Exports pay for imports. Yet in 2018, the nations of the world exported about $891 billion more of goods and services to the United States than they imported from the United States." Resolve the apparent inconsistency of these two statements.

Short Answer

Expert verified

The higher amount of imports (world’s exports) in the US than the amount of exports (world’s imports) suggests a current account deficit situation. This deficit results in unfinanced imports, and hence the statement of export paying for import is not consistent with the situation.

Step by step solution

01

Import and export: direction of cashflows

Importing goods and services causes cash outflow while exporting goods and services brings money back into the economy.This follows credit and debit of cash, signifying positive and negative signs on the current account of the balance sheet.

Any inconsistency will lead to a non-zero balance on the balance of the payment statement

02

When US imports exceed exports in the world market

The world's nations exported $891 billion more of goods and services than the United States, yet their import from the US economy is less.

Generally, the money received from exports pays for imports, but it was not true for the world's nations in 2018. The balance of payment statement of the US in 2018 reveals that foreign purchase of assets in the United States was +$765. This signifies that all the money generated from the export of goods and services to the United States was used to purchase US economy assets rather than financing imports.

This is why the balance of payment statement of the US economy shows current account deficit and capital and financial account surplus in 2018.

Unlock Step-by-Step Solutions & Ace Your Exams!

  • Full Textbook Solutions

    Get detailed explanations and key concepts

  • Unlimited Al creation

    Al flashcards, explanations, exams and more...

  • Ads-free access

    To over 500 millions flashcards

  • Money-back guarantee

    We refund you if you fail your exam.

Over 30 million students worldwide already upgrade their learning with Vaia!

One App. One Place for Learning.

All the tools & learning materials you need for study success - in one app.

Get started for free

Most popular questions from this chapter

Suppose that a country follows a managed-float policy but that its exchange rate is currently floating freely. In addition, suppose that it has a massive current account deficit. Other things equal, are its official reserves increasing, decreasing, or staying the same? If it decides to engage in a currency intervention to reduce the size of its current account deficit, will it buy or sell its own currency? As it does so, will its official reserves of foreign currencies get larger or smaller?

ADVANCED ANALYSIS Return to problem 3 and assume that the exchange rate is fixed at 110. In year 1, what is the minimum initial size of the U.S. reserve of loonies such that the United States can maintain the peg throughout the year? What is the minimum initial size that is necessary at the start of year 2? Next, consider only the data for year 1. What peg should the United States set if it wants the fixed exchange rate to increase the domestic money supply by $1.2 trillion?

QdPQsQ's
101253020
151202515
201152010
25110155

If a country such as Greece that has joined the European Monetary Union can no longer use an independent monetary policy to offset a recession, what sorts of fiscal policy initiatives might it undertake? Give at least two examples.

Suppose that a Swiss watchmaker imports watch components from Sweden and exports watches to the United States. Also, suppose the dollar depreciates, and the Swedish krona appreciates, relative to the Swiss franc. Speculate as to how each would hurt the Swiss watchmaker.

Explain why the U.S. demand for Mexican pesos slopes downward and the supply of pesos to Americans slopes upward. Assuming a system of flexible exchange rates between Mexico and the United States, indicate whether each of the following will cause the Mexican peso to appreciate or depreciate, other things equal:

a. The United States unilaterally reduces tariffs on Mexican products.

b. Mexico encounters severe inflation.

c. Deteriorating political relations reduce American tourism in Mexico.

d. The U.S. economy moves into a severe recession.

e. The United States engages in a high-interest-rate monetary policy.

f. Mexican products become more fashionable to U.S. consumers.

g. The Mexican government encourages U.S. firms to invest in Mexican oil fields.

h. The rate of productivity growth in the United States diminishes sharply.

See all solutions

What do you think about this solution?

We value your feedback to improve our textbook solutions.

Study anywhere. Anytime. Across all devices.

Sign-up for free