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60
Trade as a Percent of GDP
50
World
40
30
United States
20
10
0
1965
1970
1975
1980
1985
Year
1990
1995
2000
2005
Buyers of U.S. Exports
Canada
Mexico
Japan
China
United Kingdom
Germany
South Korea
Netherlands
0
50
100
150
200
250
Sellers of Imports to the U.S.
Canada
China
Mexico
Japan
Germany
United Kingdom
South Korea
Taiwan
0
50
100
150
200
Billions of Dollars
250
300
350
Quantity of Wine
200
C
100
0
A (Desired Consumption)
50
100
Quantity of Cloth
Quantity of Wine
200
B (Desired
Consumption)
100
D
0
100
200
Quantity of Cloth
300
400
Production, Exchange, and Consumption of Wine and Cloth
Production
Wine
Cloth
Portugal
200
0
England
0
400
200
400
Total
Exchange
Portugal
sell 100 buy 100
England
buy 100 sell 100
Consumption
Portugal
100
100
England
100
300
200
400
Total
Opportunity Cost and Comparative Advantage
Country
Portugal
England
Opportunity Cost of Opportunity Cost of
1 Unit of Cloth
1 Unit of Wine
2 units of wine
½ unit of cloth
2 units of cloth
½ unit of wine
Euros per Dollar
S
E
D
Quantity of Dollars
Euros per Dollar
Depreciation
of the Dollar
S1
S2
E1
E2
D
Quantity of Dollars
United States Balance of Payments Account (2006, Billions of Dollars)
Current Account
Inflows:
Payments for Exports of Goods
1,023
Payments for Exports of Services
423
Income Receipts
650
Total
2,096
Outflows:
Payments for Imports of Goods
–1,861
Payments for Imports of Services
–343
Income Payments
–614
Net transfers
–90
Total
–2,908
Balance on Current Account
(= Inflows  Outflows)
Financial Account
Outflows (e.g., U.S. lending abroad, or
FDI abroad)
–1,055
Inflows (e.g., U.S. borrowing from
abroad, or FDI in the United States)
1,889
Balance on Financial Account
(= Inflows  Outflows)
Statistical discrepancy (and “capital account”)
Balance of Payments
Source: U.S. BEA, U.S. International Transactions Accounts Data
–811
833
–22
0
18
Imports
16
Percent of GDP
14
12
10
Exports
8
6
4
2
0
1950
1960
1970
1980
Year
1990
2000
2010
Expansionary
monetary policy
Lowers
interest rates
Reduces
capital inflows
Investment is
encouraged
Reduces
demand for
dollars, leading
to depreciation
Aggregate
demand rises
Reduces imports
and increases
exports
Equilibrium
GDP rises
Per Unit of Domestic Currency
Units of Foreign Exchange
surplus
Smarket
e*
Dwith intervention
Dmarket
Quantity of the
Domestic Currency
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