Consolidated Balance Sheet of H Economy PDF

Summary

This document presents a consolidated balance sheet for an economy, along with details on the balance of payments. It outlines the components of the current account, capital account, and financial account, alongside national income identity. The document includes relevant equations and diagrams for understanding macroeconomic concepts.

Full Transcript

## Consolidated balance sheet of H economy * **A** = Assets * **L** = Liabilities | **A** | **L** | **Explanation** | |---|---|---| | KH<br>EHH<br>EHF<br>B<br>BHH<br>BHF<br>MH<br>MHF<br>BEK<br>BHF | WH<br>EHH<br>EFH<br>BH<br>BFH<br>6HF<br>MHF<br>RHH<br>MFH<br>BFH | KH = Real Assets<br>EH = Human...

## Consolidated balance sheet of H economy * **A** = Assets * **L** = Liabilities | **A** | **L** | **Explanation** | |---|---|---| | KH<br>EHH<br>EHF<br>B<br>BHH<br>BHF<br>MH<br>MHF<br>BEK<br>BHF | WH<br>EHH<br>EFH<br>BH<br>BFH<br>6HF<br>MHF<br>RHH<br>MFH<br>BFH | KH = Real Assets<br>EH = Human Capital<br>EHF = Equity of Foreign Assets<br>B = Bonds, loan assets<br>MH = Money<br>6HF = Foreign Assets - Foreign Liabilities<br>MHF = Money, held by H, - Money, held by F<br>BEK = Foreign Liabilities - Foreign Assets <br>BHF = Foreign Liabilities | **Equations:** * **E** = equity. * **eHF** = EHF - EFH , Foreign Assets - Foreign Liabilities * **6HF** = BHF - BFH , Foreign Liabilities - Foreign Assets * **mHF** = MHE - MFH, Money held by H - Money held by F * **HF** = ZHF - ZFH , Assets - Liabilities **Net International Investment Position (NIIP):** * NIIP = NFA = net foreign assets * NIIP = NEW = net external wealth * NIIP = -NFU = minus net foreign liabilities * NIIP = NIIP = net international investment position **Total Assets, Liabilities, and Stock (St):** * **KH + zHF** = Stocks * **Wt** = KH + zHF (Stocks) * **4Wt** = KH +zHF (Flows) ## Balance of payments **New and Old Versions:** * **CA + KA = FA** (new version) * **CA + KA + FA = 0** (old version) **Components:** * **CA** (Current Account) = Export of goods, pay off loan, salary from abroad, Spain forgives foreign debt. * **KA** (Capital Account) = Capital transfers, NP NF assets * **FA** (Financial Account) = Direct investment, Portfolio investment, Other investment, Official reserves ## BoP - published BoP (countries, IMF, OECD) **Current Account Components:** *Goods *Services *Primary Income *-From work *-From investment (Y, Z= R^2HF. *Secondary Income **Capital Account Components:** *Capital transfers *NP, NF assets ## BoP - published BoP (countries, IMF, OECD) **Financial Account:** * **Direct investment** (DIB) * **Portfolio investment** (PIB) * Shares * Bouds * **Other investment** * Trade credit * Loans * Money * **Official reserves** ## CA and NIIP **Key Equation:** * **CA + KA + = FA** (KA =0) ## National income identity (NIA) **Key Equation:** * **Y = C + I + G + CA** **Table:** | Account | Abbreviation | Equation | CA | |---|---|---|---| | Gross national expenditure (spending) | GNE | YE | X | | Gross domestic product | GDP | YP | ✓ | | Gross national income | GNI | Y | ✓ | | Gross national disposable income | GNDI | Y | ✓ | ## Durable goods * **Ct** = Consumption of durable goods **Graph**: * **x** = 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, t * **y** = 0, 2, 4, 6, 8, 10, Ct **Explanation:** * **New car:** ***H** (Home country): CA = Y - (C + I + G) > 0. ***F** (Foreign country): CA = Y - (C + I + G) < 0 * **Second-hand car:** * **H:** CA = Y - (C + I + G) < 0 * **F:** CA = Y - (C + I + G) > 0 ## Bretton Woods conference (1944) **Key figures:** * **Harry Dexter White (USA)** * **John Maynard Keynes (UK)** **New institutions:** * **IMF (International Monetary Fund):** balance of payments problems --> help. * **World Bank:** **Bretton Goods Objectives:** * Stable exchange rates (see figure 19-04) * Help in case of Bop crises ## FIGURE 19-1 **Exchange Rates Regimes of the World, 1870-2000** The shaded regions show the fraction of countries on each type of regime by year, and they add up to 100%. * **1870 to 1913:** the gold standard became the dominant regime. * **World War I (1914-1918):** most countries suspended the gold standard. * **late 1920s:** resumptions were brief. * **World War II (1939–1945):** most countries were fixed against the U.S. dollar. * **1970s:** more countries opted to float. * **1999:** the euro replaced the franc and the mark as the base currency for many pegs.

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