BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
- measures the money inflows and money outflows between the U.S. qand the rest of the world
- outflows from the U.S. are debits
- inflows are credits
Balance of Accounts
- three parts
- current account
- capital/financial account
- official reserves
Double Entry Bookkeeping
- every transaction in the balance of payments is recorded twice in accordance with standard accounting practice
Current Account
- balance of trade or net exports
- (exports of goods and services - imports of goods and services)
- net foreign income: (income earned by U.S. owned foreign assets - income paid to foreign held U.S. assets)
- net transfers (unilateral): foreign aid is a debit to the current account
Capital/ Financial Account
- balance of capital ownership
- includes the purchase of both real and financial assets
- direct investment in the U.S. is a credit to the capital account
- direct investment by U.S. firms/individual in a foreign country are debits to the capital account
- purchase of foreign financial assets by a foreign country represents a credit to the capital account
Relationship Between Current and Capital/Financial Account
- should zero out each other
- if current account has a negative balance (deficit) then the capital account should have a positive balance (surplus)
Official Reserves
- foreign currency holding of U.S. Federal Reserve System
- with the balance of payments surplus, the FED accumulates foreign currency and debits the balance of payments
- with balance of payments deficit, the FED depletes its reserves of foreign currency and credits balance of payments
- zero out the balance of payments
- active vs. passive: the U.S. is passive in its use of official reserves and does not seek to manipulate the exchange rate
Balance of Trade
- (goods and services exports - goods and services imports)
- surplus: imports > exports
- deficit: exports > imports
Current Account
- (balance of trade + net investments + net transfers)
Capital Account
- (foreign purchases of U.S. assets + U.S. purchase of assets abroad)
Official Reserves
- (capital account balance + current account balance)
Foreign Exchange (FOREX)
Four Tips
Changes in Exchange Rates
Determinants of Exchange Rate
- buying or selling of currency
- exchange rate (e) is determined in the foreign currency markets
- exchange rate is price of a currency
Four Tips
- change the demand line on one currency graph and the supply line on the other currency's graph
- move the lines of the two currency graphs in the same direction (right or left)
- if demand on one graph increases, supply on the other will also increase
- If demand moves left, supply moves left on other graph
Changes in Exchange Rates
- exchange rates (e) are a function of the supply and demand for currency
- increase in supply of currency makes it cheaper to buy one unit of it, vice versa for a decrease in supply
- increase in demand of currency will make buying one unit more expensive, vice versa for decrease in demand
Determinants of Exchange Rate
- Consumer Tastes
- Relative Economy
- Relative Price Level
- Speculation
I personally don't think this needs a visual. Your notes were very easy to follow and categorize.
ReplyDeleteI suggest detailing each bulletin a bit more, would definitely make the notes more informatively rich
ReplyDelete