Chapter 19 - A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy
The Market for Loanable Funds:
At the equilibrium interest rate, the amount that people want to save exactly balances the desired quantities of domestic investment and net capital outflow.
The Market for Foreign-Currency Exchange:
At the equilibrium real exchange rate, the demand for dollars by foreigners arising from the U.S. net exports of goods and services exactly balances the supply of dollars from Americans arising from U.S. net capital outflow.
The net capital outflow does not depend on the exchange rate
Changes in the exchange rate influence both the cost of buying foreign assets and the benefit of owning them, and these two effects offset each other
Net Capital Outflow: The Link between the Two Markets:
Net-capital-outflow curve is the link between the market for loanable funds and the market for foreign currency exchange.
Government Budget Deficits:
Government budget deficit represents a negative public saving
Reduces national saving (the sum of public and private savings)
Reduces the supply of loanable funds
Drives up interest rates
Crowds out investment
Trade Policy:
Trade policy- a government policy that directly influences the number of goods and services that a country imports or exports
Tariff- a tax on imported goods
Import quota- a limit on the quantity of a good produced abroad that can be sold domestically
Political Instability and Capital Flight:
Capital flight- a large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country
The Market for Loanable Funds:
At the equilibrium interest rate, the amount that people want to save exactly balances the desired quantities of domestic investment and net capital outflow.
The Market for Foreign-Currency Exchange:
At the equilibrium real exchange rate, the demand for dollars by foreigners arising from the U.S. net exports of goods and services exactly balances the supply of dollars from Americans arising from U.S. net capital outflow.
The net capital outflow does not depend on the exchange rate
Changes in the exchange rate influence both the cost of buying foreign assets and the benefit of owning them, and these two effects offset each other
Net Capital Outflow: The Link between the Two Markets:
Net-capital-outflow curve is the link between the market for loanable funds and the market for foreign currency exchange.
Government Budget Deficits:
Government budget deficit represents a negative public saving
Reduces national saving (the sum of public and private savings)
Reduces the supply of loanable funds
Drives up interest rates
Crowds out investment
Trade Policy:
Trade policy- a government policy that directly influences the number of goods and services that a country imports or exports
Tariff- a tax on imported goods
Import quota- a limit on the quantity of a good produced abroad that can be sold domestically
Political Instability and Capital Flight:
Capital flight- a large and sudden reduction in the demand for assets located in a country