Title: Robert J. Gordon, Macroeconomics, 10th edition, 2006, Addison-Wesley
1Robert J. Gordon, Macroeconomics, 10th edition,
2006, Addison-Wesley
- Chapter 6
- International Trade, Exchange Rates, and
Macroeconomic Policy
2- An economy with positive NX must lend to
foreigners (lending or foreign investment) while
an economy with negative NX must borrow from
foreigners. - We also learned that government budget deficit
can be financed partially or totally by foreign
borrowing depending on the size of the economy. - A small open economy can borrow the entire
deficit without crowding out, while a large
economy influences world interest rates and thus
crowd out private investment. - The trilemma
- Is the impossibility to maintain simultaneously
- Independent control of domestic monetary policy
- Fixed exchange rates
- Free flows of capital with other nations.
3- The current account and the balance of payments
(BOP) - Current account equals NX plus two additional
components (are not part of GDP) - Net flow of international investment income,
these do not represent production in the domestic
economy. They are added to the Gross National
product not GDP. - Net international transfers, e.g., remittances,
they are also excluded from GDP. - The current account and the capital account
- BOP is divided into two parts.
- The current account, which records all types of
flows for current income and output.
4- The capital account, records purchases and sales
of foreign assets by citizens and purchases and
sales of foreign assets by foreigners. - BOP outcome
- When total credits are greater than debits, the
country is said to run a BOP surplus, i.e., it
will receive more foreign money for credits than
domestic money it pays for debits. The opposite
is called a BOP deficit. - The overall BOP surplus or deficit is the sum of
the current account and capital account. - Current account balance capital account balance
- BOP outcome.
5- Foreign borrowing and international indebtedness
- A current account deficit must be financed either
by borrowing from foreign firms, households and
governments. IT must increase its indebtedness. - A current account surplus implies a reduction in
indebtedness or an increase in the countries net
investment surplus. - Change in international investment position
- current account balance
-
6- Exchange rates
- The price of one currency in terms of another is
called the foreign exchange rate. It can be shown
in two ways, - The dollar per yen 0.009437 per yen.
- The yen per dollar yen 106.00 per .
- Note the two rates are equivalent (1/106
.009437) - But it is conventional (in USA) to express the
foreign exchange rate as the foreign currency per
dollar, i.e., Yen 106.00 per . Except for the
British pound and the euro. - Changes in exchange rates
- A higher number means that the dollar experiences
an A lower number indicates a depreciation.
/ decreases from 106.25 to 1.06 and the /
rate declines from .7798 to .7769, indicating a
depreciation of the dollar against the euro.
7- Sometimes the depreciation is high over time,
e.g., the / rate. - The market for foreign exchange
- Tourists when they travel to any country they
need to exchange their currency into that
countrys currency - Banks that have too much of too little of foreign
money can trade for what they need in the foreign
exchange market. - The results of trading in foreign exchange are
illustrated for four foreign nations.
8Figure 6-2 Foreign Exchange Rates of the Dollar
Against Four Major Currencies, Quarterly,
19702005 (1 of 2)
9Figure 6-2 Foreign Exchange Rates of the Dollar
Against Four Major Currencies, Quarterly,
19702005 (2 of 2)
10- The factors that determine the foreign exchange
rate and influences its fluctuations can be
summarized on the a demand supply diagram like
those used in figure 6-3 - Why people hold dollars and Swiss Francs
- People in many countries may find dollars or
Swiss Francs more convenient or safer than their
own currencies. Sellers in these countries also
accept dollars and Swiss Francs. - A change in preferences of people will shift the
demand curve for dollars and thus exchange rates.
- Demand for currencies is driven from the demand
for its imports and capital outflows. It also has
a supply driven from the demand of its exports
and capital inflows.
11Figure 6-3 Determination of the Price in Swiss
Francs of the Dollar
12- What explains the slopes of the demand and supply
curves for dollars in figure 6-3. D0 will be
vertical if the price elasticity for Swiss demand
for US imports is zero. - If price elasticity is negative the demand curve
will be negatively slopped. Look at figure 6-3 - The analysis for S0 is different. S0 will be
vertical if the price elasticity of the US demand
for Swiss imports is -1 (since revenues in
foreign exchange will be the same with changes in
exchange rate). only if the price elasticity is
greater than unity (in absolute terms) S0 will be
positively slopped. - How governments can influence foreign exchange
rates. - If exchange rate of the dollar is higher than
market equilibrium, people must accept a lower
rate for it to induce foreigners to accept it.
13- But some countries may prevent the depreciation
of the dollar, because it will make their exports
expensive to sell. - How they do that? Look at figure 6-3, the
Switzerland government can purchase the distance
AB to maintain the dollar appreciated at a rate
of CHF 2.00/. - Real exchange rates and purchasing power parity.
