International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 5: Balance of Payments Read: Chapters 3 Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Balance of Payments Accounting
Advertisements

Chapter 13 Balance of Payments
The Balance of Payments
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Copyright © 2009 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of.
The Balance of Payments
1 Chapter 9 How Exchange Rates are Determined ©2000 South-Western College Publishing.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Balance of Payments Accounts A country’s balance of payments accounts accounts for its.
Economics of International Finance Econ. 315
Chapter Objective: This chapter serves to introduce the student to the balance of payments. How it is constructed and how balance of payments data may.
The Balance of Payments
Copyright © 2003 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 3-0 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Third Edition Chapter Objective:
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The market value of all final goods and.
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The value of all final goods and services.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Lecture 3 Topic: Balance of Payments.
Balance of payments Trade deficits and surpluses Foreign exchange markets.
The National Income Accounts
Chapter 15 International and Balance of Payments Issues.
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments Modified May 2010 by Chris Ball.
Balance of Payments Accounting The Balance of Payments is the statistical record of a country’s international transactions over a certain period of time.
International Financial Management: INBU 4200 Fall Semester 2004 Lecture 5: Part 2 Balance of Payments (Chapter 3)
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 3-0 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fourth Edition.
National Income, BOP Accounting and Central Banking Monetary Theory and Policy UFM Summer, 2006.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 3-0 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fourth Edition.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 3-0 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fourth Edition Chapter Objective:
Carbaugh, Chap The Balance of Payments Balance of Payments  A record of international transactions between residents of one country and the rest.
Chapter 3 The Balance of Payments. Chapter Three Outline Balance of Payments Accounting Balance of Payments Accounts –The Current Account –The Capital.
Exchange Rates and the Open Economy Chapter 18. Foreign Exchange Market Abbreviation: FOREX Over a trillion dollars worth are traded daily. Most trading.
The Balance of Payments
1 Ch. 32: International Finance James R. Russell, Ph.D., Professor of Economics & Management, Oral Roberts University ©2005 Thomson Business & Professional.
CHAPTER ONE INTERNATIONAL TRADE AND THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Trade is simply a buying and selling of goods and services from one to other. International.
Looking at the flow of money in and out of countries around the world.
1 Chapter 13 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments Preview National income accounts –measures of national income –measures of value of.
External Sector Econ 102 _2015. External Sector How is a country linked with other countries in the global world? 1)There are exchange of Goods and Services.
Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 U.S. Export Transaction U.S. Import Transaction Balance of Payments Flexible Exchange Rates The Market for Currency.
1 Chapter 9 part 2 International Finance These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook.
External Sector Econ 102 _2013. External Sector How is a country linked with other countries in the global world? 1)There are exchange of Goods and Services.
TAMÁS NOVÁK International Economics VII. National Income and the Balance of Payments.
Balance of payments GTGKG213SZ.
1 International Finance Chapter 1 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
The Balance of Payments: Linking the United States to the International Economy Current account records a country’s net exports, net income on investments,
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 13 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
Chapter 12 Supplementary Notes. GNP = Expenditure on a Country’s Goods and Services Y = C d + I d + G d + EX = (C-C f ) + (I-I f ) + (G-G f ) + EX = C.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fifth Edition Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
THE BALANCE OF PAYMENTS J.D. Han, King’s University College 12-1.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 2: Foreign Currency Markets Continued: Introduction to Balance of Payments Read: Chapters 3&5 Aaron Smallwood.
Chapter 5: Foreign Exchange Markets and the Balance of Payments
Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
Chapter 3 The Balance of Payments Management 3460 Institutions and Practices in International Finance Fall 2003 Greg Flanagan.
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics Chapter 7: Foreign Exchange Markets and the Balance of Payments.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Chapter 3 -. Definition Is a statistical record of a country’s international transactions over a certain period of time represented.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 2: Foreign Currency Markets Continued: Introduction to Balance of Payments Read: Chapters 3&5 Aaron Smallwood.
International Finance
Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Copyright © 2016 Pearson Canada Inc.
External Sector Econ 102 _2013. External Sector How is a country linked with other countries in the global world? 1)There are exchange of Goods and Services.
Copyright © 2012 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Balance of Payments Chapter Three.
12-1 Ec 335 International Trade and Finance Lecture 20-21: National Income Accounting Giovanni Facchini.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 3: Foreign Currency Markets Continued: Introduction to Balance of Payments Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 6: Balance of Payments Read: Chapters 3 Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.
© 2008 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd., All Rights Reserved PowerPoint® Presentation Prepared By Charles Schell The Balance of Payments Chapter 3.
The Balance of Payments 2 Chapter Objective: This chapter serves to introduce the students to the meaning, and measurement of the balance of payments.
Chapter Three The Balance of Payments Chapter Objective: Chapter Objective: This chapter serves to introduce the student to the balance of payments. How.
AEB 4283: International Development Policy
Economics of International Finance Econ. 315
International Flow of Funds
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics
Chapter 3 Balance of Payments
GDP = Expenditure on a Country’s Goods and Services
Balance of Payments Chapter Three
Chapter 3 Balance of Payments
Presentation transcript:

International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 5: Balance of Payments Read: Chapters 3 Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.

