Exchange Rates and Balance of Payments Flashcards

1
Q

Exchange Rate

A

The value of a currency in terms of another

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2
Q

Factors causing a fall in demand for a currency

A
  • Decrease in tourism (less exports)
  • Fall in the base rate (decrease flow of hot money, less return from saving)
  • Increase in tariffs
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3
Q

Factors causing a rise in demand (AFFECTS EXPORTS)

A
  • Increase in tourism
  • Increase in the base rate
  • Decrease in tariffis
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4
Q

Factors causing a fall in supply of a currency?

A
  • Decrease in imports
  • Inflation in the Eurozone
  • Interest rates in other countries decrease
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5
Q

Factors causing a rise in supply of currency?

A
  • Increase in imports
  • Deflation in the Eurozone
  • Interest rates in other countries increase
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6
Q

Analysis of Weak Pound

A
  • Imports more expensive, exports cheaper
  • increase in net exports
  • assuming demand for imports and exports are price elastic
  • AD will rise
  • Real gdp will rise
  • price level will rise
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7
Q

Analysis of weak pound supply

A
  • import prices rise
  • cost of production for firms increases
  • reduces AS
  • inflation
  • deter expansion by manufacturers (constraining growth and job growth)
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8
Q

Evaluating the weak pound (J curve)

A
  • current account may initially worsen
  • firms stuck in contracts
  • ped is inelastic
  • decrease export revenues and increase importers revenues
  • j curve
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9
Q

Evaluating the weak pound (financial account)

A
  • the financial account may see change short term but have medium term impacts on the current account
  • foreign investors investing in the UK causes an inflow into the UK capital account
  • however earns more for their current account long term in IPDs (investment income)
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10
Q

Fixed exchange rate

A

policy makers intervene to keep a fixed value of the currency versus nominated other currencies

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11
Q

Floating exchange rate

A

Where exchange rates are fully determined by market forces of supply and demand

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12
Q

How does the central bank fix the exchange rate

A
  • buy and sell a currency to keep the value at the correct value
  • restrict capital flows
  • charge interest rates
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13
Q

Methods to control the demand for a currency

A
  • control interest rates (higher interest rates to increase demand)
  • BoE can sell dollars and buy pounds (increase in demand for pounds, appreciation
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14
Q

Methods to control the supply for a currency?

A
  • control tariffs (higher tariffs to reduce supply)

- Bank of England can sell pounds and buy FX- increase in the supply of the pound = depreciation

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15
Q

Balance of payment

A

a record of all the movements of money in and out of a country over a period of time

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16
Q

What is the balance of payments made up of

A

current account
financial account
capital account

17
Q

foreign direct investment

A
  • foreign companies setting up in the UK = export

- UK companies setting up abroad = import

18
Q

portfolio investment

A
  • foreigners buying UK bonds and shares or depositing money in UK banks (export)
  • UK purchasing foreign bond and shares = imports
19
Q

Causes of current account surpluses

A
  • weak exchange rate
  • international competitveness
  • high productivity
  • economic growth and savings
20
Q

Causes of current account deficit

A
  • a strong exchange rate
  • lack of international competitiveness
  • low productivity = higher costs of production therefore lack of price and cost competitiveness
21
Q

Determinants of the exchange rate: interest rate movements

A
  • if UK interest rates increase relative to other economies, inflow of ‘hot money’
  • increase demand for the pound
    -rise in the value of a currency
    higher exchange rate
22
Q

Advantages of floating exchange rates

A

1) monetary sovereignty = interest rates set on the needs of the Uk economy alone (manage inflation and unemployment) rather than having to change them to stabilise the exchange rate
2) automatic adjustment to the current account balance = a large current account deficit generates an outflow of pounds = exchange rate falling thus atomatically leading to restoring export competitveness

23
Q

Disadvantages of floating excahgne rate

A

1) uncertainty for businesses- not knowing future value of the currency makes it harder to plan input costs, selling prices
2)Overvalued = difficult for those wishing to export
Undervalued = generates cost push inflation

24
Q

Advantages of fixed exchange rate

A

1) easier trading for businesses, likely there will be an expansion of trade between those with fixed rates against another
2) monetary discipline = less likely to be cut in interest rates, which might be inflationary. keeps interest rates in line with the other economy

25
Q

Arguments for joining currency union

A

1) greater certainty for businesses that trade with members of the currency union
2) no costs involved in converting currency
3) greater price transparency for consumers

26
Q

Arguments against joining currency unioun

A

1) individual currencies lose the right to set their own monetary policy
2) Businesses may be unable to compete with lower cost producers that are members of the union and can’t benefit from a falling exchange rate

27
Q

Policies to increase trade surplus

A

1) Lower exchange rate
2) Policies to raise productivity
3) Investment in education and healthcare

28
Q

Lower Exchange Rate

A

improve competitiveness
reduce overseas price of exports
imports more expensive

29
Q

Policies to raise productivity

A
  • methods to increase innovation and incentives to increase investment in industries with export potential
  • compete more effectively with imports
30
Q

Investment in education and healthcare

A
  • boost human capital

- increase competitiveness in fast growing and high value industries