International Accounting Practices (Getting the numbers right) Chapter 2.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chapter 13: Accounting Frameworks
Advertisements

Chapter 13 Balance of Payments
The Balance of Payments
Lecture 1 International Finance ECON 243 – Summer I, 2005 Prof. Steve Cunningham.
The Balance of Payments
The Balance of Payments © 2011 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be copied, scanned, or duplicated, in whole or in part, except for use as.
The Balance of Payments and International Linkages
International Finance
ECONOMICS/FINANCE 372 International Finance Course Objective: T o develop an understanding of the significance that the existence of different currencies.
Economics of International Finance Econ. 315
The Balance of Payment.
1 The International Trade and Capital Flows Chapter 23.
The International Balance of Payments
Copyright © 2011 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 9 Trade and the Balance of Payments.
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The market value of all final goods and.
The Balance of Payments: Linking the United States to the International Economy The Current Account Trade Flows for the United States and Japan, 2006.
TRADE AND BALANCE OF PAYMENTS
Slide 12-1Copyright © 2003 Pearson Education, Inc. The National Income Accounts  Gross national product (GNP) The value of all final goods and services.
INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT Lecture 3 Topic: Balance of Payments.
The National Income Accounts
Slides prepared by Thomas Bishop Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments Modified May 2010 by Chris Ball.
Balance of Payments Accounting The Balance of Payments is the statistical record of a country’s international transactions over a certain period of time.
International Financial Management: INBU 4200 Fall Semester 2004 Lecture 5: Part 2 Balance of Payments (Chapter 3)
Copyright ©2004, South-Western College Publishing International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition Chapter 10: The Balance of Payments.
Copyright © 2007 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. 3-0 INTERNATIONAL FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EUN / RESNICK Fourth Edition Chapter Objective:
A Note on The Current Account: Why the large current account deficit of the United States is not a bad thing.
Chapter 3 The Balance of Payments. Chapter Three Outline Balance of Payments Accounting Balance of Payments Accounts –The Current Account –The Capital.
The Balance of Payments
Chapter 12 The Balance of Payments. Copyright © 2007 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Topics to be Covered Balance of Payments Components.
1 Section 1 The Balance of Payments. 2 Content Objectives The National Income Accounts S, I, and CA The BOP Accounts Bookkeeping Summary.
1 Chapter 13 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments Preview National income accounts –measures of national income –measures of value of.
November The Balance of Payments A record of the value of all the transactions between the residents of one country with the residents of all other.
Currency crises and exchange rate policy Chapter 9.
Gains from International Capital Mobility Chapter 10.
Slides prepared by April Knill, Ph.D., Florida State University Chapter 4 The Balance of Payments.
Firm in Home serve foreign markets / source from abroad? Stay domestic Export Export or local production? Import or local production? Import Multinational.
TAMÁS NOVÁK International Economics VII. National Income and the Balance of Payments.
Balance of Payments and Foreign Exchange
Balance of payments GTGKG213SZ.
1 International Finance Chapter 1 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
The Balance of Payments: Linking the United States to the International Economy Current account records a country’s net exports, net income on investments,
1 Welcome to Econ 414 International Economics Study Guide Week Eleven Ending: Friday November 9.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Preview National income accounts  measures of national income  measures of value of.
Chapter 12 Supplementary Notes. GNP = Expenditure on a Country’s Goods and Services Y = C d + I d + G d + EX = (C-C f ) + (I-I f ) + (G-G f ) + EX = C.
First edition Global Economic Issues and Policies PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook Copyright © 2004 South-Western/Thomson Learning. All rights reserved.
Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy.
Balance-of-Payments Accounts and Net Financial Flows.
The Balance of Payments. © 2002 by Stefano Mazzotta 1 Learning Outcomes 1. Definition of the balance of payments (BOP) and its accounts 2. Some macroeconomic.
Chapter 5: Foreign Exchange Markets and the Balance of Payments
Chapter 12 National Income Accounting and the Balance of Payments.
International Capital Mobility Chapter 6. Outline 1.Indicators of the degree of international capital mobility (ICM) 2.Recent increase in ICM 3.Differences.
Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 1 – The global economy.
© 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Chapter 5.
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics Chapter 7: Foreign Exchange Markets and the Balance of Payments.
BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Chapter 3 -. Definition Is a statistical record of a country’s international transactions over a certain period of time represented.
1 of 36 Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall · Macroeconomics · R. Glenn Hubbard, Anthony Patrick O’Brien, 3e. Chapter.
Chapter 5 Saving and Investment in the Open Economy Copyright © 2016 Pearson Canada Inc.
Copyright © 2012 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Balance of Payments Chapter Three.
12-1 Ec 335 International Trade and Finance Lecture 20-21: National Income Accounting Giovanni Facchini.
International Finance FINA 5331 Lecture 3: Foreign Currency Markets Continued: Introduction to Balance of Payments Aaron Smallwood Ph.D.
Copyright ©2005, Thomson/South-Western International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 10th Edition Chapter 10: The Balance of Payments.
The Balance of Payments EdExcel A2 Macro – June 2016.
The Balance of Payments
Economics of International Finance Econ. 315
International Economics By Robert J. Carbaugh 9th Edition
The Balance of Payments
Chapter 10 The balance of payments
Eco 200 – Principles of Macroeconomics
Lecture 5 Balance of Payments
Presentation transcript:

International Accounting Practices (Getting the numbers right) Chapter 2

Firm in Home serve foreign markets / source from abroad? Stay domestic Export Export or local production? Import or local production? Import Multinational activity: horizontal Multinational activity: vertical no yes, serve foreign market yes, source from abroad export local production import local production Two types of trade: intra-firm and inter-firm Consisting of trade in final goods, services, and intermediate goods Two types of multinational activity: horizontal and vertical Multinational = firm owning and controlling value adding activities in two or more countries triggers intra-firm trade Figure 2.1 Home firm decision tree