- The real exchange rate (e) is equal to the
nominal rate (e) adjusted for differences in
inflation rates between the two countries. - e e p/pf
- Suppose that in 2005 e and e for the Mexican
peso is 10/, the price level in the two
countries is 100 - 10 pesos/ 10 pesos 100/100
14- Assume that in 2006 pf is 200 while the US price
remains fixed at 100 - 5 pesos/ 10 pesos 100/200
- The dollar experienced a real depreciation
against the peso. If the opposite is true the
dollar would experience a real appreciation. - Countries experience high inflation, find their
nominal exchange rate depreciates, while their
real exchange rate remains roughly unchanged. - Suppose that e jumps from 10 to 20 pesos/
(nominal depreciation), hence - 10 20 100/200 no real depreciation
- Countries with rapid inflation usually witness
nominal depreciation without any major change in
real exchange rate.
15- We care about e more than e, because it is a
major determinant of NX. When e appreciates M
become cheaper an X become expensive, business
profits go down and unemployment increases and
vice versa. - The theory of purchasing power parity
- PPP states that in open economies prices of
traded goods should be the same everywhere,
therefore e should be constant (1) - 1 e p/pf
- Swapping the left hand side and solve for e
- e pf/p
16- PPP and inflation differentials
- ?e/e pf - p
- Growth rate of e growth rate of pf p. the
term ?e/e is positive when there is an
appreciation of a currency. The term pf p is
the inflation differential between foreign and
domestic inflation. - Why PPP breaks down
- New inventions
- Discovery of new deposits of raw materials
- Higher demand for a currency e.g., to deposit in
banks. - Non-traded goods
- Government policy e.g., subsidization.
17- Exchange rate systems
- Flexible exchange rate system
- Exchange rate is free to change, a depreciation
and appreciation would correct for deficit or
surplus of BOP. - Fixed exchange rate system
- The central bank agreed to finance any surplus or
deficit in BOP. To do so CB maintains foreign
exchange reserves and stands ready to buy or sell
dollars as needed to maintain the foreign
exchange rate of its currency.
18- Determinants of net exports
- Net exports and the foreign exchange rate
- Effect of real income.
- NX NXa nxY
- NXa is the autonomous component of net exports
(determined mainly by foreign income). - nx is the fraction of real income spent on
imports. During expansions imports would be high
(NX will be low) while during recessions imports
will be low (NX will be high). - Effect of the foreign exchange rate
- When exchange rate appreciates X tends to decline
and M tend to increase, NX go down. To reflect
this negative relationship - NX NXa nxY ue. e.g., NX 1000 -
.1Y 2e
19- Suppose that Y 8000, e100 NX would be zero. An
appreciation in e to 150 would reduce NX to -100.
- The real exchange rate and interest rate
- The demand for dollars and the fundamentals
- The demand for dollars is to buy American
products or assets. Why the outside world hold
dollars, The fundamentals include changes in the
world wide to buy American goods, e.g., an
invention of new products in USA (ve), or
outside USA (-ve), - But fundamentals change slowly, therefore they
are not responsible for volatile changes in e.
sharp ups and downs in e are due to the desire of
foreigners to buy American securities. If
American securities are attractive (ve effect),
or foreign securities became more attractive (-ve
effect). Relative attractiveness depends on
(average) interest rate differentials.
20- (r-rf) if r gt rf US securities would be more
attractive, and vice versa. a rise in US interest
should thus cause an appreciation and vice versa.
- Interest rates and capital mobility
- Interest rates affect e through capital mobility.
- Perfect capital mobility if residents of one
country can buy any desired assets with very low
commissions and fees, interest rates would be
tightly linked. If rf increases, the demand for
foreign securities increases, which raises r
relative to rf. - Any event the a country tends to change r
relative to rf will generate a huge capital
movement that will soon eliminate the (r-rf),
e.g., capital expansion lowers r and causes
capital outflows which bring r back to its
original level.
21- The tow adjustment mechanisms fixed and flexible
rates - Perfect capital mobility implies that fiscal and
monetary policies do not affect domestic interest
rates r. - With fixed e, a stimulative monetary policy will
not reduce domestic r but instead causes will
lead the country to a loss of international
reserves as the capital account causes a BOP
deficit. - In a pure flexible e, monetary policy stimulus
generates excess supply of money and lowers e
till supply and demand are in balance again. - In short under perfect capital mobility both
monetary and fiscal policy lose control over r.
under fixed e monetary stimulus causes a loss of
reserves, and fiscal stimulus causes reserves to
increase. - Under flexible e monetary stimulus causes
depreciation and fiscal stimulus causes an
appreciation, and vice versa.
