economic constraints: the balance of payments lec 6 – thursday, 29 september 2011 j a morrison 1...
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Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
Lec 6 – Thursday, 29 September 2011J A Morrison 1
Milton Friedman (1912-2006)
Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
I. Economic ConstraintsII. The Balance of PaymentsIII. Choosing the Means to Achieve BalanceIV. The BoP and the Current Financial Crisis
2
Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
I. Economic ConstraintsII. The Balance of PaymentsIII. Choosing the Means to Achieve BalanceIV. The BoP and the Current Financial Crisis
3
Up to this point, all of our explanations of foreign economic policy have centered
around political variables: the structure of the international system and
policymakers’ ideas, interests, and institutions.
But markets also constrain and enable policymakers.
4
I. Economic Constraints
1. Empower Interest Groups2. Mold Policy & Behavior3. Negate State Action
5
Remember that Smith & Rogowski argued that interest groups lobby
policymakers to secure policies that benefit them.
Interest groups’ lobbying power, however, depends to some extent
on their economic status.6
Wealth brings status and power.
At a minimum, markets influence the strength of societies’ various
interest groups.
7
I. Economic Constraints
1. Empower Interest Groups2. Mold Policy & Behavior• Negate State Action
8
Remember that market actors often enjoy exit options.
If they don’t like certain policies, they can frequently work around them or even relocate to other
jurisdictions.
9
Because states fret at the potential loss of these valuable actors, policymakers are somewhat beholden to market actors.
Market actors can thus reward and punish certain types of
behavior.10
Remember this slide from last Thursday?
11
Example: Sovereign Debt
• Sovereign has the power to repudiate debt• Lenders have several possible responses
– Raise interest rates– Refuse to lend– Hide assets– Emigrate
• By consistently repaying debts, sovereign ensures larger supply of capital and better terms (lower interest rate)
12
I. Economic Constraints
1. Empower Interest Groups2. Mold Policy & Behavior3. Negate State Action
13
If market actors find policy completely noxious, they may take action—deliberate or indeliberate
—that negates state policy.
14
Example: Avoiding Taxes
• Hoping to increase tax revenues, a state raises its income tax
• Most citizens acquiesce since the costs of circumventing the law outweigh the benefits
• But the richest citizens have the most to lose and can emigrate at the lowest cost
• Ultimately, the state’s revenues decrease as the richest citizens leave and no longer pay any tax
15
Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
I. Economic ConstraintsII. The Balance of PaymentsIII. Choosing the Means to Achieve BalanceIV. The BoP and the Current Financial Crisis
16
II. The Balance of Payments
1. Studying the Balance of Payments2. The Balance of Payments3. Achieving Balance
17
The “balance of payments constraint” is one of the most
significant constraints policymakers face when setting
foreign (and domestic!) economic policy.
18
But it is also the most difficult to understand!
It can be a bit abstract and complex, but we need to
understand it.
19
(I’ll try to spice things up with a few pictures of my daughters along the way!)
20Hadley Samantha
Learning Objectives
1. Familiarity with the major components of the BoP
2. Understand constraints imposed by the BoP3. Identify policymakers’ options for managing
the BoP
We’ll revisit the BoP frequently throughout the term!
21
II. The Balance of Payments
1. Studying the Balance of Payments2. The Balance of Payments3. Achieving Balance
22
What is the balance of payments (BoP)?
23
The balance of payments (BoP) reconciles all of a country’s financial
transactions with the world.
This includes trade, remittances, investment, loans, &c.
As an accounting matter, the BoP must always balance, by design.
24
But that balance can be achieved in more or less painful ways…
that balance can be achieved with more or fewer implications for other
policy areas.
25
26
Balance of PaymentsBalance of Payments
Current Account
Capital Account
Trade in G&S Income Receipts Unilateral Transfers
Direct Investment Securities Purchases Checking Accounts
Current Account = Current Receipts – Current Expenditures
Capital Account = Capital Inflows – Capital Outflows
Current Account + Capital Account = 0
Let’s look at an actual year (1997) for the US.
(This is detailed in Grieco & Ikenberry, Ch 3.)
27
US Current Account in 1997• Trade in Goods & Services: -$110,206m
– Goods (Exports – Imports): $679,325m-$877,279m– Services (Exports – Imports): $258,268m-$170,520m
• Income Receipts: -$5,318m– On US Assets Abroad: $241,787m– Paid to Foreigners for US Assets: -$247,105m
• Net Unilateral Transfers: -$39,691m
US 1997 Current Account: -$155,215m
28
US Capital Account in 1997• Direct Investment: -$28,394m
– Outward FDI (Sent Abroad): -$121,843m– Inward FDI (Received): $93,449m
• Portfolio Investment: $255,574m– Foreign Stocks Purchased by US: -$87,981m– US Stocks Purchased by Foreigners: $343,555m
• Checking Accounts: $12,778m– Established by US abroad: -$267,842m– Established by Foreigners in US: $280,620m
US 1997 Capital Account: $239,958m 29
30
US BoP in 1997Balance of Payments
Current Account-$155,215m
Capital Account$239,958m
Trade in G&S-$110,206m
Income Receipts-$5,318m
Unilateral Transfers-$39,691m
Direct Investment-$28,394m
Securities Purchases$255,574m
Checking Accounts$12,778m
Calculating the BoP
In TheoryCurrent Account
+ Capital AccountBoP = 0
In Practice-$155,215m
+ $239,958m1997 BoP = $84,743m
31
So, what about the extra $84.7 billion?
