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Lecture notes

3 Pack - EC201 Macroeconomics 2 Lecture Notes

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We are providing an in-depth report of all lectures. These are 3 sets of lecture notes will serve you for the entire year and help you ace your exams. It was made by two students, both whom scored a first in the final 2nd year exams. Notes are extremely in depth.

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EC 201: International Macroeconomics
Lecture 1: Global Imbalances
International Trades Accounts (ITA) / Balance of Payments Accounts: record external positions
of countries
Trade Balance: ITA component measuring difference between exports and imports of goods and
services
Goods Balance=Exports of Goods−Imports of Goods
Service Balance=Exports of Services−Imports of Services
Trade Balance=Goods Balance + Service Balance
- To measure whether the trade balance is significant, we can use the trade deficit / surplus
Trade Balance
Trade Deficit (%)=
GDP


- Before the 1990s, the US had a nominal trade deficit very close to zero, after which it grew
rapidly to US$800bn
 This trend is mirrored in other variables measuring economic interconnectedness
- This trend persists even when looking at trade deficit as a percentage of GDP
- A large fraction of this deficit is due to trade with China
 Share explained by deficits with China grew from 10% to 50% from 1990 – 2015
- After globalisation began in the 1990s, imbalances have grown
 The nominal trade deficit grew consistently in the UK and US, while China and
Germany have had rising trade surpluses


Income Balance: ITA component measuring the difference between incomes paid and received
from the rest of the world, recorded separately for incomes from capital and labour
Net Investment Income (NII): net income from capital (dividends, interest, profits, etc.)
Net International Payments to Employees: net income from labour
Earnings of Expats Abroad – Earningsof Foreign Expats∈ Domestic Country
Income Balance =Net Investment Income
+ Net International Payments ¿ Employees


- In the UK, net primary income was close to zero until 2000, when it began experiencing
large swings (grew to 60bn and then fell to - 40bn)
 Globalisation led to divergences in primary income across the world
- Globally, net income grew for Germany and the US, and fell for China and the UK


Net Unilateral Transfers: ITA component measuring difference between gifts received from and
given to the rest of the world, involving both private and public agents
Net Unilateral Transfers=Private Remittances
+Government Transfers
Current Account (CA): Sum of Trade Balance, Income Balance and Net Unilateral Transfers

1

, - If the net current account is negative, ceteris paribus, external debt rises
- Trade balance is the most important driver of the current account for most countries



- But a plot of trade balance as a % of GDP vs current account as a % of GDP has outliers:
 In the Philippines, private remittances overcome effect of trade deficit
 In Ireland, negative net investment income dominated due to repatriated profits
 In Argentina, negative net investment income due to debt repayments dominates
- China doesn’t fully explain US current account deficit, so other surplus countries exist
 Japan, Germany, and oil exporters (OPEC, Russia, Norway) financed global deficits
- Overall:
Domestic R est O f W orld
CA +CA =0


- Globalisation led to large global imbalances (countries have run persistent deficits/surpluses)
Net International Investment Position (NIIP): difference between country’s foreign assets and
liabilities [stock variable]
 If NIIP > 0, the country is a net creditor
 If NIIP < 0, the country has external debt


- US was a net creditor until the 1980s, after which it has grown to the largest net debtor
 NIIP in nominal terms and as a % of GDP both falling


- The NIIP can change for two reasons:
 Current account deficits or surpluses
 Valuation Changes: change in market value of a country’s foreign assets or liabilities
∆ NIIP=CA+Valuation Changes
* Domestic currency appreciations or rises in foreign stock prices improve NIIP, ceteris paribus


- Since the CA of the US has been falling since the 1990s, so has the NIIP
 But what about the valuation changes?
- Since 1976, the US has mainly had valuation gains (24 gains versus 14 falls)
 Large valuation changes are a recent phenomenon (before 2003, they were ± 1-2%)
- Since 2003, however, they have grown, sometimes to ± 15%
 One reason is that gross positions have grown tremendously (assets and liabilities
both over 140% of GDP) so a small change in prices leads to a large valuation change


- If valuation changes were unimportant, plot of current account as a % of GDP against
variation of NIIP as a % of GDP would be on the 45-degree line
 This was close to true in the early 1980s, but not remotely true since 2000
- We can construct a hypothetical NIPP without the impact of valuation changes by taking the
NIIP of an initial year and adding all current account balances until the year of interest


2

,  By construction, the hypothetical and actual NIIP are both equal to zero in the initial year


- Starting with 1976, without valuation changes, 2014 US NIIP would be -$9.9tr (not -$6.9tr)
 SO, valuation change impacts were mainly positive for the US
- For instance, from 2002 – 2007, a depreciation of the dollar led to a lower valuation of
liabilities (which are denominated in dollars) and foreign stock markets outperformed US

Negative-NIIP-Positive-NII Paradox: countries with a negative NIIP (external debt) can receive
investment income from the rest of the world even though NII is interest on NIIP
NII =rNIIP
- Two suggested explanations are (i) dark matter and (ii) return differentials
Dark Matter Hypothesis: NIIP is actually positive but economic agencies fail to account for it all
 E.g. intangibles like brand name that are recognized in profits but not in accounts
- TNIIP is the true net international investment position
NII=rTNIIP


- In 2014, the actual net international investment position (NIIP) was - $7tr and the net
international income (NII) was $0.25tr in 2014
- For an r of 5%:
$ 0.25 tr
TNIIP= =$ 5 tr
0.05
Dark Matter =TNIIP−NIIP=$ 5 tr−(−$ 7 tr )=$ 12 tr !
- But this is too unrealistically large to be unaccounted for by either the BEA or IRS



Return Differential Hypothesis: motivated by fact that assets are mostly risky, high-return assets
(e.g. foreign stocks) while liabilities are safer, low-return assets (e.g. T-bills)
NIIP=A−L
A L
NII =r A−r L


- But how big does the difference in returns between assets and liabilities need to be?
- In 2014, the US has a gross asset position of $25tr, a gross liability position of $32tr, r L was
0.13% and NII was $0.25tr
A
0.25=r 25−0.0013× 32
A
r =0.0117
- So, the differential r A −r L only needs to be 1.17 %−0.13 %=1.04 %
 This is not unrealistic


- Due to the size of the asset and liability positions, a very small rate of return differentials can
lead to a positive NII despite a negative NIIP



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