INR EXAM 2 - International Money & Finance
The current account balance tells us 2 things:
(1) the gap b/t total production and income (2) the gap b/t consumption and spending
CA = private CA + public CA which can be broken down into: CA = (__ - __) + (__ - __)
(S - I) + (T - G)
In terms of the current account exports = (__) income imports = (__)
+, -
When do capital controls have little salience?
- countries moving from a closed to an open financial system - when inflow controls are tightened
What are the mechanisms Spate says this phenomenon (deficit anxiety) works through:
1. Employment prospects 2. National status
According to Steinberg & Nelson: Who you vote for depends on these two things as it pertains to capital controls:
1. Financial Participation: how integrated you are into the finance system 2. Employment security
Why does Rodrik say we are no where close to complete international integration?
1. Formal barrier to trade (national sovereignty) 2. Capital flows (national borrowing opportunities are limited by the willingness of countries to service their obligations rather than their ability to do so)
4 main findings of Steinberg and Nelson:
1. Individuals are knowledgable about outflow controls 2. Controls are perceived as being one of the most important issues 3. Economic self-interest is an important factor in shaping voter's opinions about capital outflow controls 4. Preferences toward capital outflow controls influenced individuals voting behavior
What are the 2 places you can pull from to cover a deficit?
1. Other nations 2. Reserves
What are the two ways to close the gap b/t income and spending what you have a trade deficit?
1. Reduce consumption 2. Increase income
The international trilemma states that a nation can only maintain _____ simultaneously
2
____________ of ________ keep track of imports and exports (transactions) - just like an accounting system
Balance of payments
_________ __________ are policies that restrict cross-border flows and $ and financial assets
Capital controls
This account has to be balanced, it's the main part, it tracts the trade account of exports and imports
Current account
Balance of payments is composed of what 2 main accounts?
Current account & capital account
What are the 3 components to he international trilemma?
Democratic politics, hyper-globalization, national sovereignty
Current Account =
GNP - GNE
In framework of economic integration, your economy grows but your politics shrink:
Golden Straitjacket
maintains nation-state system but ensure that these jurisdictions do not interfere with economic transactions - instead of acting like an obstacle they'd be geared toward facilitating international commerce Domestic regulations and tax policy would either match international standards or be structured so they don't pose resistance to international economic integration essentially, maintaining national sovereignty while markets become international meaning politics have to shrink
Golden Straitjacket
What are the options of international economic integration (3)
Golden Straitjacket Bretton Woods-GATT Global federalism
GNP =
Gross national profit
Are trade deficits bad
IDK (the answer is neither yes nor no - LOOK AT ALL THE COMPONENTS)
Out of the two ways to close the gap b/t income and spending what way is better and produces the least amount of harm? Why?
Increasing income, b/c when you reduce consumption you are decreasing living standards (in countries where they can't borrow from other nations that is very impactful b/c their people have to take a big pay cut)
Does just knowing your current account balance tell you anything about the state of your financial health?
NO (you have to look at investment rates, what we're investing in, etc)
__________ ___________ poses serious restraints on international economic integration
National Sovereignty
When people are arguing about whether the trade deficit is good or bad what should they be asking instead?
What are we doing as a nation? Are we just spending? Or are we investing?
A trade surplus means that..
a country is exporting more than it is importing
A current account deficit means that...
a country is importing more than it is exporting
Describe the characteristics of populism
anti-establishment, nationalist, anti-globalization, nativist
Which of the following policy measures would help reduce a country's current account deficit? a. increase private investment b. increase private savings c. increase gov. spending d. decrease tax revenue
b
Why is the misconception that "bilateral trade should be balanced" wrong?
b/c: - trade deficits aren't good or bad - having balanced trade w another nation doesn't explain anything
Trade deficit misconceptions: (1) Trade deficits are ______
bad
Trade deficit misconceptions: (5) Bilateral trade should be __________ (in the sense that your trade with another nation should be even in order to have a "healthy" relationship)
balanced
Describe global federalism
basically a world government modeled after the US's system: national governments do not disappear, but their powers are severely limited by supranational legislative, executive, and judicial authorities who'd then take care of a world market
Steinberg & Nelson =
capital controls
Understanding whether your deficit is good or bad asks you to look at what you are spending $ on: Good gov spending = Bad gov spending =
college edu, clothes & drinks
CA =
current account
B/c the US dollar is the international reserve currency we have an advantage, it's easy and cheap to finance our CA _________ b/c everyone accepts the dollar
deficit
Spate's focus =
deficit anxiety
Countries that have a surplus will be lending to countries with...
deficits
Populism used to be most commonly associated with what types of nations?
developing
Since the US is the predominant international currency we...
don't rely on reserves, we borrow
What does Rodrik suggest as the only potential way to achieve complete international economic integration?
