Lecture2
Lecture2
International Finance
Chapter 2
National Income
Accounting and the
Balance of Payments
Learning Objectives
2.1 Discuss concept of current account balance.
2.2 Use the current account balance to extend national
income accounting to open economies.
2.3 Apply national income accounting to the interaction of
saving, investment, and net exports.
2.4 Describe balance of payments accounts and explain their
relationship to the current account balance.
2.5 Relate the current account to changes in a country’s net
foreign wealth.
Preview
• National income accounts
– measures of national income
– measures of value of production
– measures of value of expenditure
• National saving, investment, and the current account
• Balance of payments accounts
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in 2016
America’s gross national product for the first quarter of 2020 can be broken down
into the four components shown.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis. The figure
shows 2016:QI GNP and its components at an annual rate, seasonally adjusted.
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Y C I G EX IM
C I G CA
20b
2 0 to the b po wer
a
55 bushels of wheat 0.5 bushel per gallon 40 gallons of milk .
b
0.5 bushel per gallon 40 gallons of milk.
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S Y C G Y = C+I+G+CA
S I CA
S=Y-C-G=Y-T-C+T-G
Private and Government Saving
• Private saving is the part of disposable income (national Sp Sg
income, Y, minus taxes, T) that is saved rather than
consumed:
S P Y T C
Sg T G
• Private and government saving add up to national saving.
S Y T C T G S P S g
Figure 2.2 The U.S. Current Account and Net an average worker in China is more productive than US
International Investment Position, 1976–2019
A string of current account deficits starting in the early 1980s reduced America’s
net foreign wealth until, by the early 21st century, the country had accumulated a
substantial net foreign debt.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
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CA fall
= Ex - Im
Fax machine purchase (Current account, U.S. good import) $1000
n e g a ti ve $1 000
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$200 D: $200
Sale of credit card claim (Financial account, U.S. asset sale) +$200 $200
Bond +200$
inflow in FA
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Once big and negative, implying missing current account credits, the world’s
current account balance has become big and positive, implying missing current
account debits.
Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook database,
October 2019.
Current Account
(1) Exports and current transfer receipts 3,805.94
Of which:
Goods 1,652.44
Services 875.83
Income receipts (primary income) 1,135.69
Current transfer receipts (secondary income) 141.98
(2) Imports and current transfer payments 4,286.16
Of which:
Goods 2,516.77
Services 588.36
Income receipts (primary income) 899.35
Current transfer receipts (secondary income) 281.69
Balance on current account l[(1) (2)] 480.22
n e g a ti ve 48 0.22
e ft b rack et l eft p aren th esi s 1 ri ght pa renthe si s mi nus l eft p aren th esi s 2 ri ght pare nthes is ri gh t b rack et
6.24
n e g a ti ve 6.24
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, June 196, 2020,
release. Totals may differ from sums because of rounding.
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Financial Account
(4) Net U.S. acquisition of financial assets, excluding 440.75
financial derivatives
Of which:
Bl a n k
38.34
n e g a ti ve 38 .3 4
Bl a n k
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, June 196, 2020,
release. Totals may differ from sums because of rounding.
The huge jump in Ireland’s 2015 real GDP was mostly an artifact of creative accounting.
Source: International Monetary Fund, World Economic Outlook database, April 2019.
Data point for 2020 is a projection
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Since 1976, both the foreign assets and the liabilities of the United States have increased
sharply. But liabilities have risen more quickly, leaving the United States with a
substantial net foreign debt.
Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis.
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r Revised; n.a. Not available. . . . Not applicable (*) Value between zero and
$50 million
4. Data are not separately available for price changes, exchange-rate changes,
and changes in volume and valuation not included elsewhere.
Summary (1 of 3)
1. A country’s GNP is roughly equal to the income
received by its factors of production.
2. In an open economy, GNP equals the sum of
consumption, investment, government purchases, and
the current account.
3. GDP is equal to GNP minus net income from foreign
countries for factors of production. It measures the
value of output produced within a country’s borders.
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Summary (2 of 3)
4. National saving minus domestic investment equals the
current account exports minus imports .
5. The current account equals the country’s net foreign
investment (net outflows of financial assets).
6. The balance of payments accounts records flows of goods
and services and flows of financial assets across countries.
– It has three parts: current account, capital account, and
financial account, which balance each other.
– Transactions of goods and services appear in the current
account; transactions of financial assets appear in the
financial account.
Summary (3 of 3)
7. Official international reserve assets are a component of
the financial account, which records official assets held
by central banks.
8. The official settlements balance is the negative value of
official international reserve assets, and it shows a
central bank’s holdings of foreign assets relative to
foreign central banks’ holdings of domestic assets.
9. The United States is the largest debtor nation, and its
foreign debt continues to grow because its current
account continues to be negative.
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