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Chapter 19(34)

THIRD EDITION ECONOMICS and MACROECONOMICS Paul Krugman | Robin Wells. Chapter 19(34). Open-Economy Macroeconomics. The meaning and measurement of the balance of payments The determinants of international capital flows The role of the foreign exchange market and the exchange rate

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Chapter 19(34)

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  1. THIRD EDITION ECONOMICS and MACROECONOMICSPaul Krugman | Robin Wells Chapter 19(34) Open-Economy Macroeconomics

  2. The meaning and measurement of the balance of payments • The determinants of international capital flows • The role of the foreign exchange market and the exchange rate • The importance of real exchange rates and their role in the current account • The considerations that lead countries to choose different exchange rate regimes, such as fixed exchange rates and floating exchange rates • Why open-economy considerations affect macroeconomic policy under floating exchange rates WHAT YOU WILL LEARN IN THIS CHAPTER

  3. Capital Flows and the Balance of Payments • A country’s balance of paymentsaccounts summarize its transactions with the rest of the world. • The balance of payments on current account, or current account, includes the balance of payments on goods and services together with balances on factor income and transfers. • The merchandise trade balance is a frequently cited component of the balance of payments on goods and services.

  4. Capital Flows and the Balance of Payments • A country’s balance of paymentson financial account, or simply its financial account, is the difference between its sales of assets to foreigners and its purchases of assets from foreigners during a given period.

  5. Capital Flows and the Balance of Payments Example: The Costas’ Financial Year

  6. The U.S. Balance of Payments, 2007

  7. The U.S. Balance of Payments, 2010

  8. The Balance of Payments

  9. FOR INQUIRING MINDS GDP, GNP, and the Current Account • Why doesn’t the national income equation use the current account as a whole? • Gross domestic product, which is the value of goods and services produced in a country, doesn’t include two sources of income that are included in calculating the current account balance: international factor income and international transfers. • For example, the profits of Ford Motors U.K. aren’t included in America’s GDP and the funds Latin American immigrants send home to their families aren’t subtracted from GDP. • Gross national product does include international factor income.

  10. FOR INQUIRING MINDS GDP, GNP, and the Current Account • Estimates of U.S. GNP differ slightly from estimates of GDP. • GNP adds in items such as the earnings of U.S. companies abroad and subtracts items such as the interest payments on bonds owned by residents of China and Japan. • Economists use GDP rather than a broader measure because: • the original purpose of the national accounts was to track production rather than income; and • data on international factor income and transfer payments are generally considered somewhat unreliable.

  11. Trade Reciprocity

  12. GLOBAL COMPARISON Current Account Surpluses and Deficits

  13. The Loanable Funds Model – Revisited

  14. Loanable Funds Markets in Two Countries

  15. International Capital Flows

  16. FOR INQUIRING MINDS A Global Savings Glut? • In 2005, Ben Bernanke said that the “principal causes of the U.S. current account deficit” were from outside the country. He argued that special factors had created a “global savings glut” that had pushed down interest rates worldwide. • What caused this global savings glut? According to Bernanke, the main cause was the series of financial crises that began in Thailand in 1997… moved across much of Asia… then hit Russia in 1998, Brazil in 1999, and Argentina in 2002.

  17. FOR INQUIRING MINDS A Global Savings Glut? • As a result, a number of these countries experienced large capital outflows. • For the most part, the capital flowed to the United States.

  18. ECONOMICS IN ACTION The Golden Age of Capital Flows • The golden age of capital flows actually preceded World War I—from 1870 to 1914. • During this period, Britain offered investors a higher return and attracted capital inflows. • During the golden age of capital flows, the big recipients of capital from Europe were also places to which large numbers of Europeans were moving.

  19. ECONOMICS IN ACTION The Golden Age of Capital Flows • These large-scale population movements were possible before World War I because there were few legal restrictions on immigration. • Modern governments often limit foreign investment because they fear it will diminish their national autonomy. In the nineteenth century, such actions were rare.

  20. The Role of the Exchange Rate • Currencies are traded in the foreign exchange market. • The prices at which currencies trade are known as exchange rates. • When a currency becomes more valuable in terms of other currencies, it appreciates. • When a currency becomes less valuable in terms of other currencies, it depreciates.

  21. The Foreign Exchange Market

  22. Equilibrium Exchange Rate • The equilibrium exchange rate is the exchange rate at which the quantity of a currency demanded in the foreign exchange market is equal to the quantity supplied.

  23. Equilibrium in the Foreign Exchange Market A Hypothetical Example

  24. PITFALL Which Way Is Up? • Suppose someone says, “The U.S. exchange rate is up.” What does that person mean? • Sometimes the exchange rate is measured as the price of a dollar in terms of foreign currency. • Sometimes the exchange rate is measured as the price of foreign currency in terms of dollars.

  25. PITFALL Which Way Is Up? • You have to be particularly careful when using published statistics. • For example, Mexican officials will say that the exchange rate is 10, meaning 10 pesos per dollar. But Britain, for historical reasons, usually states its exchange rate the other way around.

