Lecture 20
Lecture 20
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This lecture
– increases in demand
– fiscal policy and exchange rate policy
– the J curve
– saving, investment, and the current account balance
3- Reading: Blanchard, chapter 18, sections 18.3-18.6 and chapter 19, sections 19.1-19.2
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Equilibrium output and net exports
The goods market is in equilibrium when production Y is equal to the demand for domestic goods Z. At
the equilibrium level of output, trade balance may be in deficit or surplus.
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Increases in domestic demand
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Effects of increased government spending
Increase in government spending leads to increase in output and to lower net exports (here, a trade
deficit). The effect of government spending in the open economy is smaller — i.e., the multiplier is smaller
— than it would be in a closed economy.
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Increases in foreign demand
• Output increases
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Effects of increased foreign demand
An increase in foreign demand leads to an increase in output and to higher net exports (here, a trade
surplus). Trade balance improves because the increase in imports does not offset the increase in exports.
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Games countries play
• Increases in demand, both domestic and foreign, lead to increases in output. But they
have opposite effects on trade balances
• In a recession, countries with high trade deficits may wait for foreign demand to
stimulate their economy
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Fiscal policy and exchange rate policy
• Suppose output is at its natural level, but the economy is running a large trade deficit
• If government cares about both the level of output and the trade balance, both fiscal
policy and exchange rate policy should be used
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Reducing trade deficit without changing output
To reduce the trade deficit without changing output, the government must both achieve a depreciation and
decrease government spending.
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The J-curve
The J-curve refers to the dynamic adjustment process of the trade balance in response to a real
depreciation. In the short run, the effect of a real depreciation is likely to be reflected much more in prices
than in quantities. In the long run, the real depreciation improves the trade balance (assuming the
Marshall-Lerner condition is satisfied).
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The J-curve: evidence from US
The real exchange rate and the ratio of the trade deficit to GDP: United States, 1980-1990. The large real
appreciation and subsequent real depreciation from 1980 to 1990 were mirrored, with a lag, by an increase
and then decrease in the trade deficit.
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Savings, investment and the trade balance
• The alternative way of looking at equilibrium from the condition that investment
equals saving has an important meaning
Y = C + I + G + NX
• Private saving is
S ≡Y −T −C
= I + G − T + NX
N X = (S − I) + (T − G)
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Savings, investment and the trade balance
• Net exports
N X = (S − I) + (T − G)
• An increase in the government’s budget deficit, all else the same, leads to a
deterioration of the trade balance
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Equilibrium in the goods market
• Goods market
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Key simplifications
(i) Actual and expected inflation constant (and zero, for simplicity). Since inflation is
zero, domestic price level P is constant
(ii) Similarly, foreign actual and expected inflation is zero so that P ∗ is constant (and
equal to P , again for simplicity). Implies nominal and real exchange rates are the same
P
=1 ⇔ E=ε
P∗
So equilibrium condition is
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Equilibrium in financial markets
• Assuming there is perfect capital mobility. So domestic and foreign bonds are perfect
substitutes (apart from the currency in which they are denominated)
(1 + i) e
E= Ē
(1 + i∗ )
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Equilibrium in financial markets
• Exchange rate in terms of interest rates
(1 + i) e
E= Ē
(1 + i∗ )
• Domestic monetary policy contraction (i.e., i increases) will increase demand for
domestic bonds
• Foreign monetary policy contraction (i.e., i∗ increases) will increase demand for
foreign bonds
Interest parity: i = (1 + i∗ )(E/Ē e ) − 1. Lower domestic interest rate leads to lower exchange rate, a
depreciation of the domestic currency. Higher domestic interest rate leads to higher exchange rate, an
appreciation of the domestic currency.
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Equilibrium in financial markets
• The more the dollar appreciates now, the more investors expect it to depreciate over
time in the future
Ē e − E (1 + i∗ )
= − 1 ≈ i∗ − i
E (1 + i)
• Mundell-Fleming model focuses on short run for which expected exchange rate is given
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Next
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Example #10: problem
Setup: Consider the following two-country economy. The real exchange rate is fixed
and equal to 1. Domestic consumption, investment and taxes are given by
C = 110 + 0.4(Y − T ), I = 40, T = 25
Import and exports are given by
IM = 0.2Y, X = 0.2Y ∗
(asterisks denote foreign variables).