International finance
Flow of goods and services
Exports: domestically produced goods and services sold abroad
Imports: goods and services produced abroad sold domestically
Net exports = Exports - Imports
Trade surplus: Net exports > 0
Trade deficit: Net exports < 0
Balanced trade: Net exports = 0
The flow of financial resources is made up of:
Financial inflows: investments by foreigners in Canada
Financial outflows: investments by canadians in foreign countries
Forms of financial flows:
Foreign direct investment (ex: italian company opens a subsidiary in canada)
Portfolio investment (ex: japanese investor purchases canadian bonds)
Deposits and loans (ex: foreign deposits in canadian banks)
Why have financial flows grown?
Deregulation of financial sector and removal of capital controls
Capital controls = rules designated to limit financial flow across countries
Large institutional investors (pensions funds and mutual funds) have grown over time
Seek to diversify their portfolios
Technology: secure international wire transfers
Financial innovation
Nominal exchange rate: The rate at which you can trade currency of one country for currency of another.
In general we will define the nominal exchange rates in units of foreign currency per unit of domestic currency (ex: USD per CAD)
Nominal exchange rate = units of foreign currency / units of domestic currency
Units of foreign currency = nominal exchange rate x units of domestic currency
Depreciation: when the price of a currency falls
Appreciation: when the price of currency rises
Higher price of a dollar:
Appreciation of the dollar
Depreciation of the other currency
Stronger dollar
Higher exchange rate
Imports are cheaper
Exports are more expensive for foreign buyers
Lower price of a dollar
Depreciation of the dollar
Appreciation of the other currency
Weaker dollar
Lower exchange rate
Imports are more expensive
Exports are cheaper for foreign buyers
Foreign exchange market: The market in which currencies are bought and sold. The price of a Canadian dollar is the nominal exchange rate.
The market for canadian dollars:
Demanders:
From the trade flows: foreigners buying canadian exports
From financial inflows: foreigners investing in canada
Suppliers:
From trade flows: canadians buying imports
From financial outflows: canadians investing abroad
Market for Canadian dollars
Downward sloping demand
A lower price of the Canadian dollar means canadian exports are cheap
Buyers from the other country will need more Canadian dollars to pay for those Canadian exports = quantity demanded rises.
Upward sloping supply
A higher price of the canadian dollar means canadian imports (from the other country) are cheap
Canadian imports from the other country rise, canadians need to exchange more canadian dollars into the other currency to pay for imports = quantity supplied rises.
The equilibrium exchange rate is determined by the demand and supply of canadian dollars.
Demand shifters:
Increase in canadian exports:
Increase in world GDP
Lower barriers to foreign markets (ex: tariffs)
Increased domestic innovation or marketing
Higher foreign prices
Lower domestic prices
Increase in financial inflows
Higher canadian interest rates
Higher canadian business profitability
Higher foreign political risk
Higher expected future value of canadian dollar
Supply shifters
Increase in imports into canada
Increase in canadian gdp
Lower barriers protecting domestic producers
Increased foreign innovation or marketing¸Higher domestic prices
Lower foreign prices
Increase in financial outflows
Lower canadian interest rates
Lower canadian business profitability
Lower foreign political risk
Lower expected future value of canadian dollar
Real exchange rate: the rate at which a person can trade the goods and services of one country for those of another.
It is a key determinant of how much a country exports and imports
Balance of payments
The balance of payments summarizes a country’s transactions with the rest of the world
It tracks two sets of transactions:
Current account: how much income crosses national borders each year
Financial account: tracks the financial flows across borders
Current account balance: measures the difference between the income that canadians receive from abroad and the income that Canadians pay to people abroad.
Financial account balance: measures the difference between financial inflows and financial outflows.