1 / 6

HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE. CENTERS FOR TRADE DEVELOPED—BABYLON, CAIRO, ATHENS, ROME, LONDON, NEW YORK, TOKYO PRIOR TO WW I MOST COUNTRIES ON GOLD STANDARD FEDERAL RESERVE ACT OF 1913—MOVED AWAY FROM GOLD OR SILVER BACKING U.S. TRIED TO GO BACK ON GOLD STANDARD IN 1920’S, ABANDONED IN 1933.

enoch
Télécharger la présentation

HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL TRADE • CENTERS FOR TRADE DEVELOPED—BABYLON, CAIRO, ATHENS, ROME, LONDON, NEW YORK, TOKYO • PRIOR TO WW I MOST COUNTRIES ON GOLD STANDARD • FEDERAL RESERVE ACT OF 1913—MOVED AWAY FROM GOLD OR SILVER BACKING • U.S. TRIED TO GO BACK ON GOLD STANDARD IN 1920’S, ABANDONED IN 1933

  2. INTERNATIONAL MONETARY FUND (IMF) • CREATED IN 1944 TO PROMOTE WORLD TRADE THROUGH MONITORING AND MAINTAINING FIXED EXCHANGE RATES AND MAKING LOANS TO COUNTRIES WITH TRADE IMBALANCES • 1945-1972—USED COMBINATION OF GOLD AND U.S. DOLLAR FOR FOREIGN EXCHANGE RESERVES • IN 1970, CREATED SDRs (SPECIAL DRAWING RIGHTS)—BASKET OF CURRENCIES FOR INTERNATIONAL PAYMENTS (16 CURRENCIES) • TODAY BASKET OF 4—U.S.(45%), EURO(29%), JAPAN(15%), BRITISH(11%)

  3. EXCHANGE RATES • 1973 – PRESENT—MOSTLY FLEXIBLE EXCHANGE RATES • INDIA, CHINA AND RUSSIA EMPLOY MANAGED FLOATING SYSTEM WITH ACTIVE GOV’T INVOLVEMENT • CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES—VALUE OF ONE COUNTRY’S CURRENCY RELATIVE TO ANOTHER (QUOTES FOR LARGE TRANSACTIONS MORE FAVORABLE THAN FOR SMALLER TRANSACTIONS) • CURRENCY EXCHANGE RATES IMPACTED BY- • SUPPLY/DEMAND • RELATIVE INFLATION RATES (LOW INFLATION RATES = STRONGER CURRENCY) • RELATIVE INTEREST RATES • POLITICAL RISKS (POTENTIAL FOR CONFISCATION OR EXPROPRIATION) • ECONOMIC RISKS (FUTURE CHANGES IN THE COUNTRY’S ECONOMY)

  4. IMPACT ON EXCHANGE RATES

  5. FOREIGN CORUPT PRACTICES ACT (1978) – MAKES BRIBES TO FOREIGN OFFICIALS ILLEGAL, REQUIRES GOOD INTERNAL ACCOUNTING CONTROLS • FUTURES MARKET – USED TO LOCK IN EXCHANGE RATES TO AVOID DETERIATION OF TRANSACTION VALUE • EXPORT-IMPORT BANK—U.S. AGENCY DESIGNED TO ASSIST INTERNATIONAL TRADE (LOANS TO FOREIGN COUNTRIES AND GOVERNMENTS TO BUY U.S. GOODS) • FINANCING INTERNATIONAL TRADE • DRAFTS—SIMILAR TO CHECKS • BANKERS ACCEPTANCES—ISSUED BY FIRM AND GUARANTED BY BANK (NOT OVER 6 MONTHS) • TRAVELER’S LETTER OF CREDIT–ARRANGEMENT TO HONOR AT SPECIFIC FOREIGN BANKS • TRAVELER’S CHECKS—SMALL DENOMINATIONS (PRIMARILY USED BY TOURISTS)

  6. BALANCING FOREIGN TRADE • REQUIRES COOPERATION AMONG NATIONS • SINCE MORE TRADE IS DONE IN U.S. DOLLARS, U.S. DECISIONS HAVE LARGE IMPACT ON WORLD TRADE • U.S. GOVERNMENT DOESN’T CONTROL DECISIONS TO IMPORT AND EXPORT, INDIVIDUALS AND FIRMS DO • OVER 10% OF U.S. NATIONAL INCOME COMES FROM SELLING GOODS TO FOREIGNERS • GENERALLY, INTERNATIONAL TRADE BENEFITS ALL COUNTRIES • CONSUMERS BENEFIT BY GETTING LOWER COST GOODS SINCE THE GOODS COME FROM THE COUNTRY WHERE THEY ARE PRODUCED MOST EFFICIENTLY • PRODUCERS BENEFIT BY HAVING AN EXPANDED MARKET

More Related