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Carbaugh, Chap. 11 1 The Balance of Payments Balance of Payments  A record of international transactions between residents of one country and the rest.

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Presentation on theme: "Carbaugh, Chap. 11 1 The Balance of Payments Balance of Payments  A record of international transactions between residents of one country and the rest."— Presentation transcript:

1 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 1 The Balance of Payments Balance of Payments  A record of international transactions between residents of one country and the rest of the world  International transactions include exchanges of goods, services and assets (bank deposits, stocks, bonds, real estate, factories)  “Residents” includes citizens temporarily living abroad but excludes local subsidiaries of foreign corporations

2 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 2 The Balance of Payments  All transactions are either debit or credit transactions  Credit transactions result in receipt of payment from abroad  Merchandise exports  Transportation and travel receipts  Income received from investments abroad  Gifts received from foreign residents  Aid received from foreign governments  Local investments by overseas residents

3 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 3 The Balance of Payments  Debit transactions lead to payments to foreigners  Merchandise imports  Transportation and travel expenditures  Income paid on investments of foreigners  Gifts to foreign residents  Aid given by home government  Overseas investments by home country residents

4 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 4 Structure of the Balance of Payments Current account: payment for currently produced goods and services  Goods and services balance  Merchandise trade balance  Services balance  Investment income (net)  Unilateral transfers  Private transfer payments  Governmental transfers

5 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 5 Structure of the Balance of Payments Capital account  All purchases or sales of assets, including:  Direct investment  Securities (debt)  Bank claims and liabilities  Official settlements transactions

6 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 6 Current account Current account surplus and deficit  Current account and capital account balance each other. C + I + G + (X – Im) = Y = T + S + C Trade deficit:  (Im – X) = (I – S) + (G – T) Capital In = National Borrowing

7 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 7 US Balance of Payments, 1999 ($ bill.) Balance of Payments Current account Merchandise trade exports$683.0 imports-1,030.1 Net-347.1 Services Travel & transport recpts.5.3 other services, net74.3 All services, net79.6 Balance on goods & services-267.5 Cont’d.

8 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 8 US Balance of Payments, 1999 ($ bill.) Balance of Payments Current account (cont’d) Income receipts & payments investment income, net-19.1 employee compensation-5.7 All income, net-24.8 Unilateral transfers, net-46.6 Balance on current account$-338.9

9 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 9 US Balance of Payments, 1999 ($ bill.) Balance of Payments Capital account Changes in US assets abroad, net US official reserve assets$8.7 other US govt assets-0.4 US private assets-381.0 All changes, net-327.7 Changes in foreign assets in the US, net foreign official assets44.6 foreign private assets706.2 All changes, net750.8 Allocation of SDRs0 Statistical discrepancy-39.2 Balance on capital account$338.9

10 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 10 US Balance of Payments 1970-99 Balance of Payments ($ bill.)

11 Carbaugh, Chap. 11 11 Balance of Payments Current account deficit a problem?  Current account deficit has little to do with foreign trade practices or competitiveness  Determined mostly by domestic macro- economic conditions that cause demand to exceed supply and increase imports (paid for with borrowing)


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