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Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
Lesson
11.5
THE
FOUR BIG MACROECONOMIC
ISSUES AND THEIR
INTER-RELATIONSHIPS
(CONTINUED.......)
Determinants
of Capital Account:
Although
the focus of discussion
above has been the
current account, it is useful to
briefly look
at
the determinants of the
capital account, and the
factors which increase the
ability of a
country
to attract capital account
inflows:
a.
The attractiveness of the
macroeconomic environment, the
law and order situation
etc.
is
an important determinant of foreign
investment inflows into the
country. The better
the
situation, the more inflows
can be expected by way of
direct investment by
foreign
firms.
b.
The more favourable are
international conditions to borrowing
(foreign lenders'
attitude
towards,
and perception of, the
borrowing country; foreign
interest rates), the
more
easily
can a country raise foreign
debt.
c.
If foreign interest rates
are lower than domestic
interest rates (the latter
adjusted
downwards
for any expected exchanger
ate depreciation), then
foreign portfolio
investors
will want to invest in the
domestic country's stocks,
bonds and other
interest
bearing
assets. The underlying
relationship being referred to
here is that of
interest
parity
which says: id -
ΔEe should
approximately equal if if
private portfolio flows are
to
balance.
Here id stands
for domestic interest rate,
ΔEe is
the expected
depreciation
adjustment,
and if is
the foreign interest
rate.
If
it is not already clear, the
costs of running a high BOPs
or current account deficit
(high is
usually
defined as over 5% of GNP)
for a long time can be
fairly severe. The country
risks
losing
precious foreign exchange
reserves if the exchange
rate is fixed.1 In
this case, a
monetary
contraction, and hence AD
contraction, follows the
loss in reserves with
obvious
social
costs. Alternatively, if the
country completely runs out
of reserves, a BOPs crisis
can
occur
which can be very costly
both in terms of the image
of the country internationally as
well
as
its ability to borrow and
attract investment from
abroad.
GROWTH
The
Concept of Growth and Growth
Rate:
Economic
growth is increase in an economy's
level of production, output or
income. We can
talk
about production or output in
two broad definitional
contexts. One, we can
compare real
GDP
with some other measure of
welfare (for e.g., one
which adjusts for
externalities, social
indicators,
the black market, purchasing
power parity, income
inequality etc.). Two, we
can talk
about
potential vs. actual output.
Potential output is the
aggregate capacity output of a
nation;
the
maximum quantity of goods
and services that can be
produced with available
resources
and
a given state of
technology.2 In
our discussion here, we will
abstract from such
complexities
and take output to simply
mean real GDP.
The
growth rate of a country's
real GDP can be negative,
positive or zero. A growth
rate of
between
2-3% is considered normal
for mature developed
countries; for LICs, 5-7%
is
considered
healthy and 7%+
excellent.
Per
Capita Real GDP:
When
studying growth, it is always
instructive to analyse changes in
per capita real GDP
along
with
changes in real GDP. Per
capita real GDP growth
adjusts GDP growth downwards
by the
population
growth rate and gives a
more accurate indication of
improvements in living
1
Note
that serious BOPs problems
or crises are unlikely under
floating exchange rates.
2
Thus,
when the production possibilities
frontier of a country shifts out,
that represents an increase in
potential
GDP.
Actual GDP can be less than
or equal to potential GDP,
and is usually less. The
difference between
potential
and
actual GDP is sometimes referred to as
the output
gap.
119
Introduction
to Economics ECO401
VU
standards
in a country. For mature
HICs, Real GDP growth
rate = per capita real
GDP growth
rate,
since the population size in
these countries is quite
stable.
It
is also important to note
that even a small per
capital real GDP growth
rate (say around 2%
p.a.),
if sustained for a very long
very of time (say 100
years) can deliver huge
improvements
in
living standards. The U.S.
and Japan in the 19th and 20th
centuries
and East Asian
tiger
economies
in the last four decades
are a neat example of
this.
Why
Growth is an Important Macroeconomic
Issue:
It
is obvious why growth is an
important macroeconomic issue.
Every government aspires
to
deliver
a higher growth rate for
the country. High growth
rates means higher national
income
which
means better living
standards on average, which in
democracies, means
happier
electorates
and therefore increased
chances of re-election for
another term in office.
However,
while
all countries might wish to
achieve high growth rates,
in practice, only a handful
have
been
able to convert the wish
into reality.
Traditional
Thinking about
Growth:
Traditional
thinking on growth was that
it can be driven either by an
increase in factor
resources
(land, natural resources,
labour, capital), i.e. an
increase in potential GDP, or by
more
efficient use of the
factors, i.e. a move from
inside the PPF to the
PPF. The policy
implication
attached to this line of
thinking was simple.
Countries must either
accumulate
factors
of production (esp. capital), or
develop more cost-efficient
technologies and methods
of
production
to utilize those resources
better. In any event,
factors of production were at
the
heart
of growth theory.
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