3.1.9

Balance of Payments

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Balance of Payments

The balance of payments shows a record of all transactions that a country does with the rest of the world. It's made up of three accounts: current, capital and financial.

Current account

Current account

  • The current account is comprised of:
    • Trade in goods and services (X-M).
    • Net primary income - net factor income from abroad (e.g. remittances, profits, interest on dividends).
    • Net secondary income - net unilateral transfers (e.g. foreign aid).
Capital account

Capital account

  • The capital account is comprised of:
    • Sale/transfer of patents, copyrights, franchises, leases and other transferable contracts, and goodwill.
    • Transfers of ownership of fixed assets.
Financial account

Financial account

  • The financial account is comprised of:
    • Net foreign ownership of domestic assets.
    • Hot money flows.
Balancing items

Balancing items

  • The balance of payments has to add up to 0.
  • But in reality, there are errors and omissions in calculating what comes in and what goes out of an economy.
  • So we add a “balancing item” or “net errors and omissions” to make it balance.

Current Account and Flows

The current account in the balance of payments is made up of several different categories of money flows.

Merchandise trade balance

Merchandise trade balance

  • The merchandise trade balance is made up of the exports and imports of goods.
    • The sale of Aston Martins made in the UK would count as an export of goods in this section of the balance of payments.
Services trade balance

Services trade balance

  • This is made up of the exports and imports of services.
    • Barclays selling financial services (e.g investment bank consultancy fees) to a company based in Saudi Arabia would count as the export of services.
Income receipts and payments

Income receipts and payments

  • Income receipts and payments includes money received from foreign investments.
  • Investment income can come from investments abroad.
    • When someone invests in the US and makes a return, this is then transferred to the person in the UK who owns the asset.
Unilateral transfers

Unilateral transfers

  • Unilateral transfers are payments by governments or individuals in which money is sent abroad without any direct good or service being received.
    • The UK sending humanitarian aid to African countries, India or North Korea would count as a unilateral transfer.
Jump to other topics
1

Introduction to Markets

2

Market Failure

3

The UK Macroeconomy

4

The UK Economy - Policies

5

Business Behaviour

6

Market Structures

7

A Global Perspective

8

Finance & Inequality

9

Examples of Global Policy

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