Country A Country B Market AMarket B Multinational (producer) Multinational (producer, marketer) Foreign subsidiary (producer) Foreign subsidiary (assembler) FDI Finished products Components Horizontal multinational (market seeking) Vertical multinational (efficiency seeking) Fig. 2.2 Horizontal and vertical multinational activity

Figure 2.3 US export shares in 2010 Source: US census Bureau, own calculations

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Micro-level accounting: A firm’s annual report Rules of double-entry bookkeeping Complications 1.How should the firm account for foreign-currency transactions? 2.Cross-country financial management (exchange rate risk management, fiscal optimizations,...). 3.Diverging country-specific accounting regulations.

Balance of payments: Records all economic transactions between the residents of the country and residents of the rest of the world. Each transaction or exchange results in two opposite flows of value. Double-entry bookkeeping. A credit or positive item is the flow for which the country is paid—it is the item that the country gives up in the transaction, and it sets up a claim on the foreign resident, so that funds (or "money") flow into the country. A debit or negative item is the flow that the country must pay for—it is the item that the country receives in the transaction, and it sets up a foreign claim on a resident of the country, so that funds (or "money") flow out of the country. If we add up all items for the country's balance of payments, it must add up to zero Macro-level accounting: A country’s balance of payments

Figure 2.4 A country’s balance of payments Source: van Marrewijk (2012, p. 411)

Figure 2.5 Current account balance; % of GDP, Source: based on data from World Development Indicators online ( ) and The Economist, June 9, 2012, “Trade, exchange rates, budget balances, and interest rates” (2012 estimate).

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

FDI data and the capital account US government’s definition of foreign direct investment (FDI): ‘Ownership or control of 10% or more of an enterprise’s voting securities, or equivalent interest in unincorporated business’ (2004, M5-6). FDI and foreign portfolio investment (FPI) World Investment Report (by UNCTAD _en.pdf) is the most important source of information on FDI flows _en.pdf

Figure 2.6 FDI flows, Source: based on data from UNCTAD, World Investment Report 2012; developed = developed economies; developing = developing economies; transition = transition economies.

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Some meanings of the current account balance 1.Current account (CA) equals the value of the country's net flow of foreign investments (both private and official). 2.CA equals the difference between national saving and domestic real investment (S  I). 3.CA is approximately equal to the difference (X  M) implies that CA is approximately equal to the difference between domestic production of goods and services and national expenditures on goods and services (Y  E). 4.Surplus current account net capital (and financial) outflow

Official international reserves include financial assets denominated in readily accepted foreign currencies, the country's holdings of Special Drawing Rights (SDRs), the country's reserve position at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), and gold. A line called "statistical discrepancy" is added to make the accounts on the BOP add to zero. It represents the net of many items that are measured incorrectly or missed (net errors and omissions).

Limitations of FDI data Criticizing FDI data: See Box 2.3 FDI data are still useful when comparing groups of countries (Table 2.7) Significant observations about FDI flows: –FDI flows are to a large part from and to developed economies –FDI from developing countries (emerging economies) is on the rise

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Sales and value added Tax havens and FDI Value added is the “best indicator of overall or sectoral economic significance of multinational activity” (John Dunning, 1993, p. 7) World Input Output Database ( Box 2.4: Transnationality index (UNCTAD) = (unweigthed average) ofTransnationality index foreign assets/total assets + foreign sales/total sales + foreign employment/total employment Table 2.9

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Figure 2.7 Value added export (VAX) as a share of GDP; 1995 and 2008 (%) Source: based on World input output Database (WIOD), see wiod.org.wiod.org

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

How is international capital mobility measured? Current account balance as an indicator of the degree of international capital mobility –CA surplus (deficit)  net capital outflow (inflow) Size of net capital flows ( ): Table 2.12 and Figure 2.9

Figure 2.9 Global net capital flows; average for 15 countries, Source: see Table 2.11; average includes countries listed in Table 2.11 plus Denmark, Finland, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain, and Sweden.

Degree of international capital mobility: Historical perspective Main observations: 1.International capital mobility was already high during and it is only recently that capital mobility started rising (after the significant decline that lasted until 1973) 2.There are considerable changes in the degree of international capital mobility over time which weakens the argument that ‘one of the key features of the present global economy is a high and rising degree of cross- border capital mobility.’

Figure 2.10 Capital outflows; selected countries (% of national savings Source: O’Rourke and Williamson (1999).

Figure 2.11 Evolution of British and American share in foreign assets Source: see Table 2.14

Figure 2.12 Net private financial flows to developing economies; $ bn, Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook database; D Asia = Developing Asia; L Am = Latin America & Caribbean; C&E Eur = Central & Eastern Europe; CIS = Commonwealth of Independent States; SSA = Sub-Saharan Africa.

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

Beugelsdijk, Brakman, Garretsen, and van Marrewijk International Economics and Business © Cambridge University Press, 2013Chapter 2 – Getting the numbers right

The importance of distinguishing between micro and macro 1.A micro-level investment (shown on the firm’s annual accounts) does not necessarily translate into a macro-level investments (in the country’s BOP). 2.M&As are firm-level investment but are neutral from a macro perspective. 3.A multinational’s sales cannot be compared with a country’s GDP

Box 2.7 Why accounting is useful but it is not explaining. C + M + S = I + X + C or S – I = X – M This implies that the national saving surplus must be equal to the current account (CA) surplus. However, accounting cannot explain whether a trade deficit is good or bad or why we have trade deficit.