Balance of Payments Example Suppose that Maplewood Bicycle in Maplewood, Missouri, USA imports $100,000 worth of bicycle frames from Mercian Bicycles in Darby England. There will exist a $100,000 credit recorded by Mercian that offsets a $100,000 debit at Maplewood’s bank account. This will lead to a rise in the supply of dollars and the demand for British pounds.

The balance of payments accounts are those that record all transactions between the residents of a country and residents of all foreign nations. They are composed of the following: –The Current Account –The Financial Account The Official Reserves Account –The Capital Account –Statistical Discrepancy Balance of Payments Accounts

The Current Account Includes all imports and exports of goods and services, including financial services (invisible trade or investment income). Includes unilateral transfers of foreign aid. If the debits exceed the credits, then a country is running a trade deficit. If the credits exceed the debits, then a country is running a trade surplus. It is thought that the current responds to changes in income and the exchange rate.

The current account Consists of four categories –Merchandise trade (tangible goods) –Services (trade in factors of production) –Investment income (credit if we receive payment on previous investment, debit if we make payments on previous investments). –Unilateral transfers (gifts and aid).

The Current Account A credit on the current account results in foreign reserves flowing in (fixed exchange rate) or an increase in the demand for domestic currency in the FOREX market (flexible exchange rate). A debit on the current account results in foreign reserves flowing out of the domestic economy (fixed exchange rate) or an increase in the supply of domestic currency in the FOREX market (flexible exchange rate).

The Current Account When a domestic company sells goods or services to a foreign resident, there will be a credit recorded on the current account. When a domestic resident buys goods or services from a foreign firm, there will be a debit recorded on the current account. When a foreign asset pays interest to a domestic resident, or a domestic resident earns income in the foreign economy, there will be a credit recorded on the current account. When a domestic asset pays interest to a foreign resident, or a foreign resident earns income in the domestic economy, there will be a debit recorded on the current account.

J-curve Effect

What conditions are necessary for J-curve effect? ε IM is the import demand elasticity = %Δimports divided by %ΔS t. When ε IM is greater than one (in absolute value), a domestic depreciation will lead to a fall in the RMB value of imports. Import demand is said to be elastic. When ε IM is equal to one (in absolute value), a domestic depreciation will not change the RMB value of imports. When ε IM is less than one (in absolute value), a domestic depreciation will lead to a rise in the RMB value of imports. Import demand is inelastic. The J-curve can only occur when import demand elasticities are inelastic.

Algebra of Import Demand Elasticities

J-curve The point is your company’s expenditures on imports may increase following a domestic currency depreciation. While export volumes are expected to increase, if small, the generated revenue may not fully cover the increase in costs. Profits could be reduced. For an economy, if imports rise by a larger amount than exports, the trade balance could move into deficit.

The Financial Account The financial account for China measures the difference between Chinese sales of assets to foreigners and Chinese purchases of foreign assets. The financial account is composed of Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), portfolio investments and other investments, and technically official reserves. Because of their importance, official reserves are sometimes treated separately.

The Financial Account A credit on the financial account results in foreign reserves flowing in (fixed exchange rate) or an increase in the demand for domestic currency in the FOREX market (flexible exchange rate). A debit on the financial account results in foreign reserves flowing out of the domestic economy (fixed exchange rate) or an increase in the supply of domestic currency in the FOREX market (flexible exchange rate).

The Financial Account When a domestic entity (firm or individual) sells an asset to a foreign resident, there will be a credit recorded on the financial account. When a domestic resident buys an asset from a foreign entity, there will be a debit recorded on the financial account. Note – income earned on these assets is recorded on the current account, NOT the financial account!!!

The Balance of Payments Identity BCA + BFA + BRA = 0 BCA = balance on current account BFA = balance on financial account BRA = balance on the reserves account (which assumes no capital account balance and no statistical discrepancy) Note: When a country experiences a currency crisis, we typically see BRA>0 (and HUGE) Under a pure flexible exchange rate regime, BCA + BFA = 0 Because BRA = 0

Official settlements The official settlements balance, sometimes referred to as the overall balance, is the balance on the current account plus capital account plus non- official reserve component of the financial account. If a country has a balance of -$5 billion in their official reserves, the official settlements balance is +$5billion.

Balance of Payments Trends Since 1982, the U.S. has experienced continuous deficits on the current account and continuous surpluses on the non- official reserve component of the financial account. During the same period, China has experienced surpluses in both and deficit in official reserves.

China BOP

Japan BOP

USA BOP

Balances on the Current (BCA) and Financial (BKA) Accounts of United Kingdom

Official reserves In the US official reserve assets include gold, foreign currency, and special drawing rights (issued by the IMF). The official settlements balance is BCA+BFA When BCA+BFA≠0, the central bank must acquire or deplete holdings of official reserves.