Transcript Chapter 7
Trade Balance
7-1
National Income Accounting
• Y=C+I+G+NX (Income-expenditure identity)
Y=GDP (gross domestic product)
NX=EX-IM=net exports of goods & services
• S=I+CA, where CA=NX+NFP
CA=current account balance
NFP=net factor payments from abroad
• If S<I, then CA=S-I<0
If a country saves less than it invests, it must run a
current account surplus.
7-2
National Income Accounting
• Spvt=I+(-Sgovt)+CA (Use-of-saving identity)
When CA is lowered, o.t.s being equal, Spvt is
lowered too. (trade deficit and low private saving
rate)
When –Sgovt is more positive, o.t.s. being equal, CA
becomes lower (more severe gov deficit and
worsened trade deficit)
• Ignore NFP, focus on NX
• Why NX is already zero in our course?
7-3
Textbook treatment of NX
food
• Assumed one-shot
interaction
• A nation always
consumes up its value
of production (because
every agent does)
• No reason to consume
less
• unable to consume
more
D
Q
Iso-value line
cloth
7-4
Textbook Treatment of NX
•
•
•
•
Value of production = pCQC+pFQF
Value of consumption=pCDC+pFDF
pCQC+pFQF=pCDC+pFDF
Suppose C is exportable good; F is
importable good
• pC(QC-DC) - pF(DF-QF)=0
• Hence, NX=0
7-5
International Borrowing and Lending
• International capital mobility refers to mobility
of financial assets, or capital, across countries.
Financial capital is a source of funds used to build
physical capital (ex., factories and equipment).
• International capital mobility can be
interpreted as intertemporal trade:
trade of goods consumed today by borrowers
in return for goods consumed in the future
by lenders.
7-6
International
Borrowing and Lending (cont.)
• For any economy, there is a trade-off
(opportunity cost) between consuming today
and saving for the future: resources can either
be consumed or saved.
To save and invest more today typically means that
economies need to consume less today.
• We represent this concept by drawing a
special kind of production possibility frontier,
an intertemporal production possibility
frontier.
7-7
Fig. 7-5: The Intertemporal
Production Possibility Frontier
7-8
International Borrowing and Lending
• Some countries will have a comparative
advantage in spending current output/income
(in current consumption).
• Others will have one in saving current output/
income (in future consumption).
• A comparative advantage in current
consumption
would mean a lower opportunity cost of spending
current income.
would be reflected in an intertemporal PPF that is
biased toward current consumption.
7-9
International
Borrowing and Lending (cont.)
• Suppose that the domestic country has a comparative
advantage in (bias towards) current consumption,
while the foreign country has a comparative
advantage (bias towards) future consumption.
• In the absence of international borrowing and lending,
the relative price of current consumption should be
lower in the domestic country.
• But what is the relative price of current consumption?
7-10
International
Borrowing and Lending (cont.)
• The price of borrowing 1 unit of output/income to
consume today is the output/income that needs to be
repaid in the future:
principal + interest = 1+r, where r is the interest rate
The price of current consumption relative to future
consumption is 1/(1+r)
• The opportunity cost of consuming 1 unit of output/
income today is the output/income that could be
earned by saving it:
principal + interest = 1+r, where r is the interest rate
The opportunity cost of current consumption relative to future
consumption is 1/(1+r)
7-11
International
Borrowing and Lending (cont.)
• If international borrowing and lending are
allowed, the domestic country will “export”
current consumption (that is, borrow).
The domestic country initially has a lower relative
price of current consumption 1/(1+r)
The domestic country initially has a higher
interest rate r.
A higher interest rate r implies a higher return to
consumption and investment in production
processes: they are highly desirable and profitable
so that the domestic country should borrow from
foreign lenders.
7-12
Fig. 7A2-1: Determining Home’s
Intertemporal Production Pattern
7-13
Fig. 7A2-2: Determining Home’s
Intertemporal Consumption Pattern
7-14
Fig. 7A2-3: Determining Foreign’s Intertemporal
Production and Consumption Patterns
7-15
Fig. 7A2-2: Determining Home’s
Intertemporal Consumption Pattern
7-16
Demography: Life cycle consideration
• Life cycle consideration
• A country is likened to a person: save
when young & working, de-save when
old
• Hence, when ageing, a country runs a
trade surplus first, followed by a trade
deficit
7-17
A hypothetical example
• Suppose each agent lives two periods: young
(working) and old (retiring).
• Suppose a small country in which all residents are
young but they do not decide to have children.
• Suppose only one, non-storable good is produced.
But one foreign asset is available (call it US treasury
bond, with constant interest rate r)
• Time 1: all residents are young; trade surplus
• Time 2; all residents are old; trade deficit
• Time 3: the country disappears; NX=0
7-18
A hypothetical example
Trade balance
Trade
surplus Period 2
Period 1
Trade
deficit
Period 3
time
7-19
A hypothetical example
• CA=S-I
• Demography explains S. In case I is
unrelated to demography or less
responsive to it, then the change in S
will reveal itself in CA
• In China, weak financial markets prevent
channeling of savings to those who have
good business ideas
7-20
Median age: China versus US
Median Age
50
45
40
35
30
25
20
15
10
5
0
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
95
China
Median age (Years)
Medium variant
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
U.S.A.
