Balance of Payments A2 Flashcards

1
Q

What is the Current Account of a nation’s balance of payments made up of

A

Net balance of trade in goods
Net balance of trade in services
Net primary income
Net secondary income

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2
Q

What is primary income

A

Profits interest dividends and wages

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3
Q

Examples of Secondary Income

A

Overseas aid
Debt relief transfers
Military grants

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4
Q

What does the financial account include

A

Transactions that result in a change of ownership of financial assets and liabilities including:
Net balance of FDI
Net balance of portfolio investment flows
Balance of banking flows
Changes to the value of reserves of gold and foreign currency

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5
Q

What is foreign direct investment

A

Investment from one country into another that involves establishing operations or acquiring tangible assets

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6
Q

What are portfolio investment flows

A

When people/businesses from one country buy shares or other securities such as bonds in other nations

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7
Q

Causes of a Current Account Deficit

A

Poor price and non-price competitiveness

Strong exchange rate affecting demand for exports and imports

Recession in one or more country’s major trade partner countries

Volatile global prices

Strong domestic economic growth

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8
Q

Supply-side / Structural causes of a current account deficit

A

Relatively low labour productivity / high unit labour costs

Insufficient investment in capital which limits a nation’s export capacity

Low levels of national saving

Long term declines in the real prices of a country’s major exports

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9
Q

Consequences from a current account deficit

A

A loss of AD due to a trade deficit leads to weaker real GDP growth

Big current account deficit in a floating currency system leads to depreciation in a currency

Increase debt due to increase borrowing

Capital flight

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10
Q

What is a current account surplus

A

Net injection of income into a country’s circular flow

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11
Q

What are the main causes of a current account surplus

A

Large and persistent savings over investment
Net trade surplus

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12
Q

Measures to reduce a country’s imbalance on the current account

A

Expenditure switching policies and Expenditure reducing policies

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13
Q

What are expenditure switching policies

A

Policies designed to change the relative prices of exports and imports

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14
Q

What are expenditure reducing policies

A

Policies designed to lower real incomes and AD and thereby cut the demand for imports

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15
Q

To what extent is a current account deficit corrected by changes in a country’s exchange rate

A

A large current account deficit leads to an outflow of currency from the circular flow which then causes an exchange rate depreciation within a floating currency system

A weaker currency in theory brings about an adjustment of the trade balance as exports become more competitive in overseas markets and imported goods and services appear more expensive in domestic markets

In reality - the extent to which a current depreciation helps to improve the trade balance depends on a number of factors

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16
Q

What is the J Curve effect

A

Earnings for selling more exports may be insufficient to compensate for higher total spending on imports - this may lead to the balance of trade initially worsening

17
Q

What is the Marshall Lerner Condition

A

A depreciation / devaluation of the exchange rate will leaf to a net improvement in the trade balance provided that the sum of PED for exports and imports > 1