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1 International Economics -International Finance Wang Feng Department of International Economics and Trade School of Business Shenzhen University Email.

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Presentation on theme: "1 International Economics -International Finance Wang Feng Department of International Economics and Trade School of Business Shenzhen University Email."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 International Economics -International Finance Wang Feng Department of International Economics and Trade School of Business Shenzhen University Email address: nihaowf503@yahoo.com.cn nihaowf503@yahoo.com.cn

2 2 About the test 1.Comments on the exam of International trade Most of you (total 231) have done very well A + : 16 (6.93%) A: 49 (21.21%) B: 67 (29%) C: 54 (23.38%) D: 28 (12.12%) F: 17 (7.36%)

3 3 2.Arrangements of the test of international finance  In-Class Performance 30% -Answer your name 20% -Voluntary participation 20% -Teamwork and presentation 60%  Final Exam 70%

4 4 International trade versus international finance  International trade: international microeconomics -From the perspective of individual nations -Concern about the relative price or physical side  international finance: international macroeconomics -Analyze the behavior of the economy as a whole -Concern about the general price or monetary side

5 5 Macroeconomic analysis emphasizes four aspects of economic life 1. Unemployment 2. Saving 3. Trade imbalances 4. Money and the price level

6 6 Preview Chapter 13: Balance of Payments Chapter 14: Foreign Exchange Markets and Exchange Rates Chapter 15: Exchange Rate Determination Chapter 16: The Price Adjustment Mechanism with Flexible and Fixed Exchange Rates Chapter 17: The Income Adjustment Mechanism and Synthesis of Automatic Adjustments Chapter 18: Open-Economy Macroeconomics: Adjustment Policies Chapter 19: Prices and Output in an Open Economy: Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Chapter 20: Flexible versus Fixed Exchange Rates, the European Monetary System, and Macroeconomic Policy Coordination Chapter 21: The International Monetary System: Past, Present, and Future

7 7 National Income Accounts 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 = the amount of income for sellers = the value of production. –National income is often defined to be the income earned by a nation’s factors of production.

8 8 National Income Accounts: GNP Gross national product (GNP) is the value of all final goods and services produced by a nation’s factors of production in a given time period. There are 4 types of expenditure: 1.Consumption: expenditure by domestic consumers 2.Investment: expenditure by firms on buildings & equipment 3.Government purchases: expenditure by governments on goods and services 4.Current account balance (exports minus imports): net expenditure by foreigners on domestic goods and services

9 9 Another approximate measure of national income is gross domestic product (GDP): Gross domestic product measures the final value of all goods and services that are produced within a country in a given time period. GDP = GNP – payments from foreign countries for factors of production + payments to foreign countries for factors of production

10 10 Figure1-1. U.S. GNP and Its Components in 2006 Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis

11 11 Figure1-2 China’s GDP growth:2003-2007

12 12 Figure1-3 Composition of China’s GDP:2007

13 13 GNP = Expenditure on a Country’s Goods and Services 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 Expenditure by domestic individuals and institutions Net expenditure by foreign individuals and institutions National income = value of domestic production Expenditure on domestic production

14 14 Expenditure and Production in an Open Economy CA = EX – IM = Y – (C + I + G ) When production > domestic expenditure, exports > imports: current account > 0 and trade balance > 0 –when a country exports more than it imports, it earns more income from exports than it spends on imports –net foreign wealth is increasing

15 15 Figure 1-4: U.S. Current Account and Net Foreign Wealth, 1976–2006 Source: U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of Economic Analysis, June 2007 release

16 16 Saving and the Current Account National saving (S) = national income (Y) that is not spent on consumption (C) or government purchases (G). Y – C – G (Y – C – T) + (T – G) S p + S g = S

17 17 How Is the Current Account Related to National Saving? CA = Y – (C + I + G ) implies CA = (Y – C – G ) – I = S – I current account = national saving – investment current account = net foreign investment A country that imports more than it exports has low national saving relative to investment.

18 18 CA = S – I or I = S – CA Countries can finance investment either by saving or by acquiring foreign funds equal to the current account deficit. –a current account deficit implies a financial asset inflow or negative net foreign investment. When S > I, then CA > 0 so that net foreign investment and financial capital outflows for the domestic economy are positive.

19 19 CA = S p + S g – I = S p – government deficit – I Government deficit is negative government saving –equal to G – T A high government deficit causes a negative current account balance when other factors remain constant.


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