Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Relation Between Trade and Financial Flows The U.S. Balance of Payments, 1998 Current Account Exports 931 Imports Trade balance (deficit = -) (1) Investment income received Investment income paid Net investment income (2) Net transfers received (3) Current account balance (deficit = -) (1)+(2)+(3) Capital Account Increase in foreign holdings of U.S. assets Increase in U.S. holdings of foreign assets Net increase in foreign holdings/net capital flow to the U.S. Statistical discrepancy Econ 302 1100 -169 242 265 -23 -41 -233 542 305 The Goods Market in an Open Economy 237 4 Slide #1 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Balance of Payments The Current Account (Above the Line) All recorded payments to and from the rest of the world 1. Trade in Goods and Services * Exports: Payments from the rest of the world ($931 Billion) * Imports: Payments to the rest of the world ($1,100 Billion) 2. Investment Income * U.S. residents receive income on their holdings of foreign assets ($242 Billion) * Foreign residents receive income on their holdings of U.S. assets ($265 Billion) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #2 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Balance of Payments (Continued) The Current Account (Above the Line) All recorded payments to and from the rest of the world 3. Foreign Aid (-$41 Billion) * Net transfers received The difference between foreign aid received and given 4. Current account balance (+,-)= 1+2+3= -$233 Billion (1998) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #3 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Balance of Payments The Capital Account 1. Increase in foreign holdings of U.S. assets ($542 Billion) 2. Increase in U.S. holdings of foreign assets ($305 Billion) 3. Net capital flows = 1-2 ($542 Billion - $305 Billion = -237 Billion) Statistical discrepancy: Accounts for differences in data sources. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #4 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Balance of Payments • The Current Account Balance (+,-) = Capital Account Balance (+,-) • A Current Account Deficit increases foreign holdings of U.S. assets and vice versa. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #5 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets An Example: Choose between U.S. and German 1 yr. bonds • US Bonds • it = U.S. nominal interest rate • (1+it) = Return next year /$purchase of U.S. bonds Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #6 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets Expected Returns from Holding One-Year U.S. or German Bonds Year t+1 Year t U.S. bonds German bonds Econ 302 $1 1 DM Et $(1+it) 1 DM Et The Goods Market in an Open Economy (1 i *t ) Slide #7 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets If: Investors will hold only the asset with the highest rate of return. Then: To hold both U.S. and German bonds, they must have the same return. Or: 1 e 1 it (1 i *t )( E t 1 ) Et U.S. Bond = Return Econ 302 German Bond Return The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #8 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets (Continued) 1 1 it Et U.S. Bond Return = (1 i *t )(E et 1) German Bond Return A little reorganizing: The Interest Parity Condition: Econ 302 E et 1 1 it (1 i *t ) Et The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #9 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets Is the assumption that investors hold only assets with the highest expected return realistic? Some other considerations: -- Transaction Costs -- Exchange Rate Risk Observation: The interest parity condition is a good approximation for developed countries with open, well-organized financial markets. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #10 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets Adjusting the interest rate parity condition for changes in the value of the domestic currency E et 1 The Interest Parity Condition: 1 i t (1 i *t ) Et E et 1 Et Or: 1 i t (1 i *t )1 Et E Econ 302 e Et Et t 1 = Expected rate of depreciation of the domestic currency The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #11 Openness in Goods in Financial Markets Openness in Financial Markets The Choice Between Domestic and Foreign Assets (Continued) An approximation: i t i *t Econ 302 E e t 1 Et Et The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #12 Openness in Goods and Financial Markets Some Conclusions Goods • Openness allows choice between domestic goods and foreign goods. • Which goods are chosen depends primarily on the exchange rate. Financial Assets • Openness allows choice between domestic and foreign assets. • Which assets are chosen depends primarily on: • Relative rates of return • Expected rate of depreciation of the domestic currency Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #13 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Expanding the Goods Market Model (IS) to address these questions • Can a foreign expansion stimulate domestic economic growth? • Should macroeconomic policies be coordinated between countries? Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #14 The IS Relation in the Open Economy The Open Economy Demand for Domestic Goods... Z C + I + G - Q + X Econ 302 Q: The value of imports in terms of domestic goods X: Exports The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #15 The IS Relation in the Open Economy The Determinants of the Demand for Domestic Goods The Determinants of C, I, & G Domestic Demand: C + I + G = C(Y-T) + I(Y,r) + G (+) (+,-) The Determinants of Imports Imports: Q = Q(Y, ) (+ , - ) The Determinants of Exports Exports: X = X(Y*, ) (+ , +) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #16 The IS Relation in the Open Economy The Open Economy Graphically DD Domestic demand (C + I + G) AA Demand Demand DD Imports ( Q) Output Output Observations • Difference between DD & AA increases with income • AA is flatter than DD • AA has a positive slope Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #17 The IS Relation in the Open Economy The Open Economy Graphically Demand for Domestic Goods Net Exports (NX) = X - Including Exports (ZZ) Q DD Net exports, NX Demand ZZ AA C Exports (X) B BC: Net Exports (X – A AC: Exports Y < YTB Trade surplus 0 Y Q) NX BC AB: Imports Y Econ 302 YTB YTB Output The Goods Market in an Open Economy Y > YTB Trade deficit Output, Y Slide #18 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Equilibrium Output and the Trade Balance Goods Market Equilibrium: Y = Domestic Output = Z Demand for Domestic Goods Y = C(Y-T) + I(Y,r) + G - Q(Y, ) + X(Y*, ) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #19 The IS Relation in the Open Economy ZZ A Z Net exports, NX Demand, Z Equilibrium Output and the Trade Balance Trade deficit B 0 Y YTB Equilibrium Y=Z C NX 45° Y Econ 302 Output The Goods Market in an Open Economy Output, Y Slide #20 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Increases in Domestic Demand • Assume G is increased to increase domestic demand & Y Demand, Z A´ ZZ G>0 A New Equilibrium ( Y > G) Net exports, NX ZZ´ (G > 0) Initial equilibrium Y = YTB Trade deficit BC@Y’ B 0 Y YTB C NX Initial equilibrium 45° Y Econ 302 Y´ Output The Goods Market in an Open Economy Output, Y Slide #21 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign The Impact of Increasing G in an Open Economy Some Observations • A trade deficit is created • The multiplier is smaller Question: How are the trade deficit and the smaller multiplier related? Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #22 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign The Impact of Increasing G in an Open Economy Observation: The more open an economy, the smaller the impact of a change in domestic demand on output. Example: Belgium: Ratio of imports to GDP is 70%. Therefore, 70% of an increase in domestic demand will go for imports. U.S.: Econ 302 Import ratio = 13% Even in the U.S. domestic policy is reduced by the open economy. The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #23 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Increases in Foreign Demand A: Initial equilibrium & balanced trade Y*: Increases & X DD NX A´: New equilibrium ZZ C X ZZ´ X A Demand for domestic goods Domestic demand D 45° Y Econ 302 Y´ Net exports, NX Demand, Z A´ 0 Output The Goods Market in an Open Economy NX YTB Y Y´ NX´ NX Output, Y Slide #24 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Increases in Foreign Demand A Summary • Increase in Y* increases demand for domestic goods, exports grow and equilibrium Y increases. • The increase in Y increases imports. The increase in imports is less than the growth in exports. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #25 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Two Observations: Econ 302 1. Increase in domestic demand leads to an increase in Y and a trade deficit. 2. Increase in foreign demand leads to an increase in Y and a trade surplus. The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #26 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Depreciation, the Trade Balance, and Output The Depreciation of a Currency ($) Recall: EP* P Real Exchange Rate: E: Nominal exchange rate P*: Foreign price level P: Domestic price level Assuming Constant Prices: Econ 302 The depreciation of a currency ($) will make that country’s goods cheaper in other countries and vice versa. The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #27 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Depreciation, the Trade Balance, and Output Depreciation and the Trade Balance: The Marshall-Lerner Condition Net Exports: NX X - Q NX = X(Y*, ) - Q(Y, ) Depreciation (increase in ) affects the trade balance in three ways: 1. X increases 3. Q increases 2. Q decreases The Marshall-Lerner Condition: For depreciation to improve the trade balance--the increase in X and decrease in Q is greater than the increase in Q. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #28 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Depreciation, the Trade Balance, and Output The Effects of a Depreciation Tracing a Depreciation Through the Economy 1. Shift demand, both foreign and domestic toward domestic goods 2. Net exports increase (Marshall-Lerner) 3. Equilibrium Y increases 4. Trade balance improves Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #29 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Depreciation, the Trade Balance, and Output Combining Exchange Rate and Fiscal Policies Objective: Reduce the trade deficit without changing Y Policy: Balance depreciation and fiscal constraint Depreciation shifts ZZ to ZZ´ & Y to Y´ NX ZZ´ A´ G NX A Initial equilibrium 45° Y Econ 302 ZZ Net exports, NX Demand, Z Reduction in G shifts ZZ´ to ZZ & Y Depreciation shifts NX to NX´ & balanced trade Y´ B 0 Output The Goods Market in an Open Economy Y NX´ C NX Output, Y Slide #30 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Depreciation, the Trade Balance, and Output Combining Exchange Rate and Fiscal Policies Exchange Rate and Fiscal Policy Combinations Initial Conditions Trade Surplus Trade Deficit Low output ? G G? High output G? ? G Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #31 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Looking at Dynamics: The J-Curve + Net exports, NX Depreciation Time 0 0 A C B _ Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #32 The IS Relation in the Open Economy The Real Exchange Rate and the Ratio of Net Exports to GDP: U.S., 1980-1990 Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #33 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Looking at Dynamics - The J-Curve The U.S. - 1980-1990 1. Movements real exchange rates were reflected in parallel movements in net exports. 