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The Balance of Payments The Balance of Payments

The Balance of Payments - PowerPoint Presentation

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The Balance of Payments - PPT Presentation

or chapter 3 2 Talk Agenda How nations measure intl economic activity Define Current Account CapitalFinancial Account How can one use the BOP subaccounts to make financial decisions ID: 528943

balance account financial capital account balance capital financial amp bop investment trade payments international foreign reserves current credit net assets direct exchange

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Slide1

The Balance of Payments

(or chapter 3)Slide2

2

Talk Agenda

How nations measure int’l economic activity?

Define Current Account, Capital/Financial Account?

How can one use the BOP sub-accounts to make financial decisions?

What leads to capital flight? Some History.

Some Q & A (I ask the Q, you give the A)Slide3

3

The Balance of Payments

Balance of Payments (BOP):

measures all international economic transactions b/n residents & foreign residents.

Monetary and fiscal policy must take the BOP into account at the national level

BOP data may be important

Indicates pressure on exchange rate

May signal imposition/ removal of controls over payments, dividends, interest.

Helps forecast country’s market potentialSlide4

4

For example…

BOP transactions (US side)

Daimler-Chrysler purchases manufacturer in Chicago.

GM China pays dividends to parent in US.

An American tourist purchases a necklace in India.

A Mexican lawyer purchases US bond via investment broker in Cleveland.

Rule of thumb:

“follow the cash flow”Slide5

5

B of P

Current Account

Net exports/imports goods&services (Balance of Trade)

Net Income (investment income from direct portfolio investment plus employee compensation

Net transfers (sums sent home by migrant abroad)

B.

Capital Account

Capital transfers related to purchase and sale of fixed assets such as real estate

C.

Financial Account

Net foreign direct investment

Net portfolio investment

Other financial items

Net Errors and Omissions

Missing data such as illegal transfers

E.

Reserves and Related Items

Changes in official monetary reserves including gold and foreign exchange reserves

Σ (A:E)

= Overall Balance

Basic Balance = A+B+C

Overall Balance = A+B+C+DSlide6

6

BOP Accounting

The BOP must balance

How to measure international economic activity?

Is it an international economic transaction?

How do flow of goods/services/assets/money translate in debits & credits?

Bookkeeping procedures for BOP?

Mistakes are common…

BOP is

a flow statement

, not a stock statement.

Main transactions in BOP:

Exchange of real assets.

Exchange of financial assets.Slide7

7

The Current Account

Goods Trade

or

Balance of Trade (BOT)

– export/import of goods.

Services Trade

– export/import of services (financial, construction, and tourism).

Income

– predominately

current income

associated with investments made in previous periods, + wages & salaries paid to non-resident workers.

Current Transfers

– financial settlements due to change in ownership of real resources or financial items. Any transfer b/n countries which is

one-way, a gift or a grant

.CA typically dominated by export/import of goods, for this reason Balance of Trade (BOT) is widely quoted.Slide8

8

For example…

Trade balance

Debit:

Sun Microsystems buys LCDs from Hong Kong.

Credit:

Singapore Airlines buys Boeing jet.

Trade in services

Debit:

American rents an apartment in Singapore.

Credit:

TUI - Germany places an ad in the NYT.

Income payments

Debit:

Honda US pays dividend to Honda Japan.

Credit:

Bank Austria pays salary to rep in NY office.

Unilateral Current Transactions

Debit: Peace Corps pays US volunteer teachers in Bosnia.Credit: TotalFina pays tuition of employee for Stern MBA.Slide9

9

The Current Account

US Current Account, 1997-1999 (US$ bn)Slide10

10

U.S. Trade Balance

vs. Balance on Services & Income,

1985-99 (US$ bn)

Source: International Monetary Fund,

Balance of Payments Statistics

Yearbook, 2000

.Slide11

11

The Capital/Financial Account

Capital account:

transfers of fixed assets, real estate, acquisitions/disposal of non-produced/non-financial assets

Financial account:

three components; classified by degree of control,

Direct Investment

– Net balance of capital which is dispersed from and into US for the purpose of exerting control over assets.

