ECON 224 Final
When NCO > 0
Domestic purchases of foreign assets exceed foreign purchases of domestic assets.
Foreign Direct Investment
Domestic residents actively manage the foreign investment, e.g., McDonalds opens a fast-food outlet in Moscow.
Foreign Portfolio Investment
Domestic residents purchase foreign stocks or bonds, supplying "loanable funds" to a foreign firm.
When NCO < 0
Foreign purchases of domestic assets exceed domestic purchases of foreign assets
S=
I (Domestic Investment) + NCO
Demand of Loanable Funds =
I + NCO
When a foreigner purchases a good from the U.S.,
NCO (NX) and US exports increase
e=
P*/P (foreign/domestic)
Supply of Loanable Funds=
Savings
Public Saving
Tax revenue less government spending
What could necessarily increase the equilibrium interest rate?
The demand for loanable funds shifts right and the supply of loanable funds shifts left.
Crowding Out
The govt borrows to finance its deficit, leaving less funds available for investment
Private Saving
The portion of households' income that is not used for consumption or paying taxes
When a U.S. citizen buys foreign goods
US imports rise and NCO (NX) falls
Bond
a certificate of indebtedness.
Capital Flight
a large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country
Import Quota
a limit on the quantity of imports
Budget Defecit
a shortfall of tax revenue from govt spending
Tariff
a tax on imports
Purchasing Power Parity (PPP)
a theory of exchange rates whereby a unit of any currency should be able to buy the same quantity of goods in all countries
trade surplus
an excess of exports over imports
Trade defecit
an excess of imports over exports
Budget Surplus
an excess of tax revenue over govt spending
As real interest rates fall, firms desire to
buy more new equipment and buildings. This response helps explain why the demand for loanable funds is downward sloping.
A closed economy
does not interact with other economies in the world.
the policy of restricting imports...
does not reduce the trade deficit.
A closed economy
does not trade with other economies.
Net Capital Flow (NCO)
domestic residents' purchases of foreign assets minus foreigners' purchases of domestic assets
Exports
domestically-produced g&s sold abroad
If inflation is higher in the U.S. than in Japan
e falls and the dollar depreciates against the yen.
If inflation is higher in Mexico than in the U.S
e rises and the dollar appreciates against the peso
An increase in real interest rates in the United States
encourages both U.S. and foreign residents to buy U.S. assets.
A country's trade balance is greater than zero only if...
exports are greater than imports.
Imports
foreign-produced g&s sold domestically
Mutual funds
institutions that sell shares to the public and use the proceeds to buy portfolios of stocks and bonds
Financial Markets
institutions through which savers can directly provide funds to borrowers.
Financial intermediaries
institutions through which savers can indirectly provide funds to borrowers
An open economy
interacts freely with other economies around the world.
In economics,
investment is NOT the purchase of stocks and bonds
national saving equals
investment, income minus the sum of consumption and government purchases, and private saving plus public saving.
Stock
is a claim to partial ownership in a firm.
The primary economic function of the financial system is to
match one person's saving with another person's investment.
A country has a trade deficit if
net capital outflow must be negative and saving is smaller than investment.
If the real exchange rate is less than 1, then the
nominal exchange rate x U.S. price < foreign price. The dollars required to purchase a good in the U.S. would not buy enough foreign currency to buy the same good overseas.
If Norway sold more goods and services abroad than it purchased from abroad, then it had
positive net exports which is a trade surplus.
Investment
purchase of new capital
larger budget deficit
raises the interest rate and reduces investment.
an increase in the foreign price level
reduces the real exchange rate. This reduction could be offset by an increase in the domestic price level.
A higher interest rate induces people to
save more, so the supply of loanable funds slopes upward.
In a closed economy,
saving=investment
NX is
the demand for dollars
The dollar is said to appreciate against the euro if
the exchange rate rises. Other things the same, it will cost more euros to buy U.S. goods.
financial system
the group of institutions that helps match the saving of one person with the investment of another.
Law of One Price
the notion that a good should sell for the same price in all markets
National Saving
the portion of national income that is not used for consumption or government purchases (public + private)
Nominal Exchange Rate
the rate at which one country's currency trades for another
Real Exchange Rate
the rate at which the g&s of one country trade for the g&s of another (exchange rate x domestic/foreign)
NCO is
the supply of dollars
A policy that induces people to save more shifts
the supply of loanable funds and reduces interest rates.
Net exports=trade balance
value of exports - value of imports