Well, much of this is explained by statistical discrepancies.
Governments recognize that they can’t get fully accurate reporting on all
of these transactions.
In 1997, the US statistical discrepancy was estimated at $99.7 billion.
32
33
But that still leaves $14.8 billion!!! I thought the balance of payments
always balances!
34
It does--but often not without some help!
35
(And people thought I was cute…)
II. The Balance of Payments
1. Studying the Balance of Payments2. The Balance of Payments3. Achieving Balance
36
Milton Friedman describes the various mechanisms available to states to redress imbalances of
payments. (p 202)
37
Relieving Pressure on the Balance of Payments
1. Adjustment of Reserves2. Adjustment of Internal Prices & Incomes 3. Exchange Rate (ER) Adjustment4. Exchange Controls
38
(1) Adjustment of Reserves
• The first option is to “adjust reserves” using “official transactions”
• Reserves: non-domestic financial assets (foreign currency, bonds, &c.) held & used by govts to support their currency
• Official Transactions: govt purchase/sale of foreign reserves so as to alleviate pressure on the balance of payments 39
Example: US in 1997• Foreign central bank purchases of US currency &
US treasury bills & bonds: $15.8bn• US holding of foreign currency & government
debt: -$1bn
US & Foreign official transactions account for the missing $14.8 billion
40
41
Oh, that must be nice: you can clear your imbalances just by
adjusting your reserves!
That does sound nice. But is there any limit to
the amount of “adjusting” you can do?
Asymmetric Options• Selling Reserves
– A central bank cannot sell more reserves than it has initially
• Amassing Reserves– There is, theoretically, no upper limit to the quantity of
reserves a central bank can acquire– A central bank can purchase limitless foreign currency by
continually printing and selling its own currency in exchange
– To prevent inflation, it might employ sterilization: selling govt bonds and “soaking up” excess currency
This is precisely what China has been doing.42
Returning to the US BoP in 1997, we’re all set:
The official transactions and “statistical discrepancy” resolve the US autonomous surplus of
$84.7 billion.
43
But Friedman listed three other mechanisms that can be used to
maintain balance.
These mechanisms, however, work dynamically—so we don’t
always see their effects on the balance sheet.
44
(2) Adjustment of Internal Prices & Incomes
• Central bank influences domestic rate of interest (RoI)
• Double effect of RoI adjustments1. Influences domestic price level current
account2. Influences int’l capital flows capital account
45
BoP Adjustment via Interest Rate Changes
46
(3) ER Adjustments
• Mechanism 2 maintained the external value of currency (the ER) at the expense of adjusting the internal value (the domestic price level)
• Mechanism 3 does the opposite: maintain the domestic price level but allow the ER to adjust
47
BoP Adjustment under Flexible ER Regime
48
(4) Exchange Controls
• State directly manages the current and/or capital account
• Current Account Intervention: management of trade & commerce– Subsidies, tariffs, restrictions, &c.
• Capital Account Intervention: restrictions on capital convertibility– Limits on currency exchange, dual exchange rates,
Tobin tax, &c.49
50
Managing the Balance of Payments
Balance of Payments
Current Account
Capital Account
Trade in G&S Income Receipts Unilateral Transfers
Direct Investment Securities Purchases Checking Accounts
Trade Management
Capital Controls
Current account intervention directly adjusts the costs of
domestic/foreign transactions.
Capital account intervention indirectly adjusts these costs by
influencing the costs of acquiring the foreign currency required for
foreign transactions. 51
Recap: Mechanisms of Balance1. Official Transactions: Buy/sell domestic &
foreign currency to influence market ER2. Adjust relative costs of domestic/foreign
transactions by adjusting domestic price level (internal adjustment)
• Adjust relative costs of domestic/foreign transactions by adjusting ER (external adjustment)
• Influence costs of domestic/foreign transactions
52
Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
I. Economic ConstraintsII. The Balance of PaymentsIII. Choosing the Means to Achieve BalanceIV. The BoP and the Current Financial Crisis
53
So, we have 4 different options…
But don’t make the mistake of assuming that all of these
responses are equal!!
