Balance Of Payments Flashcards
What is the Balance of Payments?
Record of a country’s transactions with the rest of the world
What does the Balance of Payments show?
- Receipts from trade
- Consists of the current and financial account
- Represented by the X-M component of AD
What is it called if the payment into a country is greater than the payments going out?
Balance of Payments current account surplus
What is it called if the payments out of the country are greater than the payments coming in?
Balance of Payments current account deficit
What is the current account?
Record of all payments for trade in goods and services plus income flow. Divided into 4 components
What are the 4 components of the current account?
- Balance of trade in goods (visibles)e.g. cars
- Balance of trade in services (invisibles)e.g.Tourism
- Net income flows:Primary income flows (wages)
- Net current transfers:Secondary income flows (oversea aid)
An example of Primary income? (Credit +)
Investment incomes. Income received on foreign direct investment (FDI)
Give an example of FDI? (Credit +)
If a UK company such as BP earn profits from its operations in India. This is a credit (+) for the UK on the current account
An example of primary income (Debit -)?
Wages, UK companies like BP pay UK workers who work for them abroad, this leads to money leaving the UK and is a debit - on the current account
What does secondary income represent?
“Something for nothing”
What is a remittance?
A remittance is money sent to another party, usually one in another country.
Give an example of a remittance?
Immigrant workers earn money in the UK but send much of it back to their home countries
What is the impact of inward FDI on the balance of payments for UK example (Inward FDI = Tata (India) buying JLR; Chinese investors buying Aston Villa)?
1) Initial Impact, a big one-off CREDIT(+) on the financial account
2) Subsequent impact, a continuous DEBIT(-) on the current account as profits made in the UK flow back to India and China
Name a reason for why the trade deficit often begins to rise quickly after a recession?
In a boom we spend more and much of what we buy is expensive imported goods e.g. iPhones and cars. Also, in recessions, labour costs may fall, making UK goods cheaper to produce so making exports more competitive
Name a few situations where running a current account deficit may be a problem for the UK?
- Persistent deficit that is continuously growing, never self-correcting
- The deficit forms a large share of GDP