Slideserve - co.uk-LN03 Eiteman 85652 14 LN03
Slideserve - co.uk-LN03 Eiteman 85652 14 LN03
Slideserve - co.uk-LN03 Eiteman 85652 14 LN03
The Balance of
Payments
Learning Objectives
Learn how government and multinational
enterprise management uses balance of
payments accounts and accounting in
decision-making
Examine how the primary accounts of the
balance of payments reflects fundamental
economic and financial activities across
borders
Explore how changes in the balance of
payments affect key macroeconomic rates
like exchange rates and interest rates
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Learning Objectives
Analyze how exchange rate changes affect
the prices and competitiveness of
international trade
Evaluate how governments have responded
to the globalization of capital markets in
their use of capital restrictions in an effort to
hinder capital mobility
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Direct Investment
This is the net balance of capital dispersed from and
into the U.S. for the purpose of exerting control
over assets.
The source of concern over foreign investment in
any country focuses on two topics: control and
profit.
Some countries possess restrictions on what
foreigners may own in their country.
Concerns over profit stem from the same argument.
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Portfolio Investment
This is the net balance of capital that flows in and out of the
U.S. but does not reach the 10% threshold of direct
investment.
The purchase of debt securities across borders is classified as
portfolio investment because debt securities by definition do
not provide the buyer with ownership or control.
Portfolio investment is motivated by a search for returns
rather than to control or manage the investment.
As illustrated in Exhibit 3.3, portfolio investment has shown
much more volatile behavior than net foreign direct
investment over the past decade.
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Managed Floats
Countries operating with a managed float often
find it necessary to take action to maintain their
desired exchange rate values
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Capital Mobility
The degree to which capital moves freely
across borders is critically important to a
countrys balance of payments
The United States financial account surplus
has at least partially offset the current
account deficits over the last 20 or more
years
China has run a surplus in each of these
accounts in recent years
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Capital Mobility
The free flow of capital in and out of an economy
can potentially destabilize economic activity or can
contribute significantly to an economys
development
Thus, Bretton Woods Agreement was careful to
promote free movement of capital for current
account transactions (e.g., foreign exchange or
deposits) but less so for capital account
transactions (e.g., foreign direct investment)
1970s-1990s saw growth in capital openness, the
financial crisis of 1997/1998 stopped that due to
destructive capital outflows and contagion
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Capital Mobility
The authors argue that the post-1860 era can be
subdivided into four distinct periods with regard to
capital mobility.
1860-1914: continuously increasing capital mobility as the
gold standard was adopted and international trade
relations were expanded
1914-1945: global economic destruction, isolationist
economic policies, negative effect on capital movement
between countries
1945-1971: Bretton Woods era say a great expansion of
international trade
1971-2097: floating exchange rates, economic volatility,
rapidly expanding cross-border capital flows
China and India attempt to open their markets
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Capital Controls
A capital control is any restriction that limits or
alters the rate or direction of capital movement into
or out of a country
Free movement of capital is more the exception
than the rule
Exhibit 3.8 outlines several methods of and
purposes for capital controls
Dutch Disease is the name given to the problem of
a substantial currency appreciation due to the
demand for a specific natural resource faced by
several resource-rich smaller nations
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Exhibit 3.8
Purposes of
Capital
Controls
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Capital Flight
Capital flightthe rapid outflow of capital in
opposition to or in fear of domestic political and
economic conditions and policiesis one of the
problems that capital controls are designed to
control.
Although it is not limited to heavily indebted
countries, the rapid and sometimes illegal transfer
of convertible currencies out of a country poses
significant economic and political problems.
Many heavily indebted countries have suffered
significant capital flight.
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Global
Finance in
Practice
3.2
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