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What is the balance of payments (BoP)?
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What is the balance of payments (BoP)?
A record of all economic transactions between the residents of a country and the rest of the world over a given time period. It consists of the current account, capital account, and financial account.
A country's financial record with the rest of the world.
What is the financial account?
The part of the BoP that records cross-border transactions involving financial assets: foreign direct investment (FDI), portfolio investment (shares, bonds), and changes in official reserve assets (central bank reserves).
FDI, portfolio investment, reserve changes.
What are the four components of the current account?
1) Trade in goods (visible trade/merchandise). 2) Trade in services (invisible trade). 3) Primary income (wages, investment returns). 4) Secondary income (transfers — aid, remittances).
Goods, services, primary income, secondary income.
What is the trade balance (balance of trade)?
Exports of goods minus imports of goods. A positive value means a trade surplus (exports > imports); negative means a trade deficit (imports > exports). This is typically the largest component of the current account.
Goods exported − goods imported.
What are the three main accounts of the BoP?
1) Current account: trade in goods/services, income, transfers. 2) Capital account: transfers of non-financial assets (small). 3) Financial account: FDI, portfolio investment, reserve changes. The BoP must always balance to zero.
Current + Capital + Financial = 0.
What is the difference between FDI and portfolio investment?
FDI is a long-term investment establishing a lasting interest in a foreign business (≥10% ownership), e.g. building a factory. Portfolio investment is buying foreign financial assets (shares, bonds) without control, often short-term and mobile.
FDI = building/buying businesses. Portfolio = buying shares/bonds.
What is primary income in the current account?
Earnings from factors of production owned abroad: wages earned by citizens working in other countries and investment income (profits, dividends, interest) from foreign assets. Net = income received − income paid.
Wages and investment returns from abroad.
Why must the balance of payments always balance?
It is a double-entry accounting system. Every transaction has two sides — e.g., buying imports (current account debit) must be financed by selling assets or borrowing (financial account credit). A deficit in one account is offset by a surplus elsewhere.
Double-entry bookkeeping: every outflow = an inflow.
How does a current account deficit relate to the financial account?
A current account deficit must be financed by a financial account surplus. The country borrows from abroad, sells assets, or attracts FDI/portfolio investment to cover the gap between what it earns and what it spends.
CA deficit = FA surplus — foreigners finance the gap.
What is the difference between a BoP deficit and a current account deficit?
The whole BoP always balances (by definition). When people say "BoP deficit," they usually mean a current account deficit — where the country imports more goods/services than it exports, spending more abroad than it earns.
People mean current account deficit, not the whole BoP.
What are official reserves and why are they in the financial account?
Official reserves are foreign currency and gold held by the central bank. Changes in reserves are recorded in the financial account. Selling reserves finances a deficit; buying reserves absorbs a surplus.
Central bank's foreign currency stockpile.
What is secondary income in the current account?
One-way transfers of money where nothing is received in return: foreign aid, remittances sent by workers to their home countries, and contributions to international organisations.
One-way money flows: aid, remittances.
Give an example of a country with a persistent current account surplus.
Germany consistently runs a large current account surplus due to strong manufacturing exports (cars, machinery). Its exports of goods far exceed imports, and it earns significant investment income from foreign assets.
Germany — strong exports, big surplus.
What is the role of the "errors and omissions" item in the BoP?
It is a statistical balancing entry that accounts for measurement errors, unrecorded transactions, and timing differences. It ensures the BoP sums to zero even when data is imperfect.
Plugs the gap from imperfect data.
How does the BoP reflect global interdependence?
A country's deficit is another's surplus. Capital flows, trade, and income transfers connect economies. A financial crisis in one country can spread through the BoP — reduced imports hit partners' exports and FDI withdrawals cause currency crises.
One country's deficit = another's surplus; crises spread.
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What causes a current account deficit?