2. There were substantial lags in the response of the trade balance to changes in the real exchange rate. The J-Curve at work. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #34 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Saving, Investment, and Trade Deficits Recall: Y = C + I + G - Q + X and S = Y - C + T Subtract C + T from both sides: S=I+G-T-Q+X And using NX X - Q NX Trade Balance Econ 302 = S + (T - G) - I = Saving - Investment The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #35 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Saving, Investment, and Trade Deficits NX = S + (T-G) - I Observations: • Trade surplus: Excess of saving over investment • Trade deficit: Excess of investment over saving • An increase in investment must be reflected either in an increase in private or public saving or in a deterioration of the trade balance. • An increase in the budget deficit must be reflected in an increase in private saving, decrease in investment, or a deterioration of the trade balance. • A country with a high saving rate, public and private, must have a high investment rate or a large trade surplus. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #36 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Games that Countries Play A Scenario... There is a group of countries that are trading partners. • The countries are in a recession • The countries have balanced trade Questions: Why would any one country be reluctant to expand domestic demand? What would be the impact on the trade balance if all countries increased domestic demand together? Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #37 The IS Relation in the Open Economy Increases in Demand, Domestic or Foreign Games that Countries Play Coordination: As global commerce expands, the motivation for coordination increases. For example, the G7 meetings. The Evidence: There is very little limited macro-coordination. Barriers to Coordination: • Not all countries experience the same economic conditions. • Budget and trade balances may differ. • Countries have an incentive to promise and then not deliver on the promise. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #38 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Goods Market (IS) Output - Demand for Domestic Goods Y = C(Y-T) + I(Y,r) + G - Q(Y, ) + X(Y*, ) ( + ) (+,-) (+, -) (+ , +) Net Exports = X - Q NX(Y,Y*, ) X(Y*, ) - Q(Y,G) Y = C(Y-T) + I(Y,r) + G + NX(Y,Y*, ) Observation: Equilibrium Y & Demand depend on the… real interest rate (r) real exchange rate () r I Demand Multiplier Y Demand for Domestic Goods Demand Y Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #39 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Goods Market (IS) Some Assumptions • The domestic price level is given (e = O & r = i) • The foreign price level is given ( & E move together) P*/P = I & = E New Equilibrium Statement Y = C(Y-T) + I(Y,i) + G + NX(Y,Y*, E) ( + ) (+,-) (- , + , + ) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #40 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Money vs. Bonds Money: Equilibrium in the money market in an open economy Econ 302 Supply of money = M P = Demand for money YL(i) The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #41 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Money vs. Bonds Domestic Bonds vs. Foreign Bonds Equilibrium in domestic bonds and foreign bonds Interest parity relation: i t i *t Domestic i Econ 302 = E * t 1 Et Et Foreign i + The Goods Market in an Open Economy Expected Depreciation Slide #42 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Money vs. Bonds Domestic Bonds vs. Foreign Bonds (Continued) Equilibrium in domestic bonds and foreign bonds Assume: E e is given denote it E e E E it i * 1 i i * e Then: Solving for E: Econ 302 Ee E 1 i i * The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #43 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Domestic Bonds vs. Foreign Bonds e Interpreting: E E 1 i i * i Exchange Rate (appreciation of domestic currency) i* Exchange Rate (depreciation of domestic currency) Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #44 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Domestic Bonds vs. Foreign Bonds An example: The adjustment of exchange markets to an increase in U.S. interest rates above German rates • Initially: i = i* & E=Ee • U.S. monetary contraction increases i, if E is constant U.S. bonds become more attractive i > i* • To buy U.S. bonds, Germans must sell German bonds for DM, then sell DM for $s and the $ appreciates. To maintain equilibrium: • the $ appreciation until the expected future depreciation compensates for the increase in i Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #45 