Title: A1256655583hAKVy
1BSc Financial Economics International
Finance Professor Anne Sibert
2International Finance
Lecture 1 Balance of Payments Accounting
3Learning Objectives
- To be able to explain the main and sub-accounts
of the balance of payments and their relationship
to each other. - To understand the principles of double-entry
bookkeeping. - To be able to record transactions and present a
balance of payments table. - To understand the relationship between the
balance of payments and a nations budget
constraint. - To understand the relationship between the
balance of payments and the national income
accounts.
4Definition The balance of payments is a record
of transactions between residents of a country
and residents of the rest of the world.
- The balance of payments is use to
- project exchange rates
- assess the health of the economy
- assess the credit worthiness of an economy
5Balance of payments accounting is based on the
principles of double-entry bookkeeping each
transaction is recorded twice, once as a debit
and once as a credit.
Definition. Assets are economic resources which
are expected to benefit future activities. Definit
ion. Liabilities are outsiders claims against
assets. Definition. Credit this means
right. Definition. Debit this means left.
6Georges Shoe Store
Account Name This account records
Inventory The purchase and sale of shoes
Accounts Payable Debts incurred and paid
Cash Cash acquired and disbursed
Accounts Receivable Loans made and repaid
7ASSET ACCOUNTS LIABILITY ACCOUNTS
Left-hand balances Right-hand balances
Increased by entries on the left Increased by entries on the right
Decreased by entries on the right Decreased by entries on the left
8George sells 500 of shoes. Payment is due in 30
days.
INVENTORY INVENTORY
Increases Decreases (1) 500
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
Increases (1) 500 Decreases
9In 30 days, George receives payment in cash.
ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE
Increases (1) 500 Decreases (2) 500
CASH CASH
Increases (2) 500 Decreases
10George buys new inventory for 800. Payment is
due in 30 days.
INVENTORY INVENTORY
Increases (3) 800 Decreases (1) 500
ACCOUNTS PAYABLE ACCOUNTS PAYABLE
Decreases Increases (3) 800
11Recalling our previous definitions, we now have
DEBITS CREDITS
Left-hand side entries Right-hand side entries
Increases in assets Decreases in assets
Decreases in liabilities Increases in liabilities
12Thus, we have
- Debit accounts receivable 500 Credit inventory
500 - Debit cash 500 Credit Accounts Receivable 500
- Debit inventory 800 Credit Accounts Payable
800 - Credits are entered as positive numbers Debits
are entered as negative numbers.
13Georges Shoe Store
Inventory -300
Accounts Receivable 0
Cash -500
Accounts Payable 800
14A nations balance of payments is a record of
transactions between residents of that nation and
residents of the rest of the world.
- We are talking about residents not citizens.
Tourists, military and diplomatic personnel and
temporary migrants are not residents. A permanent
migrant is a resident, even if not a citizen.
- Example A subsidiary of a Korean automobile firm
located in the UK sells cars to Korea. This is a
UK export and a Korean import.
15A Countrys Budget Constraint
- Net sales of goods and services Net Interest
income Net gifts received from foreigners
Change in home holdings of foreign assets
Change in foreign holdings of home assets - The left-hand side change in net worth
- The right-hand side change in asset holdings
16Current Account
- The Current Account is a record of transactions
affecting the left-hand side of the budget
constraint. - It is a measure of the change in a countrys net
worth. - It is a record of trade in goods in services
(including the services of capital and labour)
and gifts.
17Current Account
- Merchandise Trade
- Services
- Income
- Current Transfers
18Merchandise Trade
- This is trade in physical goods such as computers
and automobiles. - It is often broken down into
- Merchandise exports
- Merchandise imports
19Services
- This is trade in invisible or intangible goods.
- Examples are shipping, travel, communications,
financial services, insurance, tourism - The sum of merchandise trade and services is
called the trade balance
20Current Transfers
- These are one-sided transactions such as
government grants, pension payments, and private
gifts.
21The Capital Account
- A complication arose because debt forgiveness was
distorting balance of payments numbers. - It was decided to include only gifts that would
be consumed within a year in the current account
and to make up a new account called the Capital
Account that would include long-term gifts such
as debt forgiveness. - Thus, the left-hand side of the budget constraint
should actually be the Current Account plus the
Capital Account. - The Capital Account is unimportant for the UK or
the US.
22Is this an increase or a decrease in an asset? Is this a debit or a credit? Is it entered as a positive or a negative number
A country buys a good or a service Increase (it has more goods and services) Debit Negative
A country sells a good or a service Decrease (it has fewer goods and services) Credit Positive
23Thus we have Exports Credits Positive
Entry Imports Debits Negative Entry A
positive balance on the current account means
that a country sold more than it bought A
negative balance on the current account means
that a country bought more than it sold
24The UK Current Account 2006
In millions, Pink Book
25G-7 Current Accounts as a Share of GDP 2007
Source IMF estimate
26Current Account Deficit as a Share of GDP
27The Financial Account
- This is the right-hand side of the governments
budget constraint. - The financial account is a record of capital
flows between residents of a country and the rest
of the world.
