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IF_Lecture_5_full.pptx

Lecture 5 Balance of Payments

Learning Objectives

Understand balance of payments account categories, the relationship between them and the identities

Comprehend the double-entry recording system in the balance of payments statement

Gain knowledge of international economic linkages through the balance of payments

Discuss the relationship between trade deficits and macroeconomic fundamentals

Reading: Madura and Fox, Ch 2; Bekaert and Hodrick, Ch 4; Peijin Wang, Ch4

Motivation

We have examined parity conditions

But not yet the ‘real’ side of economies

So this is what we will turn to now

How to measure financial flows between countries

Different types of activity

Also how these determine exchange rates

Whether considering the value of assets

Or these financial flows

Balance of Payments (BOP)

A statistical statement or record

Of a country’s international economic transactions

With another country or the rest of the world

Over a certain period of time, often a year

This measures

Flows of goods, services and capital

out of and into the country.

How is balance of payments measured?

Double entry bookkeeping

Transactions

-- Involve flows of goods, services and capital.

Are presented in the form of double-entry bookkeeping,

i.e. every transaction is recorded as both a credit and a debit

With equal values and opposite signs.

The net balance of all entries in the statement is in theory zero.

Although there may be statistical errors (minor)

Difference between Transactions and Transfers

Transactions

Most entries in the balance of payments refer to transactions

Economic values are provided or received in exchange for other economic values.

Therefore, offsetting credit and debit entries are entered for the transaction.

Transfers

When items are given away rather than exchanged, or when a recording is one-sided for other reasons,

special types of entries – referred to as transfers – are made as the required offsets.

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Real Resources and Financial Items

We should distinguish between

Real resources

Goods

Services

Income

Financial items

Investments (private)

Reserves (government)

However treatment of them in Balance of Payments is similar

The Balance of Payments - Credit Entries and Debit Entries

An intuitive rule for determining credits and debits

Credit transactions give rise to conceptual inflows or sources of foreign exchange; the purchases of goods and assets by foreign residents from domestic residents are credits because they are a source of foreign exchange

Debit transactions give rise to conceptual outflows or uses of foreign exchange; the purchases of goods and assets by domestic residents from foreign residents are debits because they cause an outflow of foreign exchange

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Credit Entries and Debit Entries

For each of these there may be

Credit entries (+) recorded for

Real resources: exports of goods and services; income receipts

Financial items: deductions in foreign assets or increases in foreign liabilities.

Debit entries (-) recorded for

Real resources: imports of goods and services; income payments

Financial items: increases in foreign assets or decreases in foreign liabilities.

Categories in the Balance of Payments

There are three categories:

Current account

Capital and financial account

Capital account

Financial account

Statistical discrepancies

- representing omitted and miss-recorded transactions.

Current Account

The major components in the current account

Exports of goods and services (+)

Imports of goods and services (-)

(Referred to as the trade balance)

Income

Income receipts (+)

(Interest and dividend receipts)

Income payments (-)

(Interest and dividend payments)

Current transfer

Transfer payments between countries (e.g., gifts or aid)

Capital and Financial Account

Capital Account

International transfers of ownership

Acquisition/disposal of non-produced, non-financial assets:

The purchase and sale of two types of assets: tangible and intangible assets.

Capital transfer: Catastrophic losses, Debt forgiveness, etc.

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Capital and Financial Account

Financial Account

-- The financial account records public and private investment and lending.

-- It consists of

Foreign direct investment

abroad (-), in reporting economy (+)

Portfolio investments

assets (-), liabilities (+)

Other investments

assets (-), liabilities (+)

Reserve assets/Official reserves

27/11/2017

HUBS

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Reserve Assets/Official Reserves

Reserve assets cover transactions in assets

Considered by the monetary authorities

As available for use in funding payments imbalances and meeting other financial needs.

It reflects surplus and deficit in the current account

And private sector transactions

in the capital and financial account

It consists of

Reserve gold

SDRs - reserve position in the IMF

foreign exchange assets (currency, deposits, and securities).

27/11/2017

Example

Suppose the US computer maker Dell sells $20 million of computer to Komatsu, a Japanese manufactory. Komatsu pays Dell by transferring dollars from its dollar-denominated bank account at Citibank in New York to Dell’s bank account in Japan. What are the credit and debit items on the US balance of payments?

US BOP Credit Debit
Computer purchase by Komatsu from Dell (Current account, US, good export) +$20m
Citibank foreign deposit decrease (Capital account; capital outflow from the US) -$20m

Exercise

Suppose LVMH, a French luxury goods company, buys €1.5 million of consulting services from the London Consulting Group (LCG). LVMH pays by writing a check on its euro-denominated bank account at a Paris bank. What are the credit and debit items on the French balance of payments?

French BOP Credit Debit
Service purchase by LVMH from LCG (Current account, French, service import) -€1.5 million
Paris bank foreign deposit increase (Capital account: capital inflow) +€1.5 million

Exercise

Suppose LVMH, a French luxury goods company, buys €1.5 million of consulting services from the London Consulting Group (LCG). LVMH pays by writing a check on its euro-denominated bank account at a Paris bank. What are the credit and debit items on the UK balance of payments?

UK BOP Credit Debit
Service purchase by LVMH from LCG (Current account, UK, service export) +€1.5 million
Foreign assets increase (Capital account: capital outflow from UK) -€1.5 million

The Balance of Payments Identity

Sum of all transactions must be zero

Under a pure flexible exchange rate regime

Current Account + Capital & Financial Account = 0

CA + KFA = 0

Under a managed exchange rate regime

Need to also consider the Official Reserve Account

CA + KFA + ORA = 0

U.S. Balance of Payment for 2009 (billions of dollars; credits, +; debits, –)

Table 1: Current Account Balances for the G7 Countries as a Percentage of GDP

Trade Deficits ~ Macroeconomic Fundamentals

Given the fact that most developed countries are experiencing the trade deficits, can the trade deficits be explained by macroeconomic fundamentals?

Trade Deficits ~ Macroeconomic Fundamentals

Linking the Current Account to National Income

Gross National Income = Gross domestic product + Net Foreign Income

GNI = GDP + NFI (1)

By definition of GDP, GDP = C+ I + G + NX

Where

C - consumption

I – investment

G - government purchases

NX – net exports

Trade Deficits ~ Macroeconomic Fundamentals

GNI = C+ I + G + NX + NFI (2)

Re-arranging eq(2)

GNI – (C + G) - I = (NX + NFI) (3)

S - I = CA (4)

Where S - Savings

Trade Deficits ~ Macroeconomic Fundamentals

If CA < 0 , then S – I < 0 or S < I.

That is domestic savings do not suffice to finance investment.

In other words, the given country borrows from abroad.

This implies a Capital/Financial Account surplus(due to the capital inflow) and a CA deficit.

On the other hand, if CA > 0, then S – I >0, or S > I

Implies an increase in net foreign wealth (ie, saving) and lending abroad.

In summary, the CA depends on the relative balance between S and I.

Conclusions

Business School