Median Age
(Years)
Medium variant
7-21
Total Dependency Ratio: China versus US
Total Dependency Ratio
1.8
1.6
1.4
1.2
1
0.8
0.6
0.4
0.2
0
50
55
60
65
70
75
80
85
90
USA: Total Dependency Ratio
95
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
50
China: Total (Young+Old)dependency ratio
7-22
Dependence ratio: China
7-23
Difficulty
• The example predicts CA be negative
some day. For Germany and Japan,
whose populations have aged for a long
time, still there is no sign their CA will
become negative.
• Way out: to look at richer demography
that allows for richer dynamic of CA
change
7-24
Demography
Sex ratio in China (males per 100 females)
year
At birth
Population aged
0-4
1953
104.9
107.3
1964
103.8
106.5
1982
107.6
107.0
1990
111.8
109.8
1995
116.6
118.8
2000
117.8
120.8
2005
122.0
120.0
2010
--
121.0 (estimated)
7-25
Demography
• Sexual Imbalance (missing women)
• one child policy + son preferences
• Parents and their single sons save more to
increase competitiveness in the marriage
market
• Evidence: counties with more skewed sex
ratio have higher saving rates
• It is argued that sexual imbalance may
account of up to ½ of the China’s trade
surplus with the US.
7-26
Data/mis-measurement problem
• “Dark Matters in China’s Current Account” by Zhiwei
Zhang, a staff member of HKMA
• One bias due to under-estimated returns on foreign
investments in China
• all earnings for foreign investments should be
recorded in current account as a negative item,
regardless if the earnings are re-invested in China or
repatriated out
• Official CA statistics; official stock of FI by end of 2006
is US$1.03T; FI earnings US$57.3B in 2007 =>
hence, ROR 5.5%
• The author’s estimate: FI earnings ~ US$109.6B
• Evidence: ROR should be higher (OECD studies
found 14.3%).
7-27
Data/mis-measurement problem
• 60% of China’s exports are actually made by foreign
funded firms
• China has been top exporter of cell phones and
notebook computers, but the cell phones are mostly
made by Nokia and Motorola, and notebooks by Dell
and HP.
• The importance of foreign capital is asymmetrically
reflected in China’s current account
the explosive growth of exports (largely due to foreign firms
moving production bases into China) are well recorded,
But the profits foreign firms made into China are substantially
under-recorded.
7-28
Data/mis-measurement problem
• Another source of bias: capital inflows misreported as
trade surplus.
• The expectation for RMB appreciation heightened in
mid 2004, and made one-way bet for RMB a
profitable arbitrage opportunity.
• Firms in China can over-report their exports and
under-report their imports.
• China’s current account surplus is over-estimated,
and capital account surplus is under-estimated.
• Misreported capital flows through the trade channel
amounts to 1.9% of GDP in 2007.
7-29
Data/mis-measurement problem
• Accounting for Growth in China’s Exports by Firm
Ownership
Stateowned
Foreignfunded
Collective
Private
2002
16%
62%
8%
14%
2003
13%
62%
6%
19%
2004
10%
63%
4%
22%
2005
9%
63%
3%
26%
2006
11%
58%
2%
29%
2007
13%
53%
2%
31%
7-30
Other explanations
• S=I+CA
• It is China, stupid!
Currency manipulation (RMB undervalued)
Mercantilism (export is good, import is bad)
Saving rate too high (culture?)
Poor financial market
• It is US, stupid!
Saving rate too low (culture?)
Developed financial market
• J.M. Keynes: “If I owe you a little money and I don’t repay, I have
trouble. If I owe you a lot of money and don’t repay, you have
trouble!”
7-31
Prognosis: China as a transformative
/de-stabilizing factor
• Increasing economic power
Education attainment
• 2000: 1 million college students graduated
• 2010: more than 6 million college students graduated
(c.w. 3.5 million first year students in US in 2008)
• Now 22% of the cohort go to college
Rate of return of capital has no sign to slow down
• Destabilizing the global order
• But growth will slow down one day…
• Income inequality
7-32
Prognosis: China as a transformative
/de-stabilizing factor
• Sexual imbalance
1.7 million un-marriageable boys being borne each year
=5 times of the total girls borne a year in Canada (around
330K)
=50 times of the total girls borne a year in HK (around 30K)
•
•
•
•
•
Lack of non-material ideals
Communist Party an effective autocracy forever?
1949-1978: passion
1979-2008: interest
2009-2039: ??
7-33
Topics
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Trade balance & capital flows
Textbook case
Data problem
Demography
Lack of investment opportunity
Undeveloped financial market
Exchange manipulation
Culture—saving glut
7-34