28- One way to break down capital flows is by the
type of transaction. - There are two main types of capital flows
- Direct investment When residents of a country
acquire shares in a foreign business with the
intent of exercising management control. This is
typically defined as purchasing 10 percent of a
firms stock. - Portfolio investment Investment without the
intention of exercising management control. - Portfolio investment used to be further broken
down between short- and long-term flows. But,
secondary markets exist for many long-term
financial assets and this has become increasingly
meaningless. Once can also break it down between
foreign claims on the home country and home
claims on foreigners.
29Home purchase of a foreign asset Capital outflow Increase in an asset Debit Negative entry
Foreign sale of a home asset Capital outflow Decrease in a liability Debit Negative entry
Home sale of a foreign asset Capital inflow Decrease in an asset Credit Positive entry
Foreign purchase of a home asset Capital inflow Increase in a liability Credit Positive entry
30Reserve Account
- A special sub-account of the financial account is
the reserve account. - The reserve account is a record of changes in the
home countrys official (government) assets. - When fixed exchange rates were more prevalent
this used to be separate from the financial
account.
31Foreign Reserves
- For most countries the most important component
is their foreign exchange reserves. This is the
foreign currency held by the central bank. - When a central bank intervenes in the exchange
market to influence the value of its currency it
uses its foreign exchange reserves.
32The central bank buys foreign exchange This is an increase in an asset debt Negative entry
The central bank sells foreign exchange This is a decrease in an asset credit Positive entry
33Reserve Account Balance
- Negative balance (debit, increase in an asset)
Reserves rose. - Positive balance (credit, decrease in an asset)
Reserves fell. - Another definition of the balance of payments is
minus one times the reserve account balance. - A positive (negative) balance of payments
reserves rose (fell)
34Errors and Omissions
- Each transaction is entered once as a debit and
once as a credit that is, once as a positive
number and once as the same negative number. - So, all of the transactions should sum to zero.
- In practice, it does not work out that way.
35Errors and Omissions
- Data on merchandise trade comes from customs
declarations. - Trade in services is typically estimated by
various sampling techniques errors can be
substantial. - Reporting of capital flows and investment income
is highly imperfect people try to hide these to
evade taxes. - The Statistical Discrepancy or Errors and
Omissions is the amount we need to add or
subtract to make things add up to zero.
36Balance of Payments Current Account Merchandise
Trade Exports Imports Services Income Curre
nt Transfers Capital Account Financial
Account Direct Investment Portfolio
Investment Home claims on Foreigners Foreign
Claims on the Home Country Reserves Errors and
Omissions
37Examples for the Mythical Country of Pongoland
- Which account is credited?
- Which account is debited?
38A European importer buys 3 million pongos worth
of equipment from a Pongoland firm. Payment is
made with a cheque drawn on a Pongoland bank.
- The equipment is a Merchandise Export.
- It is a decrease in an asset, so credit
Merchandise Exports 3 million. - The cheque is a Foreign Claim on Pongoland. It is
a decrease in a liability so debit Foreign Claims
3 million.
39Pongoland imports 1.2 million pongos of food from
Latin America. Payment is made with cheques drawn
on Pongoland banks.
- The food is a Merchandise Import.
- It is an increase in an asset so debit
Merchandise Imports 1.2 million. - The payment is a Foreign Claim on Pongoland.
- It is an increase in a liability so credit
Foreign Claims 1.2 million.
40Pongoland tourists spend 400,000 pongos while
travelling in Europe. They pay with Pongoland
travellers cheques.
- The tourism is a Service.
- It is an increase in an asset so debit Services
.4 million. - The travellers cheques are a Foreign Claim on
Pongoland. - They are an increase in a liability, so credit
Foreign Claims .4 million.
41A Pongoland company purchases 20 percent of a
European Company for 800,000 pongos. It pays with
cheques drawn on Pongoland banks.
- Debit Direct Investment .8 million.
- Credit Foreign Claims .8 million
42The government of Pongoland provides foreign aid
to a country in the form of 300,000 million of
agricultural products.
- Debit Current Transfers .3 million
- Credit Exports .3 million
43Pongoland investors receive 200,000 pongos from
their foreign investments. They are paid with
cheques drawn on foreign banks.
- The earnings are Income.
- They are no longer owed the income so this is a
decrease in an asset. Or, view this as an export
of the services of capital. Credit Income .2
million. - The cheques are Pongoland Claims on Foreigners.
- This is an increase in an asset debit Pongoland
Claims.
44The Balance of Payments and the National Accounts
- Y C I G X where Y is output or income, C
is private domestic consumption, I is private
domestic investment, G is government spending
(assumed to be consumption) and X is exports
minus imports, or net exports or the current
account. - Y C G S I X, where S is income minus
total private and government consumption, or
savings. - X S I the current account is domestic
investment minus saving