Transcript Lecture #2

National Income Accounting
and the Current Account Surplus and
Deficits
J.D. Han,
• King’s University College
12-1
Review of Intermediate
Macroeconomics
National income accounts

measures of National Income (Y): Income

measures of value of Aggregate Output (S Pi Qi) :
Supply

measures of value of Aggregate Expenditure(AE):
Demand: AE = C + I + G + EX - IM

Disposal of National Income : Y = T + C + S
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-2
Ex-post, Supply = Demand
P=E=Y
• Records the value of national income that
results from production and expenditure.

Producers earn income from buyers who spend
money on goods and services.

The amount of expenditure by buyers (E)=
the amount of income for sellers (Y)=
the value of production(P).

National income is often defined to be the income
earned by a nation’s factors of production.
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-3
Y= S Pi Qi = Supply Side NI: GNP

Y: What are factors of production? workers (labor), physical
capital (like factories and equipment), natural resources and
other factors that are used to produce goods and services.

S Pi Qi: The value of final goods and services produced by
labor, capital and natural resources, which belong to the
Canadian nationals, are counted as Canadian GNP.

National Income and the total value of aggregate products
are always equal to each other at ll times.
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-4
AE = Demand Side NI: GNE
•
GNE is calculated by adding the value of
expenditure on final goods and services produced.
•
There are 4 types of expenditure:
1.
Consumption: expenditure by domestic residents
2.
Investment: expenditure by firms on plants & equipment
3.
Government purchases: expenditure by governments on
goods and services
4.
Exports = expenditures by foreigners on domestic goods
and services
5.
AE
= Cd + Id + Gd + EX
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-5
•
Y = P at all times: Supply Side
•
E: Demand Side
•
At equilibrium, Supply = Demand
•
Y (= P )= E at equilibrium
Y = Cd + Id + Gd + EX
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-6
• However, for statistical convenience,
consumption, investment, and
government expenditures are all
inclusive of expenditures on domestic
and foreign goods.
- Noone is always checking and
classifying where the product he spends
on is made!
C = Cd + Cf; I = Id + If; G = Gd + Gf
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-7
Y = Cd + Id + Gd + EX
= (C-Cf) + (I-If) + (G-Gf) + EX
= C + I + G + EX – (Cf + If +Gf)
= C + I + G + EX – IM
= C + I + G + CA surplus
Expenditure
By domestic
residents
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
Net expenditure
by foreigners
12-8
Now Incorporating Y = C + I + G + XM and Y = C + S + T
There are 2 ways of doing so:
(1)Method 1
C+ I + G + EX – IM = C + S + T
EX – IM = S – I + T - G
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-9
Method 2: From Y = C + I + G + EX - IM
EX- IM
(current account surplus)
= Y – (C + I + G )
Trick is to put +T and –T so that Y = C+S+T is incorporated.
= (Y – C – T) + (T – G) – I
= SPrivate + SGovernment- I
= SN – I
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley. d
12-10
*Savings
(1) SPrivate : the saving of the private sector or the households.
• Y = C + SPrivate + T
•
SPrivate =Y – C - T
(2) SGovernment: It is equal to government budget surplus.
* SGovernment = T – G
(3) National Savings SN = SP+ SG
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-11
• If National Savings> Investment, then
CA +
• If National Savings< Investment, then
CA -
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-12
* CA deficits are in fact Savings or
Investment (supplemented) by Foreigners
for this country
I = SN – CA surplus
= SN + CA deficits
I = SNational + SForeign
• Countries can finance investment either by national savings or
by acquiring foreign funds equal to the current account deficit,
which is in fact savings by foreigners (non-residents) for this
economy.
• When national S < I, then CA < 0, financial capital inflows for the
domestic economy.
A current account deficit implies a financial capital inflow or
negative net foreign investment(= positive net investment by
foreigners = net negative foreign investment by Canadians.
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-13
*In the short-run, Sp does not change very
much, but Sg does: Government Deficits are the
major determinant of Current Account
CA = Sp + Sg – I
= Sp – government deficit – I
• Government deficit is negative
government saving

equal to G – T
• A high government deficit causes a
negative current account balance, all other
things equal.
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-14
Relationship Between Government Deficits and
Current Account Illustrated
US current account and public saving relative to GDP,
1960-2004
Percent of GDP
4%
2%
0%
-2%
-4%
-6%
-8%
1960
1965
1970
1975
1980
current account
1985
1990
1995
2000
public saving
Source: Congressional Budget Office, US Department of Commerce
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-15
**We can derive the same equation in an
alternative way:
• Equilibrium National Income Condition was
Sprivate + T + IM = I + G + EX
IM – EX = Current Account Deficits =
= I – Sprivate + ( G – T)
= I – SPrivate + SGovernment
= I – SNational
Modified by J.D. Han based on Materials provided by Pearson Addison-Wesley.
12-16