Macro 3 - Balance of Payments on Trade Flashcards
(40 cards)
Balance of payments - definition
> A record of all payments or financial transactions between a country and other economies over a given period of time.
Exports - definition
> Any good or service a domestic firm sells to foreign consumers in exchange for money.
Injection into CF.
Imports - definition
> Value of goods and services from abroad that are bought into an economy.
Leakage CF.
Trade deficit - implications
> If a country is spending significantly more money on imports than it’s receiving for exports, this can be harmful to the economy or suggest the economy is in poor health.
Number of reasons for this:
1. Suggests income is lower than expenditure.
2. May lead to increasing debt - difficult to pay off.
3. May mean economy is dependent upon other countries for essential goods and services while there’s less demand for domestically produced goods , which can mean a lack of revenue for domestic firms, and in turn, less income to domestic workers.
However, implications of deficit depends on a variety of factors.
What 3 accounts is the BoP made up of?
> Current account
Financial account
Capital account
What are the four sections on the current account?
- Trade in goods.
- Trade in services.
- Primary income (Investment and employment income).
- Transfers (or ‘secondary income’).
Current account - trade in goods
> Measures the exports and imports of visible goods.
UK’s biggest visible exports: machinery, mechanical appliances and pharmaceuticals.
UK’s biggest visible imports: mineral fuels, oils, machinery and mechanical appliances.
Current account - trade in services
> Measures exports and imports of invisible goods.
UK’s biggest invisible exports: insurance and banking.
UK’s biggest invisible imports: tourism.
Current account - primary income
> This covers the flow of money in and out of a country resulting from employment or earlier investment. E.g:
- Deposits in foreign banks receive interest payments.
- Businesses set up overseas by a UK company will earn profits for the UK parent company.
- Shares bought in foreign firms will bring dividend payments to the UK shareholder - the shares themselves won’t appear on the current account.
- Salaries paid to UK residents working abroad.
Current account - secondary income
> Transfers are the movements of money between countries which aren’t paying for goods or services and aren’t the result of investment.
Transfers include payments made to family members abroad and aid paid to or received from foreign countries.
UK Current Account and BoP
> The UK has a large deficit on its current account, and it has had a deficit every year since 1984.
This means that the UK’s current macroeconomic policy includes having to deal with a BoP deficit.
Capital Account
> The capital account includes transfers of non-monetary and fixed assets - the most important part of this is the flow of non-monetary and fixed assets of immigrants and emigrants, e.g. when an immigrant comes to the UK, their assets become part of the UK’s total assets.
Debt forgiveness is included on the capital account.
Financial account
> The financial account involves the movement of financial assets. It includes:
-Foreign Direct Investment.
-Portfolio investment - investment in financial assets, such as shares in overseas companies.
-Financial derivatives - these are contracts whose value is based on the value of an asset, e.g. foreign currency.
-Reserve assets - these are financial assets held by the Bank of England to be used as and when they are needed.
Income from the financial account, e.g. in the form of interest, is recorded in the current account.
FDI - Definition
> This is when a firm based in one country makes an investment in a different country.
Short-term capital and financial flows
> Short-term flows (sometimes called ‘hot money’) are based on speculation and people/firms trying to quickly make more money.
E.g. by moving money from one currency to another expecting to make a profit through changes in exchange rates.
Long-term capital and financial flows
> Long-term flows are due to things such as FDI and portfolio investment,
They’re usually quite predictable as, for example, FDI is often made when a country gains a comparative advantage in producing something, which tends to happen over a long period of time.
Hot money
> When interest rates are high in the UK, big financial institutions want to buy the pound.
They do this so that they can put their money into UK banks to take advantage of the high rewards for savers brought about by the high interest rates.
This is likely to be a short-term movement of money and it’s called ‘hot money’.
Variables that may affect the BoP for any economy
- Inflation
- Costs of production
- Global trends
- Exchange rates
- Productivity
- Interest rates
- Household income
Variables that affect BoP - inflation
> A country’s competitiveness will be reduced by inflation as exports will cost more to buy and imports will be cheaper. If exports fall and imports rise, then this could create a deficit in the balance of payments and increase unemployment.
Inflation discourages saving because the value of savings falls. This makes it more attractive to spend creating demand-pull inflation before prices rise further.
A reluctance to save creates a shortage of funds for borrowing and investment, which means that it is harder for firms to make improvements. If interest rates go up to reduce inflation this will also reduce investment.
Inflation creates uncertainty for firms as rising costs will reduce investment - harming future growth.
Variables that affect BoP - costs of production
> E.g. if country A forms trade unions to protect rights of workers and increase pay, the labour force will be more expensive and hence, so will their goods.
Consumers will buy from a different source, reducing country A’s exports and increasing imports.
Creates deficit on the current account.
Variables that affect BoP - global trends
> Influences on global tastes may increase/decrease demand for certain goods/services, affecting the current account.
Decline in smoking due to research could cause problems for the BoP of tobacco producing countries.
Variables that affect BoP - exchange rates
> A higher exchange rate for the pound makes UK exports more expensive.
Now the cost of buying pounds is higher so foreigners have to pay more of their currency to gain the same amount of good in pounds.
When this happens exports go down worsening the current account on the balance of payments.
Variables that affect BoP - interest rates
> High interests rates cause a short-term movement of money known as ‘hot money’, where big institutions want to buy the pound so they can take advantage of the high rewards for savings brought about by the high interest rates. An increased demand for the pound means its price goes up so the pounds exchange rate rises. A high exchange rate makes UK exports more expensive so they decrease. BoP worsens.
High UK interest rates mean imports from abroad become cheaper, worsening the current account.
Imports are a leakage in the circular flow of income so more spending on imports means a reduction in AD.
AD
> Aggregate demand is the total demand, or the total spending on goods and services, in an economy over a given time period.