High consumer spending on imports, strong currency (making imports cheaper), low export competitiveness (high costs, poor quality), high domestic inflation, strong economic growth pulling in imports, and over-valued exchange rate.
Too much importing relative to exporting.
What are the consequences of a persistent current account deficit?
Rising foreign debt, currency depreciation pressure, loss of foreign reserves, potential loss of investor confidence, higher interest rates to attract capital, and ultimately lower living standards if debts become unsustainable.
Debt, currency weakness, confidence loss.
How can expenditure-reducing policies correct a CA deficit?
Contractionary fiscal policy (higher taxes, lower spending) or tighter monetary policy (higher interest rates) reduce aggregate demand. Lower incomes mean less spending on imports, improving the current account.
Cut demand → less spending on imports.
What causes a current account surplus?
High export competitiveness, weak/undervalued currency, low domestic demand (limiting imports), high savings rates, natural resource exports (e.g. oil), and strong global demand for the country's products.
Exporting more than importing.
How can expenditure-switching policies correct a CA deficit?
Policies that redirect spending from imports to domestically produced goods: devaluation/depreciation of the exchange rate, tariffs, quotas, or subsidies for domestic producers. These make imports dearer or domestic goods more attractive.
Switch spending from imports to domestic goods.
What are the consequences of a persistent current account surplus?
Upward pressure on the currency (may harm exports), trading-partner resentment and potential trade disputes, build-up of foreign reserves, and under-consumption domestically (saving too much, spending too little).
Currency strength, trade tensions, under-consumption.
How can supply-side policies improve the current account?
Policies that improve productivity and competitiveness: investment in education, infrastructure, technology, deregulation, and reducing costs of production. These make exports more competitive in the long run.
Make domestic industry more efficient and competitive.
How can a persistent deficit lead to a currency crisis?
If foreign investors lose confidence, they withdraw capital and sell the currency. This causes rapid depreciation, which raises import prices, fuels inflation, increases foreign debt servicing costs, and can trigger a recession.
Capital flight → currency crash → inflation → recession.
How does economic growth affect the current account?
Strong domestic growth increases demand for imports (consumers buy more foreign goods). If trading partners are growing slowly, export demand may stagnate. This combination typically worsens the current account.
Growth sucks in imports → deficit widens.
How does the exchange rate affect the current account?
An overvalued/strong currency makes exports expensive and imports cheap, worsen the CA. An undervalued/weak currency makes exports cheap and imports expensive, improving the CA (subject to the Marshall-Lerner condition).
Strong currency → CA deficit. Weak → CA surplus.
Give an example of a country facing consequences from a CA deficit.
The US has run persistent current account deficits for decades, funded by foreign purchases of US assets (especially Treasury bonds). This has led to concerns about growing foreign debt and dependence on foreign capital.
US — massive deficit, funded by selling bonds.
What is the trade-off of using contractionary policy to fix a deficit?
While it reduces imports, it also slows economic growth, increases unemployment, and lowers living standards. The deficit improves but at a significant domestic cost — a conflict between internal and external balance.
Less imports, but also less growth and more unemployment.
Why are supply-side policies considered the best long-term solution for a CA deficit?
They improve competitiveness without reducing demand or triggering inflation. However, they take years to have effect, require significant investment, and outcomes are uncertain. Short-term measures may be needed while supply-side reforms take hold.
Best but slowest — improves competitiveness sustainably.
Why are global imbalances a concern for the world economy?
Large, persistent imbalances create instability. Deficit countries accumulate debt; surplus countries accumulate claims on foreign assets. A sudden correction (e.g. capital flight) can trigger financial crises that spread globally.
One country's debt is another's risk.
Is a current account deficit always bad?
Not necessarily. It may reflect strong FDI inflows (positive sign for the economy) or high growth that pulls in capital goods imports for future production. However, persistent deficits funded by borrowing can lead to unsustainable debt.
Depends on why — investment vs. overconsumption.
Topic 4.6 study notes
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