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Balance of Payments

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Title: Balance of Payments


1
Balance of Payments
  • A useful way to think about the balance of
    payments is that it is an account that records
    purchases and sales of sterling by those making
    international transactions. Purchases of sterling
    are recorded as positive items, sales as negative
    ones. Since it is not possible for someone to buy
    a pound without someone else selling them one,
    the balance of payments must add up to zero. -
    Philip Allan Updates, Unit 6 Student Unit Guide,
    pg. 34

2
Current Account
  • Net trade in goods
  • Net trade in services
  • Net income flows (interest on foreign bank
    accts, dividends on shares held in foreign
    companies, income from FDI)
  • Net current transfers payment from one govt
    to another (development aid, EU subscription
    payments)

3
Financial Account
  • Financial flows investment from one country to
    another, purchasing of foreign shares/bonds, FDI
  • Money saved in banks overseas
  • Official changes in govt foreign exch. reserves
  • Should offset the current acct balance!

4
B of P Disequilibrium (a structural current
account deficit)
  • For the UK the persistent trade deficit has short
    and long term causes
  • high propensity to buy imported goods / services
    UK consumers prefer foreign produced output
    this is cyclical (a consumer boom often
    accelerates imports)
  • lack of productive capacity of UK firms - if
    domestic producers have insufficient capacity to
    meet domestic demand then imports will make up
    the balance
  • ? comparative advantage - UK manufacturing has
    suffered from low-cost production in newly
    Industrialising countries in other parts of
    Europe (net x capital gds, chemicals net m
    food, cars, aircraft, consumer gds)

5
B of P Disequilibrium cont
  • poor price and non-price competitiveness of UK
    firms - cost levels decrease competitiveness, but
    non-price factors are also important eg.
    quality, design, reliability and service
  • over valued exchange rate? - some economists
    think trade problems stem from the exch. rate
    being too high
  • ? surplus in UK's trade in oil - UK used to be a
    major exporter of oil from the North Sea oil
    production is now well past its peak and net
    surplus from oil trade no longer contribute as
    much to the balance of visible trade
  • current transfers generally negative UK is net
    contributor to EU budget gives more in
    membership subscriptions than it gets in agr.
    subsidies inner city development

6
Positive Trends for UK Current Acct
  • Income acct is positive UK multinational
    investment in 1990s is now returning income
    flows to the UK
  • Services acct is positive esp. financial,
    insurance, advertising, computer services (but
    travel services are negative)

7
Correcting BofP Disequilibrium
  • In order to need correcting, current account
    deficit must be structural rather than cyclical
  • Structural deficit could be sustainable with a
    surplus on the financial account but it requires
    hot money which is very vulnerable to
    speculation sentiment

8
Correcting BofP Disequilibrium
  • Exchange Rate Adjustment depreciation to raise
    international competitiveness (not a policy tool
    in the UK!)
  • Achieved by cuts in interest rates or increase in
    foreign currency reserves
  • But, this is a loosening monetary policy which
    could cause inflation
  • Also, rapid outflow of hot money could threaten
    funding for current acct deficit

9
Correcting BofP Disequilibrium
  • Demand Management reducing AD by tightening
    fiscal or monetary policy - ? disposable income ?
    ? imports
  • Dependent on YED of imports
  • Will also ? output ? unemployment

10
Correcting BofP Disequilibrium
  • Supply-Side Policies raise labour productivity
    make UK more competitive may also focus on
    quality of production
  • May reduce working conditions rights of workers
  • Tend to have long-term effect but limited in the
    short-run
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