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NotesEconomicsTopic 4.6Current account imbalances and corrective policies
Back to Economics Topics
4.6.21 min read

Current account imbalances and corrective policies

IB Economics β€’ Unit 4

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Contents

  • Causes of current account deficits
  • Consequences of persistent imbalances
  • Policies to correct a deficit

πŸ“‰ Causes of Current Account Deficits

  • Strong domestic demand β€” when the economy grows fast, consumers buy more imports.
  • Overvalued exchange rate β€” makes exports expensive and imports cheap.
  • High relative inflation β€” domestic goods become less competitive.
  • Low productivity/competitiveness β€” domestic firms can't compete with foreign producers.
  • Dependence on primary commodity exports β€” volatile prices and low value-added.
  • High income levels β€” wealthier consumers tend to import more (higher marginal propensity to import).
A deficit is not always 'bad'. It may reflect strong growth and investment (capital good imports) rather than structural weakness.

⚠️ Consequences of Persistent Imbalances

Persistent deficit

  • Rising foreign debt β€” the country must borrow to finance the gap.
  • Depreciation pressure β€” continuous selling of the domestic currency.
  • Loss of confidence β€” investors may pull out, triggering a currency crisis.
  • Reduced reserves β€” if the central bank defends the currency, reserves deplete.

Persistent surplus

  • Appreciation pressure β€” currency strengthens, eventually hurting export competitiveness.
  • Trading partner resentment β€” seen as 'unfair' if maintained through undervalued currency.
  • Under-consumption β€” domestic consumers may be worse off if they're not enjoying the benefits of trade.

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πŸ”§ Corrective Policies

Expenditure-reducing policies

  • Contractionary fiscal policy β€” reduce government spending or raise taxes β†’ lower AD β†’ fewer imports. But: causes unemployment and slower growth.
  • Contractionary monetary policy β€” raise interest rates β†’ reduces consumer spending and investment β†’ fewer imports. But: slows growth and raises debt costs.

Expenditure-switching policies

  • Devaluation/depreciation β€” make the currency cheaper β†’ exports more competitive, imports more expensive. But: J-curve delay, imported inflation.
  • Trade protection β€” tariffs/quotas reduce imports. But: retaliation, misallocation, WTO violations.
  • Supply-side policies β€” improve productivity and competitiveness (education, R&D, infrastructure). Long-term but most sustainable.
The best IB answers combine short-run measures (expenditure-reducing) with long-run structural reforms (supply-side) and evaluate the trade-offs of each.

Related Economics Topics

Continue learning with these related topics from the same unit:

4.1.1Absolute and comparative advantage
4.1.2Free trade benefits and the terms of trade
4.2.1Tariffs
4.2.2Quotas and subsidies
View all Economics topics

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How Current account imbalances and corrective policies Appears in IB Exams

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Define

Give the precise meaning of key terms related to Current account imbalances and corrective policies.

AO1
Describe

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AO2
Explain

Give reasons WHY β€” cause and effect within Current account imbalances and corrective policies.

AO3
Evaluate

Weigh strengths AND limitations of approaches in Current account imbalances and corrective policies.

AO3
Discuss

Present arguments FOR and AGAINST with a balanced conclusion.

AO3

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