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