses arising from foreign exchange risk

Slide The Dirty Float and Managed Exchange Rates Dirty Float –A system between flexible and fixed exchange rates in which central banks occasionally enter foreign exchange markets to influence rates

Slide Managed Exchange Rates What do you think? –Is it possible to “manage” foreign exchange rates? One study concludes that neither the Fed nor the central banks of the other G7 can successfully influence exchange rates in the long run.

Slide Issues and Applications: Japan’s Finance Ministry Learns a New Currency Trick As the value of the dollar has declined against the Japanese yen in recent years, American consumers must pay more for Japanese-made goods. In response, the Japanese government began buying dollars on the foreign exchange market. Of late, the government has been using private banks to implement the foreign exchange transactions needed to arrest the yen appreciation.

Copyright © 2005 Pearson Addison- Wesley. All rights reserved Key Terms and Concepts appreciation balance of payments balance of trade capital account transactions depreciation derived demand fixed exchange rate system floating (flexible) exchange rate system foreign exchange market foreign exchange risk trade deficit unilateral transfers