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Lecture notes EC201: Macroeconomics 2 (EC201) (T1) $14.91   Add to cart

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Lecture notes EC201: Macroeconomics 2 (EC201) (T1)

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Providing an in-depth report of all lectures from the macroeconomics course at the university of Warwick. Notes were created by a student who scored a first. They are very detailed and include all the nuances needed for exams.

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  • November 23, 2023
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By: maggievijay • 10 months ago

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KEY:

Yellow – Mid-importance//Basics//Main Topic

Relevant

Green – Need to Know//Past-Exam

Purple – New Topic

Current Account (Video 1)

- International Transactions Accounts = Balance of Payments
o 3 Main Accounts
o Current Account
 Trade Balance (goods balance + service balance)
 (+) Income Balance = Net Investment Income + Net International Payments to
employees
 (+) Net Unilateral Transfers
- To assess the size of the trade balance you’ll have to scale it to the size of the economy
o Calculate the ratio between the Trade Balance and GDP.
T Bt
o =Trade Balance as a % of GDP
GD Pt
- Time Perspective:
o Compute the time series for the trade balance overtime
o Nominal trade value has a limited informational worth so you should compute the trade
balance again as a % of GDP
- General pattern for developed countries – neutral until the 2000s but post 2000s it transforms
largely into a trade deficit (UK, US)
- The Income Balance
o Measures the difference between income received from the RoW and income paid to
the RoW
 Net Investment Income -> Net income from capital (dividends, interest, profits)
 Net Income from Labor -> Net International Payments to Employees
o Time Perspective (UK) -> Neutral until the 2000s and then experienced larger swings
(positive) as globalization starts to kick in.
o The US runs a trade deficit post-2000s in its trade balance but a trade surplus in the
income balance during the same period.
- Net Unilateral Transfers:
o Keeps a record of the difference between gifts received from the rest of the world and
gifts given to the rest of the world.
o Gifts can involve private agents or governments
o Net Unilateral Transfers = Private Remittances + Government Transfers (including Aid)
- Current Account
o A negative current account (ceteris paribus) means that the net external debt of the
country will increase

,Snapshot (Video 2)

- Observations of the Example
o For the US the trade balance is the main driver of the balance of the current account
o In net terms as a percentage of GDP.
o Trade balance moves closely with the current account
- The Trade Balance and Current Account Balances Across Countries




o

The Net International Investment Position (NIIP) (BoP) (Video 3)

- NIIP = Difference between a country’s foreign Assets (A) and its foreign Liabilities (L)
- If the NIIP is negative -> Country is a net debtor to the rest of the world
- How has the NIIP evolved? (Time perspective)
- The NIIP Changes for 2 Reasons
o ∆ NIIP=CA+Valuation Changes
o VC -> changes in the market valuation of the country’s (A) and (L) (due to appreciation
and depreciation of currency, changes in stock prices)
 Depreciation of the Dollar means that liabilities lose value (‘shrink’)
o A positive CA value will indicate that the NIIP is increasing but not necessarily that the
NIIP itself is positive
- How important are valuation changes in the NIIP
o Recall that the NIIP can either change bc of changes to the CA or VC
o Large valuation changes are a recent phenomenon.
 Until 2003, the typical change was between –1 and +2 % of GDP.
 Since then, we have observed VC as large as 15% of GDP

, - To Compute a Hypothetical NIIP Valuation:

The NIIP/NII Paradox (Video 4)

- Counterintuitively -> Despite the US being the largest external debtor in the world, it receives
investment income from RoW




-
- How can this paradoxical situation happen? - 2 Explanations
o Dark Matter
o Return Differential
- Dark Matter
o The hypothesis maintains that the US net external international investment position is
positive, but the Bureau of Economic Analysis fails to account for that.
o Assuming this -> how much dark matter is there in the NIIP?

TNIIP - True NIIP
o Net Investment income is the return on the True Net International Investment Position

Where r is the interest rate

Take the value of r to be 5%/annum

NII =rTNIIP
NII 0.25
TNIIP= = =5T
r 0.05
 Dark Matter is simply the difference between true and recorded NIIP

, According to the dark matter theory the US wouldn’t owe to the RoW -> but
number appears to be too high to be plausible
- Return Differential
o 2nd explanation is motivated by the observation that gross international asset position of
the US is mostly composed of risky but high-return assets, like foreign stocks
o Also, INT. gross Int. L position is composed of safer low-return assets, such as US T Bills

Where A denotes the US Int. Asset position, and Ldenotes its Int. Liability position

NIIP=A−L
Let r A be the return on A and r L be the return on L

o Q is how large does the rate differential on A and L must be to explain the paradox

( 1 ) NII =r A A +r L L
o Why is it that a small rate differential suffices to explain the NII-NIIP paradox?
 Gross A and L positions have exploded in the last 3 decades. (Doubling every
decade)
 Hence, just a small rate of return diff. Can lead to a positive NII even though the
NIIP is negative

Notes on readings:

Lecture notes in green

Current Account Sustainability:

Sustainability in 2 periods (Video 1):

- Can a country run a perpetual trade balance deficit?
o Depends on whether the country is a net debtor or creditor to the RoW
o Formally: Consider an economy that lasts for two periods. It starts period 1 with a net
¿
foreign asset position of B0. Let r denote the interest rate. Then, the country’s NIIP in P1
¿
is given by r B 0. Let the trade balance be denoted by T B1. Then, the country’s NIIP at
the end of period 1 is given by -
¿ ¿
(1) B1=( 1+r ) B 0 +T B1

Similarly, in period 2:
¿ ¿
(2) B2=( 1+r ) B1+ T B 2

- @ The end of period 2, the country cannot hold assets or debts because no one will be alive in
P3. This means that:
¿
(3) B2=0

o For this statement above we assume that net payments to employees is equal to 0 and
that net unilateral transfers are also equal to 0

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