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1 Variable Net Exports Chapter 24 Appendix © 2006 Thomson/South-Western
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2 Net Exports and Income The amount of U.S. output purchased by foreigners depends not on the U.S. level of income but on income levels in their own countries
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3 Exhibit 12: Imports, Exports, Net Exports (a) Autonomous export function is shown in panel (a)
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4 Exhibit 12: Imports, Exports, Net Exports Imports are positively related to income, as shown in panel (b).
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5 Exhibit 12: Imports, Exports, Net Exports Net exports are negatively related to income, as shown in panel (c). Net exports are zero when disposable income is $9.0 trillion.
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6 Exhibit 12: Imports, Exports, Net Exports When disposable income increases, U.S. consumers spend more on all goods and services, including imported goods and services: the relationship between imports and income is positive as shown by the upward sloping import function, M, in the middle panel What matters in terms of total spending on U.S. products are exports, X, minus imports, M, or net exports By subtracting the import function in the middle panel from the export function in the top panel, we derive the net export function, depicted as X – M in the bottom panel (a)
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7 Exhibit 13: Shifts in Net Exports X – M Real disposable income (trillions of dollars) 0.9 - 0.9 0 X' – M' X" – M" 3.0 9.0 15.0 If the value of the dollar increases relative to foreign currencies, foreign products become cheaper for Americans and U.S. products become more expensive for foreigners. This implies that imports increase at every level of income so net export function shifts from X – M down to X' – M‘ A decline in the dollar’s value will have the opposite effect, increasing exports and decreasing imports upward shift of the net export function from X – M to X” – M” Real net exports (trillions of dollars)
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