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Equilibrium in the Financial Markets Domestic Bonds vs. Foreign Bonds A numeric example: Assume: U.S. i & Di* = 4% • Then U.S. i increases to 10% • The $ will appreciate 6% • At a 6% appreciation, holding U.S. or German bonds yields 10% in $s e E E In terms of i i * E 10% = 4% + 6% Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #46 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Putting Goods and Financial Markets Together The goods market equilibrium depends, in part, on i & E Output: Y = C(Y-T) + I(Y,i) + G + NX(Y,Y*,E) The money market determines i Interest Rate: M YL(i ) P The interest parity condition implies i & E are negatively related. Ee Exchange Rate: E 1 i i * Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #47 Equilibrium in Financial Markets The Relation Between the Interest Rate and the A lower domestic Exchange Rateinterest rate leadsby to a higher Implied Interest exchange Parity rate—to a depreciation of the domestic currency. A higher domestic interest rate leads to a lower exchange rate—to an appreciation of the domestic currency. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #48 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Putting Goods and Financial Markets Together The goods market equilibrium depends, in part, on i & E (Continued) The Open-Economy IS-LM Model Ee IS : Y C (Y T ) I (Y , i ) G NX Y ,Y *, 1 i i * Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #49 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Putting Goods and Financial Markets Together Consider: Ee IS : Y C (Y T ) I (Y , i ) G NX Y ,Y *, 1 i i * If i increases: • Direct Effect: I Y • Indirect Effect: Domestic Currency Appreciates NX Y In an open economy is the multiplier larger or smaller? Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #50 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate The Effects of Policy in an Open Economy Fiscal Policy A Summary: G Demand Y Money Demand i makes domestic bonds more attractive domestic currency appreciates the higher i and appreciation reduce demand for domestic goods and offsets some of the effects of G on Y. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #51 Putting Goods and Financial Markets Together The IS-LM Model in the Open Economy An increase in the interest rate reduces output both directly and indirectly (through the exchange rate). The IS curve is downward sloping. Given the real money stock, an increase in income increases the interest rate: The LM curve is upward sloping. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #52 20-4 The Effects of Policy in an Open Economy The Effects of an Increase in Government An increase in government spending Spending leads to an increase in output, an increase in the interest rate, and an appreciation. The increase in government spending affects neither the LM curve nor the interestparity curve. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #53 The Effects of Monetary Policy in an Open Economy The Effects of a Monetary A monetary contraction Contraction leads to a decrease in output, an increase in the interest rate, and an appreciation. The decrease in the money supply affects neither the IS curve nor the interest-parity curve. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #54 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate The Effects of Policy in an Open Economy Fiscal Policy Can we tell what happens to the various components of demand (C, I, G, NX) from the increase in G? • G: G • C: Increase in Y C • I: Ambiguous: Y I & i I • NX: Decrease: Appreciation & Y NX Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #55 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Fixed Exchange Rates Pegs, Crawling Pegs, Bans, the EMS, & the Euro Exchange rate policies vary from country to country. • Flexible exchange rates: The U.S. and Japan • Fixed exchange rates: • Pegs: Setting the exchange rate to the dollar or some other currencies. Adjust by evaluation and devaluation. • Crawling Peg: Setting an exchange rate target. • EMS: European Monetary System: Maintain bilateral exchange rates or band around a central parity. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #56 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Fixed Exchange Rates Pegging the Exchange Rate and Monetary Control Assume: A country pegs its exchange at E E e t 1 Et Given the interest parity condition: i t i * t Et E E i i * i *t And: E t E , then t t E M M YL(i ) now i=i* or YL(i *) Recall the LM Relation: P P Therefore, to maintain to keep i at i*. Econ 302 E , the money supply must be adjusted The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #57 Fiscal Policy Under Fixed Exchange Rates The Effects of a Fiscal Expansion Under Fixed Under flexible exchange rates, a Exchange Rates fiscal expansion increases output, from YA to YB. Under fixed exchange rates, output increases from YA to YC. The central bank must accommodate the resulting increase in the demand for money. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #58 Output, the Interest Rate, and the Exchange Rate Fixed Exchange Rates Good or Bad Idea? With fixed exchange rates, a country… Gives up a powerful tool for correcting trade imbalances and changing the level of economic activity. Gives up control of its interest rate. Must accommodate its fiscal policy with monetary policy. Are there any benefits to fixed exchange rates? This requires a look into the medium-run. Econ 302 The Goods Market in an Open Economy Slide #59