54
“It cannot be too strongly emphasized that the structure and method of determining exchange rates
have a vital bearing on almost every problem of international economic relations…The only other
alternative to movements in exchange rates is direct control of foreign trade. Such control is therefore
almost certain to be the primary technique adopted to meet substantial movements in conditions of
international trade so long as exchange rates are maintained rigid. The implicit or explicit recognition of this fact is clearly one of the chief sources of difficulty
in attempts to achieve a greater degree of liberalization of trade in Europe…” (Friedman, 196-197)
55
Friedman, in fact, was following JM Keynes…
56
“The problem of maintaining equilibrium in the balance of payments between countries has
never been solved…So far from currency laissez-faire having promoted the
international division of labour, which is the avowed goal of laissez-faire, it has been a
fruitful source of all those clumsy hindrances to trade which suffering
communities have devised in their perplexity as being better than nothing in protecting them
from the intolerable burdens flowing from currency disorders.”
-- Keynes (1941)57
So, what does Friedman propose?
58
“There are no major economic difficulties to prevent the prompt establishment by
countries separately or jointly of a system of exchange rates freely determined in open markets, primarily by private transactions,
and the simultaneous abandonment of direct controls over exchange transactions. A move
in this direction is the fundamental prerequisite for the economic integration of the free world through multilateral trade.”
(MF, 203)59
So, policy makers have a variety of ways to ensure that their payments
balance.
And prominent theorists (Keynes; Friedman) suggest that some of those choices (flexible ERs) are better than
others (exchange controls).
60
Economic Constraints: The Balance of Payments
I. Economic ConstraintsII. The Balance of PaymentsIII. Choosing the Means to Achieve BalanceIV. The BoP and the Current Financial Crisis
61
“In my view…it is impossible to understand this crisis without
reference to the global imbalances in trade and capital flows that began in the latter half of the
1990s.”-- Ben Bernanke, Speech at the Council on Foreign Relations.
(March 2009)
62
We thus face two questions with extraordinary contemporary relevance:
(1) what causes imbalances of payments in the first place?
(2) what are the effects of sustained imbalances?
63
II. Imbalances: Causes & Consequences
1. Two Explanations2. The Stakes: Contemporary Application
64
Doug Irwin has developed one perspective on this vital question:
65
“Trade policy cannot directly affect the current account deficit because trade
policy has little influence on the underlying determinants of domestic savings and
investment, the ultimate sources of the current account. If a country wishes to
reduce its trade deficit, then it must undertake macroeconomic measures to
reduce the gap between domestic savings and investment.”
(D Irwin, Free Trade Under Fire, 90)
66
Hmm. Interesting.
Now compare that to this…
67
“When a country is growing in wealth somewhat rapidly, the further progress of this happy state of affairs is liable to be
interrupted, in conditions of laissez-faire, by the insufficiency of the inducements to new investment…the opportunities for home investment will be governed, in the long run, by the
domestic rate of interest; whilst the volume of foreign investment is necessarily determined by the size of the
favourable balance of trade…At a time when the authorities had no direct control over the domestic rate of interest or the other
inducements to home investment, measures to increase the favourable balance of trade were the only direct means at their
disposal for increasing foreign investment; and, at the same time, the effect of a favourable balance of trade on the influx of the precious metals was their only indirect means of reducing
the domestic rate of interest and so increasing the inducement to home investment.” (Keynes, General Theory, 335-336)
68
What is the relationship each theorist sees between
macroeconomic (monetary) policy, the patterns of investment &
saving, and the balance of trade (the current account)?
69
Irwin versus Keynes
• Irwin– Macroeconomic policy patterns of saving &
investment balance of trade• Keynes
– Balance of trade patterns of saving & investment macroeconomic effects (on domestic price level)
The causal chains are reversed!
70
II. The Cause of Imbalances of Payments
1. Two Explanations2. The Stakes: Contemporary Application
71
This directly relates to the current global financial crisis.
What caused the housing bubble that ripened conditions for the
crisis?
72
China & Germany Follow Irwin’s Perspective
• US has loose monetary policy; Germans & Chinese have tight monetary policy US savings rates fall German & Chinese savings rates rise
• An abundance of US capital causes Americans to buy more of everything
Because interest rate is low, US consumers buy houses rather than invest in businesses; this caused the housing bubble 73
US Follows Keynes’ Perspective• US has excess demand for Chinese goods
negative BoT• US: this should either appreciate the ER or raise
prices in China, which would correct the imbalance
• BUT China limits appreciation and inflation– it absorbs USD into reserves ($1.3 trillion) and
sterilizes RMB to limit inflation• Glut of capital in China Chinese savings rate• Speculative flows from China US housing
bubble• Limited appreciation of RMB US trade deficit
74
Our theory of the cause of these imbalances will determine the policies we
undertake in the current crisis…
Germany insists that the US tighten monetary policy.
The US insists that the surplus countries (China & Germany) allow their ERs to
appreciate.75
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