  26. An Increase in the Demand for U.S. Dollars

  27. Effects of Increased Capital Inflows

  28. Real Exchange Rates • Real exchange rates are exchange rates adjusted for international differences in aggregate price levels. • Real exchange rate = Mexican pesos per U.S. dollars × PUS/PMex

  29. Real versus Nominal Exchange Rates

  30. Purchasing Power Parity The purchasing power parity between two countries’ currencies is the nominal exchange rate at which a given basket of goods and services would cost the same amount in each country.

  31. Purchasing Power Parity versus Nominal Exchange Rate

  32. FOR INQUIRING MINDS Burgernomics • The Economist has produced an annual comparison of the cost of a McDonald’s Big Mac in different countries. • The Big Mac index looks at the price of a Big Mac in local currency and computes the following: • the price of a Big Mac in U.S. dollars using the prevailing exchange rate • the exchange rate at which the price of a Big Mac would equal the U.S. price

  33. FOR INQUIRING MINDS Burgernomics • If purchasing power parity held, the dollar price of a Big Mac would be the same everywhere. • Estimates of purchasing power parity based on the Big Mac index are relatively consistent with more elaborate measures.

  34. ECONOMICS IN ACTION Low-Cost America • Why were European automakers, such as Volvo and BMW, flocking to America? • To some extent because they were being offered special incentives. • But the big factor was the exchange rate. • In the early 2000s, 1 euro was, on average, worth less than a dollar; by the summer of 2008 the exchange rate was around €1 = $1.50. • This change in the exchange rate made it substantially cheaper for European car manufacturers to produce in the United States than at home.

  35. U.S. Net Exports, 1995–2011 ECONOMICS IN ACTION

  36. Exchange Rate Policy • An exchange rate regime is a rule governing policy toward the exchange rate. • A country has a fixed exchange rate when the government keeps the exchange rate against some other currency at or near a particular target. • A country has a floating exchange rate when the government lets the exchange rate go wherever the market takes it.

  37. Exchange Market Intervention • Government purchases or sales of currency in the foreign exchange market are exchange market interventions. • Foreign exchange reserves are stocks of foreign currency that governments maintain to buy their own currency on the foreign exchange market. • Foreign exchange controls are licensing systems that limit the right of individuals to buy foreign currency.

  38. Exchange Market Intervention

  39. Exchange Rate Regime Dilemma • Exchange rate policy poses a dilemma: there are economic payoffs to stable exchange rates, but the policies used to fix the exchange rate have costs. • Exchange market intervention requires large reserves, and exchange controls distort incentives. • If monetary policy is used to help fix the exchange rate, it isn’t available to use for domestic policy.

  40. FOR INQUIRING MINDS The Road to the Euro

  41. ECONOMICS IN ACTION China Pegs the Yuan • China’s spectacular success as an exporter led to a rising surplus on current account. • At the same time, non-Chinese private investors became increasingly eager to shift funds into China, to take advantage of its growing domestic economy

  42. ECONOMICS IN ACTION China Pegs the Yuan • As a result of the current account surplus and private capital inflows, at the target exchange rate, the demand for yuan exceeded the supply. • To keep the rate fixed, China had to engage in large-scale exchange market intervention—selling yuan, buying up other countries’ currencies (mainly U.S. dollars) on the foreign exchange market, and adding them to its reserves.

  43. Exchange Rates and Macroeconomic Policy • A devaluation is a reduction in the value of a currency that previously had a fixed exchange rate. • A revaluation is an increase in the value of a currency that previously had a fixed exchange rate.

  44. Monetary Policy Under Floating Exchange Rates • Under floating exchange rates, expansionary monetary policy works in part through the exchange rate: cutting domestic interest rates leads to a depreciation, and through that to higher exports and lower imports, which increases aggregate demand. • Contractionary monetary policy has the reverse effect.

  45. Monetary Policy and the Exchange Rate

  46. International Business Cycles • The fact that one country’s imports are another country’s exports creates a link between the business cycle in different countries. • Floating exchange rates, however, may reduce the strength of that link.

  47. ECONOMICS IN ACTION The Joy of a Devalued Pound • On September 16, 1992, Britain abandoned its fixed exchange rate policy. • The pound promptly dropped 20% against the German mark, the most important European currency at the time. • The British government would no longer have to engage in large-scale exchange market intervention to support the pound’s value.

  48. ECONOMICS IN ACTION The Joy of a Devalued Pound • The devaluation would increase aggregate demand, so the pound’s fall would help reduce British unemployment. • Because Britain no longer had a fixed exchange rate, it was free to pursue an expansionary monetary policy to fight its slump.

  49. Summary A country’s balance of payments accounts summarize its transactions with the rest of the world. The balance of payments on current account, or current account, includes the balance of payments on goods and services together with balances on factor income and transfers. The merchandise trade balance, or trade balance, is a frequently cited component of the balance of payments on goods and services. The balance of payments on financial account, or financial account, measures capital flows. By definition, the balance of payments on current account plus the balance of payments on financial account is zero.

  50. Summary Capital flows respond to international differences in interest rates and other rates of return; they can be usefully analyzed using an international version of the loanable funds model, which shows how a country where the interest rate would be low in the absence of capital flows sends funds to a country where the interest rate would be high in the absence of capital flows. The underlying determinants of capital flows are international differences in savings and opportunities for investment spending.

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