E.g. US company acquires foreign company stake (-)

Foreign company acquires US company stake (+)

foreign direct investment (FDI)

: 10%+ of voting shares acquired.Slide12

12

The Capital/Financial Account

Portfolio Investment

– Net balance of capital which flows in/out of US but does not reach 10% ownership.

No voting or control rights over the asset.

Purchase/sale of equity securities.

Purchase/sale of debt securities.

E.g. T-bill purchases by foreigners (

net portfolio investment

)

E.g. US$ debt issues by foreign companies/ governments.

Risk/Return motivated.

Far more volatile than FDI.

Other Investment Assets/Liabilities

–Short & long-term trade credits, cross-border loans, currency & bank deposits, & other accounts receivable and payable in cross-border trade.Slide13

13

Direct Investment Concerns

How much shall the country control the direct investments?

What can foreigners buy?

Land, real estate sale to foreigners limited (Eastern Europe)

Certain stock can not be purchased (China, Russia)

How shall profit be distributed?

Profit drain

?

Many foreign firms in US reinvest most of their profits.Slide14

14

The Capital/Financial Account

US Capital/Financial Account, 1997-1999 (billions of US$)Slide15

15

For example…

Direct Investment

Debit:

Ford builds factory in Australia.

Credit:

Ford sells its factory in UK.

Portfolio Investment

Debit:

US investor buys BASF stock @ Frankfurt Stock Exchange

Credit:

Korean gov’t buys US T-bills to hold as forex reserves.

Other investment

Debit:

HP deposits $10m in a bank account in London.

Credit:

HP generates accounts receivable in Canada.Slide16

16

US Financial Account, 1985-99 (US$ bn)

Source: International Monetary Fund,

Balance of Payments Statistics Yearbook, 2000

.Slide17

17

Current & Financial/Capital Account Balances, US,

1992 - 1999 (US$ bn)

Source: International Monetary Fund,

Balance of Payments Statistics Yearbook, 2000

.Slide18

18

The Other Accounts

Net Errors and Omissions

– Account is used to account for statistical errors and/or untraceable monies within a country

Official Reserves

(ORA) – total reserves held by official monetary authorities within a country.

Comprised of major currencies used in international trade and financial transactions, & reserve accounts (SDR) held @ IMF.

Important indicator for countries w/ fixed exchange rate regimes

Need to maintain

parity rate

w/

official reserves

.Slide19

19

The Balance of Payments in Total

US Balance of Payments, Analytic Presentation, 1997-1999

Q:

Why did FDI increase so much?Slide20

20

What if…?

BOP shows surplus:

D > S for that currency.

Allow currency value to increase,

Or accumulate foreign reserves.

BOP shows deficit:

S > D for that currency.

Devalue currency,

Or use official reserves to support currency.Slide21

21

Capital Mobility

Very important for BoP these days…

Some history on it

1860-1914 –increasing capital openness, countries adopted gold standard

1914-1945 – couple of wars & depression

1945-1971 –”Annees des miracles” of international trade

1971-2003 – floating exchange rates, financial volatility, rapidly expanding capital flowsSlide22

22

Source: “Globalization and Capital Markets,” Maurice Obstfeld and Alan M. Taylor, NBER Conference Paper, May 4-5, 2001, p. 6.

Low

High

Capital Mobility

1880

1860

1900

1920

1940

1960

1980

2000

1880

1900

1914

1860

Gold Standard

1880-1914

Capital Mobility

1960

1971

Bretton Woods

1945-1971

1980

2000

Float

1971-2000

1918

Interwar, 1914-1945

1929

1925

1945

•Slide23

23

Capital Flight

How to move capital across borders:

International payments

, regular bank transfers.

Transfer by bearer

(smuggling).

Transfer of collectibles/ precious metals

.

Money laundering

Off-shore zones & tax heavens.

Invoicing

international trade transactions.

Transfer pricing Slide24

24

Where can I find this in … BOP?

Calpers (the Cal mutual fund) buys shares of stock on the Tokyo & London stock exchanges?

American tourist pays hotel in Paris w/ AMEX credit card (US issued)?