Title: The Exchange Rate and the Macro Economy
1The Exchange Rate and the Macro Economy
2A National Income Accounting
- GNP Gross National Product The value of all
final goods and services produced - GNP national income (Y), or total output
equals total income - Four possible uses for a countrys output/income
- Consumption
- Investment
- Government Purchases
- Net exports
3Basic Identity
- Y C I G X M
- Current Account X-M
- Y C I G CA
- The Current Account As Savings Minus Investment
- National saving S Y C G.
- Domestic investment is I.
- Y C I G CA.
- So
- CA S I,
- or the current account is the amount by which
national savings exceeds domestic investment.
4- The current account reflects whether a country is
saving abroad (CA surplus) or borrowing to pursue
additional consumption/investment at home (CA
deficit). - C I G represents domestic residents spending
or absorption - Y represents national income
- CA Y C I G represents the excess of
income over spending domestically
5CA and the nations wealth
- A positive CA implies national income is greater
than domestic spending. - The economy is making more than it is consuming
or investing itself (the difference is foreign
spending on domestic goods). - A current account surplus implies an economy is
accumulating foreign assets (on net). A deficit
implies decrease in net foreign assets.
6- Net Foreign Assets Where wealth is held not
level of wealth. - Suppose the Country A has wealth of 100. 99
invested at home and one abroad. - Country B has wealth of 10. 9 invested in
Country A and one at home. - Country As net foreign assets Assets abroad
(1) minus foreign assets in A (9) minus 8. - Country B has NFA of plus 8.
7Why run deficits or surpluses?
- Life-cycle model implies that saving occurs when
current income is high relatively to permanent
income (adjusted for impatience and interest
rate). - Investment takes place where marginal product of
capital is high. - Growth economies should run deficits.
- Why might Japan run surpluses?
8Public and Private Saving
- S(private) Y T C.
- S(govt) T G.
- S S(private) S(govt).
- CA S(private) S(govt) I.
- S(private) I (G T).
- Holding constant private activity, an increase in
the government deficit lowers the current account
surplus (or increases the deficit).
9The Balance of Payments
- The financial account (formerly capital
account) records all international purchases or
sales of assets. - When an American purchases a foreign asset, it
shows up as a debit on the U.S. financial account
(it is a negative entry because the U.S.
imports a foreign asset). - An increase in international reserves is an
important entry in the financial account. - Capital account now refers to non-market
transfers of wealth (e.g. sovereign debt
forgiveness).
10The Balance of Payments Identity
Current Account Private (non-ORT) Financial
Account Official Reserve Transactions Capital
Account 0
- Implications
- A current account deficit must be matched by a
financial account surplus. - That is, a CA deficit is matched by a capital
inflow as foreign countries purchase the US
assets that fund Americas spending over income.
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13B Open Economy Macro
- Disposable Income and the Current Account
- Determinants of Aggregate Demand
- Consumption
- C(Yd)
- YdY-T is disposable income.
- C increases with income.
- However, C increases less than one for one with
income.
14- Y is short-run income level. YF is the long-run
(full employment) income level. - As Y increases while holding YF fixed, there is
an incentive to save some of the additional
income for the future. - ? C increases with Y, but so does savings.
- Current Account As disposable income increases,
consumers increase purchases of imports. All
else equal, CA declines. (In equilibrium, all
else cannot stay equal as saving also increases.)
15- Real Exchange Rate and the Current Account
- As domestic goods become cheap relative to
foreign goods (q ?), the volume of exports
increase and the volume of imports fall. - Effect on the current account depends on the
value effect. - Assume that volume effect outweighs the value
effect and the CA improves following a real
exchange rate depreciation. - In the short run, prices are sticky and so
nominal exchange rate movements result in real
exchange rate movements. - E? ? CA ?
- CA(q, Yd)
- The model takes Investment (I) as given. (In
practice investment decreases as the real
interest rate increases.) - Government purchases (G) contribute to aggregate
demand as well. - Assume that deficits are not offset by private
savings (no Ricardian equivalence.)
16- Aggregate Demand
- C(Yd)IGCA(q,Yd)
- DD(q, Yd, I, G)
17Goal Equilibrium determination of exchange rates
and output in the SR
- Output Market Equilibrium
- Asset Market Equilibrium
- Short Run Prices are sticky. We assume that
supply can move to meet changes in demand without
large movements in price (especially if there is
unemployment) in the short-run. - In the long-run, prices adjust and Y converges to
YF.
18Output Market Equilibrium DD curve
19Factors that Shift the D Curve
- A change in G.
- A change in T.
- A change in I.
- A change in P/P.
- A change in the consumption function.
- A demand shift between foreign and domestic
goods. - A change in E is a movement along the D curve
not a shift!
20Asset Market Equilibrium The AA Curve
- What pair of E and Y keeps the money and currency
market in equilibrium. - By UIP
- For a given Money Supply and Price level
- An increase in Y ? Money Demand ? ? r ?? E
?
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22Factors that Shift the A Curve
- A change in the Money Supply.
- A change in P.
- A change in Ee.
- A change in r.
- A change in the money demand function.
23Short-Run Equilibrium for an Open Economy