Carbaugh, International Economics 9e, Chapter 14
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Transcript Carbaugh, International Economics 9e, Chapter 14
International Economics
By Robert J. Carbaugh
9th Edition
Chapter 13:
Balance-of-Payments
Adjustments
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing
Balance of payments adjustments
Balance of payments adjustments
If part of the balance of payments is in
deficit or surplus for a period of time,
mechanisms are needed to restore
equilibrium
Adjustment mechanisms can be:
Automatic - economic processes
Discretionary - government policies
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
2
Balance of payments adjustments
Automatic adjustment under fixed
exchange rates
Key variables
Prices
Interest rates
Income
Money
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Schools of thought on adjustment
Classical approach (1800s - early 1900s)
Centered on gold standard
Emphasized role of prices and interest rates
Keynesian approach (1930s onward)
Emphasized income changes affecting
adjustment
Monetarist approach (1960s-, Chicago school)
Focus on role of money in changes and
adjustment
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Price adjustment - background
Under the gold standard, each nation’s
currency was backed by gold and had a
fixed price in terms of gold
Imports and exports were paid for in gold
A nation’s money supply (total amount of
gold and gold-backed currency) was
directly tied to balance of payments whether gold was flowing in or out overall
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Price adjustment - background (cont’d)
Balance of payments surplus would expand
money supply; deficit would shrink money
supply
By the classical quantity theory of money,
increases in the money supply led directly
to an increase in overall prices (and a
shrinking money supply caused overall
prices to fall)
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Price adjustment of the BOP
Deficit nations
Would be losing gold, therefore shrinking their money
supply and causing prices to fall
Lower prices would make their exports more
competitive and lessen demand for imports, restoring
equilibrium
Surplus nations
Would be gaining gold, increasing money supply and
price level
Higher prices would cut exports and encourage imports
until the surplus was eliminated
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Problems with price adjustment theory
Gold flows are not directly linked to
domestic money supply
Nations are often not at full employment
If economy is not at capacity, less likely that
prices will rise as money supply does
Prices and wages are often not able to fall
in the short run
Falling money supply will cut output and
employment rather than prices
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Interest rate adjustment
Inflows of gold expand the money supply,
causing short-term interest rates to fall;
outflows cause rates to rise
Investors in surplus nations would send
gold abroad in search of higher rates;
deficit nations would receive gold from
abroad for investment, restoring equilibrium
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Interest rate adjustment
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Income adjustment
Surplus nations will experience rising national
income, leading to an increased demand for
imports - partially offsetting the surplus
Deficit nations will experience falling income,
leading to a drop in demand for imports - partially
offsetting the deficit
Foreign repercussions effect - one country’s
deficit is another’s surplus, so that while income
is declining in one country, its exports will
increase to the country with rising income
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Income adjustment applied
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Disadvantages of automatic mechanisms
Require governments not to intervene
Automatic systems seem desirable when
they are believed to lead to full
employment; when nations face
unemployment and shrinking output,
automatic mechanisms seem inadequate
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Monetary adjustment - background
BOP disequilibrium represents an imbalance
between the supply and demand for money
Demand for money is:
Directly related to income and prices
Inversely related to interest rates
Supply of money has two components:
Domestic component - credit created by national
government
International component - foreign exchange reserves
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Monetary adjustment
Payments deficits are the result of an
excess supply of money at home
Excess supply of money encourages imports,
which results in foreign exchange reserves
flowing overseas and reducing the money
supply
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Monetary adjustment
Excess demand for money leads to a
payments surplus
Excess demand is reflected in higher interest
rates and less spending on imports,
encouraging a flow of foreign exchange into
the country
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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Balance of payments adjustments
Monetary adjustment - implications
Theory focuses on domestic monetary
policy as key to balance of payments
Other policies designed to affect the
balance of payments - tariffs, quotas,
devaluation of the currency - are ineffective
in the long run according to the theory
Carbaugh, Chap. 14
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