22- The IS-LM model in a small open economy
- The assumption of perfect capital mobility
introduces a new assumption in the IS-LM that
(r-rf) is zero. - Any small change in r caused by shifts in
monetary and fiscal policy will generate capital
flows that will quickly bring the domestic
interest rate into line with the unchanged
foreign interest rate. - The BP schedule
- Under perfect capital mobility BOP can be in
equilibrium only at a single r equal to rf. Any
higher interest rate will lead to unlimited
capital inflows causing a huge BOP surplus. Any
lower r will lead to unlimited capital outflows
causing a huge BOP deficit. The BOP is in
equilibrium only along the BP line, capital and
current accounts are in equilibrium. (figure 6-8)
23- The analysis of fixed exchange rates
- We will examine the effects of monetary and the
fiscal expansion. We will assume that price level
is fixed. - Monetary expansion
- Figure 6-8, if real money supply increases LM
shifts to the RHS, while IS is assumed to be
unchanged, r will go down to r1. This generates
huge capital outflows and loss of international
reserves. To prevent such movements, the CB must
boast interest rate back to r by reversing the
monetary stimulus. LM shifts back to LM0 and the
economy returns back to E0. Monetary policy is
impotent. - Fiscal expansion
- With fixed exchange rates, the only way domestic
policy makers can alter the real income is to use
fiscal policy
24Figure 6-8 Effect of an Increase in the Money
Supply with Fixed Exchange Rates
25- Figure 6-9, a fiscal expansion shifts IS to the
RHS which moves the economy to E2, r increases to
r2, leading to huge capital inflows.
International reserves increase and the since e
is fixed, CB must increase MS until r returns to
its initial level. - In a closed economy without capital inflows, the
economy would move to point E3. - Perfect capital mobility with fixed r makes
fiscal policy very effective. - Analysis with flexible exchange rates
- The CB does nothing to prevent an appreciation or
depreciation. Monetary policy becomes very
effective while fiscal policy becomes
ineffective.
26Figure 6-9 Effect of a Fiscal Policy Stimulus
with Fixed Exchange Rates
27- Figure 6-10. Note that the currency depreciates
whenever the economy moves below the BP
(increases NX and shifts IS to the RHS) and
appreciates whenever it moves above the BP line
(reduces NX and shifts IS to the LHS). - Monetary expansion
- Shifts the LM to the RHS, capital outflows lead
to a depreciation and NX increase such that IS
shifts to IS1, till the economy arrives to E3,
where the economy and BOP are in equilibrium at
higher Y. - Fiscal expansion
- Shifts IS to the RHS, capital inflows lead to an
appreciation and NX decreases. IS falls back to
its initial position E0.
28Figure 6-10 Effect of a Monetary and Fiscal
Policy Stimulus with Flexible Exchange Rates
29- LM does not shift and domestic crowding out is
replaced by international crowding out which is
complete in this case. The twin deficits are
identical trade deficit is the fiscal deficit. - Notes
- With fixed exchange rates, fiscal policy is
highly effective and CB is forced to accommodate
fiscal policy actions. Monetary policy is
impotent. - With flexible exchange rates, monetary policy is
highly effective, CB can stimulate the economy by
causing the exchange rate to depreciate. Fiscal
policy is impotent and international crowding out
is complete.
30- Capital mobility and exchange rates in a large
open economy - How a large economy differs from a small open
economy - A large economy has a substantial control over
its r, capital flows are not substantial to
change r to equate rf. Capital mobility is
imperfect to eliminate (r-rf). - Figure 6-11, for a small open economy BP is
horizontal. In a large economy capital account
surplus occurs with r is high, and a deficit
occurs when r is low. - For a BOP balance any surplus in capital account
must be offset by a deficit in current account
which requires a high level of income, e.g., at
point C. - For a BOP balance any deficit in capital account
must also be offset by a surplus in current
account caused by lower income e.g., at point A.
BP slopes up for a large economy because capital
mobility is positively related to r.
31Figure 6-11 The BP Line in a Small and Large
Open Economy
Capital account surplus Must be with a C.
account Deficit (needs large income
Capital account deficit Must be with a C.
account surplus (needs small income
32- Monetary and fiscal policy with fixed and
flexible exchange rates - With fixed e monetary policy is impotent in a
large economy, while fiscal policy is highly
effective, but some what less than the case of a
small open economy, since its stimulus is divided
between an increase in real income and domestic r
instead of being entirely directed toward an
increase in real income. - With flexible e fiscal policy is impotent in a
large economy, while monetary policy is highly
effective, but since higher income must be
accompanied by higher r (BP is upward slopping),
there is some crowding out of domestic
expenditures, and this must be offset by a larger
stimulus to NX than in a small open economy
requiring an even larger depreciation. See the
following summary.
33Summary of Monetary and Fiscal Policy Effects in
Open Economies
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35Table 6-1 The U.S. Balance of Payments, Selected
Years
36Figure 6-1 The U.S. Current Account Balance and
Its Net International Investment Position,
19752004
37Table 6-2 Daily Quotations of Foreign Exchange
Rates
38Figure 6-2 Foreign Exchange Rates of the Dollar
Against Four Major Currencies, Quarterly,
19702005
39International Perspective Big Mac Meets PPP
40Figure 6-4 Nominal and Real Effective Exchange
Rates of the Dollar, 19702004
41Figure 6-5 Foreign Official Holdings of Dollar
Reserves as a Percent of U.S. GDP
42Figure 6-6 U.S. Real Net Exports and the Real
Exchange Rate of the Dollar, 19702004
43Figure 6-7 The U.S. Real Corporate Bond Rate and
the Real Exchange Rate of the Dollar, 19702004
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