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Chapter 5

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Chapter 5

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Chapter 5

Saving and
Investment
in the Open
Economy

Copyright © 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved.


Table 5.1
Balance of
Payments
Accounts of the
United States,
2008 (Billions of
Dollars)

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5-2
Balance of Payments Accounting

• Basic Principles
– Credit item (+)
• Funds flow into the country
• Example: exports of goods
– Debit item (–)
• Funds flow out of the country
• Example: imports of goods

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5-3
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The current account


– Net exports of goods and services (NX)
– Net income from abroad (NFP)
– Net unilateral transfers (NUT)

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5-4
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The current account


– Net income from abroad (NFP)
• Income received from abroad is a credit item, since it
causes funds to flow into the country.
• Payment of income to foreigners is a debit item
• Net income from abroad is part of the current
account, and is about equal to NFP, net factor
payments

– Net unilateral transfers (NUT)


• Payments made from one country to another

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5-5
Balance of Payments Accounting

• Sum of net exports of goods and services,


net income from abroad, and net unilateral
transfers is the current account balance
• CA = NX + NFP + NUT
– Positive current account balance implies current
account surplus
– Negative current account balance implies
current account deficit

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5-6
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The capital and financial account


– The capital and financial account records trades
in existing assets, either real (for example,
houses) or financial (for example, stocks and
bonds)
– The capital account records the net flow of
unilateral transfers of assets into the country

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5-7
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The capital and financial account


– Most transactions appear in the financial
account part of the capital and financial
account
• When home country sells assets to a foreign country,
that is a capital inflow for the home country and a
credit (+) item in the capital and financial account
• When assets are purchased from a foreign country,
there is a capital outflow from the home country and
a debit (–) item in the capital and financial account

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5-8
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The Capital and Financial Account


– Capital Account (unilateral transfers of assets)
– Financial Account
• Financial Inflow
– Credit item (+)
– Sale of U.S. assets to foreigners
• Financial Outflow
– Debit item (–)
– Purchase of foreign assets by U.S. residents
• KFA = capital and financial account
balance

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5-9
Balance of Payments Accounting

• The relationship between the current


account and the capital and financial
account
– Current account balance (CA) + capital and
financial account balance (KFA) = 0 (5.1)
– CA + KFA = 0 by accounting; every transaction
involves offsetting effects

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5-10
Balance of Payments Accounting

• Net foreign assets and the balance of


payments accounts
– Net foreign assets are a country’s foreign
assets minus its foreign liabilities
• Net foreign assets may change in value (example:
change in stock prices)
• Net foreign assets may change through acquisition of
new assets or liabilities

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5-11
Balance of Payments Accounting

• Net foreign assets and the balance of


payments accounts
– The net increase in foreign assets equals a
country’s current account surplus
– A current account surplus implies a capital and
financial account deficit, and thus a net
increase in holdings of foreign assets (a
financial outflow)
– A current account deficit implies a capital and
financial account surplus, and thus a net
decline in holdings of foreign assets (a financial
inflow)

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5-12
Balance of Payments Accounting

• Net foreign assets and the balance of


payments accounts
– Foreign direct investment: a foreign firm buys
or builds capital goods
• Causes an increase in capital and financial account
balance
– Portfolio investment: foreigners acquire U.S.
securities; also increases capital and financial
account balance

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5-13
Summary 7

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5-14
Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open
Economy

• From Ch. 2,
S = I + CA = I + (NX + NFP) (5.2)
– So national saving has two uses:
• Increase the capital stock by domestic investment
• Increase the stock of net foreign assets by lending to
foreigners
– In this section, we’ll assume NFP = 0 = NUT

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5-15
Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open
Economy

S = I + CA = I + NX

– To get goods market equilibrium, national


saving and investment must equal their desired
levels:
Sd = Id + NX (5.4)

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5-16
Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open
Economy