global federalism
Reading a current account deficit we know that it is not necessarily ________ or _____
good, bad
Trade deficits are necessarily _________ or ______ : it depends on how you're using your money, where you're getting it from, and it's overall value long term
good, bad
G =
gov spending
GNE =
gross national expenditures
National sovereignty or the nation-state pertains to territorial jurisdictional entities with ____________ powers of making and administering the law
independent
The Bretton Woods-GATT system sacrifices the objective of a complete ________ _________ integrations
international economic
I =
investment
Relatively ____ ______ workers have done poorly under globalization in advanced countries like the US
less skilled
Spate: Trade deficit priming -->
less support for free trade
Reserves are usually...
liquid assets
Another perk of being the international reserve currency is that we can finance debt at...
low interest rates
In reality, trade deficits do not _________ - they're not a measure of success b/c they don't tell you anything about the relative productive factors
matter
Current and capital accounts are _________ of each other
mirrors
Rodrik says that globalization is held in a very _______ regard in advanced countries
mixed
Perception is that you're importing a lot and not exporting at all, BUT you can have a very healthy economy if you export a lot but import even...
more
Since the current account and capital accounts are mirrors of each other: IF a country has a trade surplus ( + current account) their capital account must be...
negative
How close does Rodrik say we are to complete international economic integration (meaning, a world exists where markets for goods, services, and factors of production are perfectly integrated)?
no where near
Trade deficit misconceptions: (2) Trade balances reflect _________ trade policies why is this wrong?
perfect, the actual influence of trade policy on trade deficits is very small
There is a correlation b/t current account balance and _______________
protectionism
According to Spate, he finds informing people of a deficit makes people percieve it as a negative outcome and therefore become more....
protectionist
There is a correlation b/t current account balance and protectionism: Countries with very large current account deficits tend to be more ___________ Countries with large surpluses tend to be more ___-________
protectionist, pro-trade
This public obsession with the concern over trade deficits comes from the predominant beliefs of ___________
recantilism
All most other countries rely on ____________
reserves (what they don't borrow from someone else they draw from themselves)
We've started to see the rise of populism in ________ countries more recently
richer
Steinberg and Nelson explain that international finance regulation can be ________ under specific conditions
salient
S =
savings
(S - I) + (T - G) essentially asks...
savings - investments (+) tax revenues - gov. spending
T =
taxes (gov revenue)
If a country is running a current account deficit (CA = -) and national private savings = domestic investment then we know...
the gov must be running a budget deficit
What explains the nature of the economic trade offs?
the international trilemma
Despite the fact that having a trade deficit doesn't matter nor provides a clear indicator of a successful vs. unsuccessful economy who still carries this factor as a main concern?
the public
The US has a negative current account b/c we have more payments going out then coming in, which means that we have a...
trade deficit
Economics is a science of...
trade offs
IF a country has a positive current account they have a...
trade surplus
Trade deficits vs. _______ __________
trade surplus
T/F - over the lsat 10 to 15 years the rise of populism has been occurring in the US and W EUR
true
T/F - trade surpluses or trade deficits are not an effective measure of economic performance
true
T/F we can have TOO much globalization
true
T/F you're current account balance can be (-) and still be good
true
What is the key difference b/t global federalism and the golden straitjacket?
under global federalism politics would not shrink (they'd just move to the global level)
Trade deficit misconceptions: (3) Trade deficits lead to ____________ and ______ economic growth Again, it's not enough to know that you have a trade deficit, you need to know why you have a trade deficit - a deficit doesn't tell us about whether the underlying conditions are good or bad
unemployment, slow
According to Steinberg & Nelson: Capital controls are likely to become a publicly salient issue when: Economically ___________ countries reimpose regulations on outflows of $
unstable
What has caused this increase in populism in W EUR rather than latin america more recently?
vote share of populist parties in EUR have increased, driven by the increase in far right ideology
According to Steinberg & Nelson: attitudes on capital controls also influence __________ choice in elections
voter
Just like before, Rodrik states that alliances will form b/t winners and losers of economic integration: winners = losers =
w: exporters, multi-national enterprises and financial interests l: environmentalists, labor groups
Case study of Mexico as it pertain to the misconception that trade needs to be "balanced" Say, you cut imports from Mexico b/c we have a trade imbalance why is this not smart?
we'll consume less (lowering quality of life) we have to make up for the difference somewhere - aka transferring our deficit now to just another nation we choose to trade with next
So what does it mean if CA = GNP > GNE
we're making more than we are spending
When do you get a trade deficit?
when you are spending more than you're making or consuming more than you're producing
usually people associate import heavy with negative consequences but that is...
wrong
According to Spate's article, does telling someone about a trade deficit make them anti-trade?
yes (strong affect)
According to Steinberg & Nelson: You are MORE favorable to capital controls (aka you support them) if:
you work in a domestic industry or in non-tradable sectors