The International Economy Flashcards

(35 cards)

1
Q

Exchange rate

A

The price of one currency in terms of another

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2
Q

Floating exchange rate

A

Determined by market forces in the Forex market
PRO- Interest rates are focused on inflation & growth
CON- Volatile

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3
Q

Reasons why demand/supply of a currency can change

A

Purchase of foreign goods/services
Tourism
Hot money flows
Purchase of foreign shares/bonds
Speculation
Gov intervention

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4
Q

Impact of exchange rate on an industry depends on

A

Exporter or importer
How dependent on trade
If raw materials are imported
Strength of foreign competition in domestic market
Currency involved

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5
Q

Effect of appreciation

A

Exports expensive & imports cheap, so less exports and more imports, so worse trade balance, AD decreases.
But also imported raw materials cheaper, so SRAS increases, cost-push inflation decreases.

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6
Q

How the gov can devalue the £

A

Buy foreign currency (so sell £)
Reduce interest rates (hot money out)

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7
Q

Marshall lerner condition

A

Trade balance will only improve from depreciation if PED for exports/imports is elastic

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8
Q

J curve effect

A

Depreciation may initially worsen trade balance but improve in the long run because firms need time to adjust

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9
Q

Balance of payments

A

Gov accounts which record financial transactions between UK and R.O.W.

Current account & Capital account
ALWAYS BALANCES
Usually measured in % of GDP

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10
Q

Current account (Van In Pea Soup)

A

Visible balance (goods)
Invisible balance (services)
Primary income (profits, dividends, interest)
Secondary income (foreign aid)

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11
Q

Capital account (Dust Pan Brush)

A

Direct investment flows
(foreign firm investing in UK)
Portfolio investment flows
(foreign firm buying UK shares/bonds)
Banking flows
(foreign currency reserves, hot money, interbank lending)

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12
Q

Export led multiplier

A

Increase in X results in more than proportional increase in AD

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13
Q

Long term impacts of trade deficit

A

Structural/Regional imbalance
Hysteresis
Reliance on borrowing
Reliance on imports
Less confidence, further fall in AD

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14
Q

Expenditure switching (to fix trade deficit)

A

Import tariffs and other protectionism
Depreciation
Low relative interest rates

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15
Q

Issues with protectionism

A

Less economic welfare
Trade wars
Economic damage to foreign countries
Less need for specialisation/R&D

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16
Q

Motives for protectionism

A

Protect new or declining industries
Protect strategic industries
Protect non-renewables
Protect jobs
Improve trade balance

17
Q

Devaluation in the UK

A

Despite a weak pound since 2008, our trade deficit has gotten worse. This is because of our inelastic PED for imports and slow growing X from low investment.

18
Q

Policies to address BoP

A

As the current account deficit is counter cyclical it can be improved by reducing demand.

As we have a high MPM, lower incomes would mean far less M.

Long term solution is supply side policies, to increase X and reduce need for M

19
Q

Weaknesses of UK exports

A

Productivity gap
Low investment
Lack of R&D
Lack of manufacturing

20
Q

SSP to improve trade balance

A

Attracting FDI (low corporation tax) to increase X

Tax breaks to increase capital investment

Developing new areas

21
Q

Comparative advantage

A

A country should specialise in the product that they can produce at the lowest opportunity cost.

22
Q

Benefits of international trade

A

-More choice
-Increased competition
-Larger markets
-Exports

23
Q

Dumping

A

A firm exporting to another country at a price below what it charges in its home country or below CoP

24
Q

Pros/cons of globalisation on a firm

A

Pros -Cheaper labour and raw mats
-Shared info
-Larger markets
Cons -Vulnerability of G.P.Networks
-Unfair competition (TNCs)

25
Advantages of being in EU
-Each country can specialise and trade with each other freely -FDI -Political stability -Increased competition
26
Disadvantages of EU
-UK was a net contributor (£8bn) -Loss of sovereignty -CAP leads to higher food prices
27
Pros of TNCs
-Jobs and income -Infrastructure investment -Improved skills
28
Cons of TNCs
-Environmental damage -Tax and profits go overseas -Over-exploitation of resources -Footloose
29
Development definition
Improving people's incomes, capacities and capabilities so that they can live their lives with greater freedom.
30
Primary export dependency
- >60% of exports -Vulnerable to volatile prices -91% of LICs
31
Prebisch-Singer hypothesis
In LR, prices of primary commodities decline relative to manufactured goods. But labour intensive manufacture can be cheaper and non-renewables are increasing in scarcity and price.
32
Dutch disease
When the discovery of natural resources leads to appreciation, as other nations want to buy them. So making exports less competitive.
33
Harrod-Domar model
A higher savings ratio leads to higher investment, so improving productive potential and LR output. Rate of growth = Savings ratio/Capital-output ratio
34
Capital-output ratio
Total capital/total output (efficiency of capital)
35
Foreign currency gap
Caused by currency outflows persistently exceeding inflows. Results in lack of foreign currency to pay for imports.