Balance of Payments Flashcards

1
Q

What are the balance of payments?

A

a record of all the flows of money between the residents of one country and the rest of the world

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2
Q

What are imports?

A

an overseas produced good/service purchased by UK citizens resulting in an outflow of income from the UK

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3
Q

What are exports?

A

a UK produced good/service sold overseas resulting in an inflow of income into the UK

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4
Q

What is the current account on the balance of payments?

A

the section of the balance of payments that records international trade in goods, services, primary income & secondary income

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5
Q

What is the balance of trade in goods and services?

A

the value of exports of goods & services minus the value of imports of goods and services. If this is positive, there is a trade surplus, if it is negative there is a trade deficit

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6
Q

What does the current account record the exports and imports of?

A

Trade in goods – oil, energy, raw materials, food, manufactures, semi-manufactures, components, capital goods etc.
Trade in services – finance, insurance, business services, consulting, travel/tourism, telecommunication and information etc.
Primary income(net investment income) – the inflow of interest, profits and dividends on UK assets held abroad, less the outflow of interest, profits and dividends of foreign-owned assets in the UK.
Secondary income – net current transfers between countries such as foreign aid, gifts, payments to and from EU (due as part of the TCA).
Current account balance: the value of exports less the value of imports for goods, services, primary and secondary income

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7
Q

What are impacts of running a current account deficit?

A

Suggests a lack of international competitiveness/supply-side weakness
Withdrawal from the circular flow (X<M) reducing AD, slows growth
Loss of jobs in home-based industries (regional & structural unemployment)
May cause a depreciation of the currency & some inflationary pressure
Foreigners may own more UK assets
More imports can add to the standard of living
Imports of capital goods can help boost development

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8
Q

What are cyclical causes of a current account deficit?

A
  • Overvalued exchange rate
  • Boom in domestic demand
  • Recession in key export industries
  • Slump in global prices of exports Increased demand for imported technology
  • Increase in global energy/commodity prices (for net importers)
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9
Q

What are structural causes of a current account deficit?

A

Under-investment
Relatively low productivity
Persistently high relative inflation
Inadequate R&D, innovation
Emergence of low-cost competition (emerging markets)
Increase in global energy/commodity prices (for net exporter)

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