• S = I + CA = I + NX
– Alternative method:
• Y = Cd + Id + G + NX(5.5)
• NX = Y – (Cd + Id + G) (5.6)
• Net exports equal output (Y)
minus absorption (Cd + Id + G)

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5-17
Saving and Investment in a Small Open
Economy
• Key assumption: Residents of the small
open economy can borrow or lend at the
expected world real interest rate

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5-18
Figure 5.2 A small open economy that
lends abroad

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5-19
Figure 5.3 A small open economy that
borrows abroad

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5-20
Saving and Investment in a Small Open
Economy
• Result: rw may be such that Sd > Id, Sd = Id, or Sd
< Id
a. If Sd > Id, the excess of desired saving over desired
investment is lent internationally (net foreign lending is
positive) and NX > 0

b. If Sd = Id, there is no net foreign lending and NX = 0

c. If Sd < Id, the excess of desired investment over desired


saving is financed by borrowing internationally (net foreign
lending is negative) and NX < 0

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5-21
Table 5.3 Goods Market Equilibrium in a Small
Open Economy: An Example (Billions of Dollars)

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5-22
Saving and Investment in a Small Open
Economy
• The effects of economic shocks in a small
open economy
– Anything that increases desired national saving
(Y rises, future output falls, or G falls) relative
to desired investment (MPKf falls,  rises) at a
given world interest rate increases net foreign
lending, and vice versa
– A temporary adverse supply shock
• Temporary drop in income leads to a drop in saving,
so net foreign lending declines; shown in text Fig. 5.4

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5-23
Figure 5.4 A temporary adverse supply
shock in a small open economy

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5-24
Saving and Investment in a Small Open
Economy
• The effects of economic shocks in a small
open economy
– An increase in the expected future marginal
product of capital
– Desired investment rises, so net foreign lending
falls; shown in text Fig. 5.5

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5-25
Figure 5.5 An increase in the expected
future MPK in a small open economy

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5-26
Saving and Investment in Large Open
Economies
• Large open economy: an economy large enough
to affect the world real interest rate
– Suppose there are just two economies in the world
• The home or domestic economy (saving S, investment I)
• The foreign economy, representing the rest of the world
(saving SFor, investment IFor)

• The world real interest rate moves to equilibrate


desired international lending by one country with
desired international borrowing by the other (Fig.
5.6)

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5-27
Figure 5.6 The determination of the world real
interest rate with two large open economies

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5-28
Saving and Investment in Large Open
Economies
• The equilibrium world real interest rate is
determined such that a current account
surplus in one country is equal in
magnitude to the current account deficit in
the other

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5-29
Saving and Investment in Large Open
Economies
• Changes in the equilibrium world real
interest rate: Any factor that increases
desired international lending of a country
relative to desired international borrowing
causes the world real interest rate to fall

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5-30
Fiscal Policy and the Current
Account
• Are government budget deficits necessarily
accompanied by current account deficits?
That is, are there “twin deficits”?
– The critical factor: the response of national
saving
• An increase in the government budget deficit raises
the current account deficit only if the increase in the
budget deficit reduces desired national saving
• In a small open economy, if an increase in the
government budget deficit reduces desired national
saving, the saving curve shifts left, thus reducing the
current account balance (Fig. 5.11)

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5-31
Figure 5.11 The government budget deficit and
the current account in a small open economy

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5-32
Fiscal Policy and the Current
Account
• The government budget deficit and national
saving
– A deficit caused by increased government purchases
• No question here: The deficit definitely reduces national
saving
• Result: The current account balance declines
– A deficit resulting from a tax cut
• Sd falls only if Cd rises
• So Sd won’t change if Ricardian equivalence holds, since
then a tax cut won’t affect consumption
• But if people don’t foresee the future taxes implied by a tax
cut today, they will consume more, desired saving will
decline, and so will the current account balance

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5-33
Key Diagram 4 National saving and
investment in a small open economy

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5-34
Key Diagram 5 National saving and
investment in large open economies

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5-35

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