Transcript Week 2
Topic 1: Current account
determination
Balance of payments accounting
FRBNY article, June 2004
BEA international statistics (www.bea.gov)
FRB Bulletin, May 2003
Any intermediate macroeconomics
textbook
Net external liabilities
Current account deficits cumulate to net
external liabilities
See www.bea.gov/bea/newsrel/intinvnewsrelease.htm
Focus on gross and net positions
Net International Investment Position of
the United States at Year end, 1989 –
2007
See:
http://www.bea.gov/international/xls/intinv07_t2.xls
U.S. NIIP 2007
NIIP at year end: about -$2.5 trillion (with
FDI at current cost)
US-owned assets abroad $17.6 trillion
Foreign securities $6.6 trillion
US FDI abroad $3.93 trillion
Bank claims $3.8 trillion
Foreign-owned assets in US: $20.1 trillion
Revaluation effects
Price changes: Greater share of FDI and
portfolio equities in US assets than in US
liabilities
Exchange rate changes: US liabilities
largely denominated/priced in dollars,
while US assets mostly denominated in
foreign currency
Net liabilities decline when dollar depreciates
Exchange rate changes
About two-thirds of US assets
denominated in foreign currency
10 percent depreciation in dollar $1200
billion dollar value of gross US assets
Equivalent to roughly 7 percent of GDP
Lowers net payments on NIIP by
0.28 percent of GDP (.04 7%)
Factors driving global
imbalances
Two main views
“Trade-flows” versus “Capital-flows” view
Does the trade flows drive capital flows or
vice-versa?
Trade-flows view
Elasticities approach to trade
See: Hooper, Johnson, and Marquez
(1998), Chinn (2005)
Idea: Relate trade flows to relative prices
and importer income
Income: GDP or domestic demand
Relative prices: real trade-weighted (effective)
exchange rate
Trade equations
All variables in logs
Xt = Y*t + 1Rt-1 + 2Rt-2
Mt = Yt + 1Rt-1 + 2Rt-2
where:
X = real exports
M = real (non-oil) imports
Y = Domestic income; Y*= Foreign income
R = Real effective exchange rate
Source: Chinn 2005
Empirical results for the US
Good statistical fit
>>0
Houthakker-Magee asymmetry
Implication: with constant prices and equal
U.S. and foreign income growth, U.S. trade
deficit widens
’s and ’s small
In part reflecting incomplete pass-through
U.S. trade deficit
U.S. economy has been outperformed
major trading partners 1997-2006
Real dollar appreciated sharply from 1996
to 2001; depreciated since 2002
Gap between imports and exports now so
large that a marked acceleration in exports
is needed to close trade deficit
U.S. trade deficit
Partial equilibrium: trade deficit drives
financial flows
General equilibrium: if ex-ante trade and
financial flows differ, then the real
exchange rate adjusts to equate the expost flows