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CHAPTER 5 SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE OPEN ECONOMY.

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Presentation on theme: "CHAPTER 5 SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE OPEN ECONOMY."— Presentation transcript:

1 CHAPTER 5 SAVING AND INVESTMENT IN THE OPEN ECONOMY

2 Lecture Outline: I. Balance of Payments Accounting II. Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open Economy III. S and I in a Small Open Economy IV. S and I in Large Open Economies V. Fiscal Policy and Current Account

3 I. Balance of Payments Accounting Balance of Payments Accounts — are the record of a country’s international transaction Current Account — measures a country’s trade in currently produced goods and services, along with net transfers between countries.

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5 Capital and Financial Account records trade in existing assets, either real (direct investment) or financial (portfolio investment). a). Financial Inflow: Canada sells assets to foreign country b). Financial Outflow: Canada buys assets from foreign country 2. The Capital Account

6 Official Reserve Assets — are assets, other than domestic money or securities, that can used in making international payments Official Settlements Balances ( or the Balance of Payments): — is the net increase (domestic less foreign) in a country’s official reserve assets. 2. The Capital Account

7 Why? Every international transaction involves a swap of goods, services or assets between countries. The two sides of the swap has offsetting effects. 3. The Relationship Between The Current Account and The Capital Account

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9 Net Foreign Assets = Foreign assets – Foreign liabilities Net amount of new foreign assets = a country’s current account surplus 4. Net Foreign Assets

10 II.Goods Market Equilibrium in an Open Economy Equilibrium Condition: Assume, Alternative way to express:

11 III. S and I in a Small Open Economy Small Open Economy: — too small to affect the world real interest rate. World Real Interest Rate ( ) — the real interest rate that prevails in the international capital market. Assume: financial markets are fully accessible to all savers and borrower.

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14 At a given, any change that desired national saving relative to desired investment will net foreign lending, CA and NX. Examples: (i) A Temporary Adverse Supply Shock (ii) An Increase in CA 4. Effects of Economic Shocks

15 IV. S and I in a Large Open Economy Large Open Economy: — large enough to affect the world real interest rate. Two large economies: (i) home economy (ii) foreign economy will be such that: Desired international lending = Desired international borrowing

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17 IV. S and I in a Large Open Economy Alternative equilibrium condition: lending country’s CA surplus = borrowing country’s CA deficit Any factor that desired international lending relative to desired international borrowing

18 V. Fiscal Policy and the Current Account Q: Does government budget deficit cause a CA deficit? A: It could — through the response of national saving. budget deficit

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20 V. Fiscal Policy and the Current Account A deficit caused by G G A deficit resulting from a tax cut (i) If Ricardian Equivalence holds: no effect on CA (ii) If consumers :


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