3 Chap3 IBF
3 Chap3 IBF
3 Chap3 IBF
International
Finance
IBF301 – FPT UNIVERSITY
CHAPTER 3
Balance of Payment
Content
1. Balance-of-Payments Accounting
2. Balance-of-Payments Accounts
(1) the balance of payments (2) a country’s balance-of- (3) balance-of-payments data
provides detailed information payment data may signal its can be used to evaluate the
concerning the demand and potential as a business performance of the country
supply of a country’s partner for the rest of the in international economic
currency. world. competition.
1. Balance-of-Payments
Accounting
IBF301 – CHAPTER 3
Balance-of-Payments Accounting
The balance of payments can be formally defined as the statistical record of a
country’s international transactions over a certain period of time presented in the form
of double-entry bookkeeping.
N.B. when we say “a country’s balance of payments” we are referring to the transactions of its
citizens and government.
For example, suppose that Boeing Corporation exported a Boeing 747 aircraft to Japan Airlines for $50 million,
and that Japan Airlines pays from its dollar bank account kept with Chase Manhattan Bank in New York City.
(Japan thoái vốn ra khỏi Mỹ là 50$)
EXAMPLE 3.2
Suppose, for another example, that Boeing imports jet engines produced by Rolls-Royce for $30 million, and that
Boeing makes payment by transferring the funds to a New York bank account kept by Rolls-Royce.
EXAMPLE 3.3
Suppose that Thomson Corporation, a U.S. information services company, acquires Reuters, a British news
agency, for $750 million, and that Reuters deposits the money in Barclays Bank in London, which, in turn, uses
the sum to purchase U.S. treasury notes.
Balance-of-Payments Accounting:
Examples
The above examples can be summarized as follows:
Note:
Not only international trade, that is, exports and imports, but also cross-border investments are recorded in
the balance of payments.
2. Balance-of-Payments
Accounts
IBF301 – CHAPTER 3
Balance-of-Payments Accounts
The balance of payments accounts are those that record all transactions between the
residents of a country and residents of all foreign nations.
ii. The Capital Account (khả năng mua bán tài chính vdu, đất đai 1. FDI nước ngoài sang nước mình mở cty và điều
hành, 2,Portfolio investment: vốn đầu tư gián tiêps từ nứic ngoài, mua vài cổ phiếu và làm cổ đông, thông qua điều
hành chứ ko mở nhf máy)
iii.The Financial Account (excluding official reserves) ( i +ii hiếm khi nào =0, tkhoan sai số thống kê)
iv. The Official Reserves Account (hdong mua bán tài sản trong và ngoài nước đc thực hiện bởi chính phủ)
(1) Current Account
The current account includes the export and import of goods and
services
• include payments and receipts for legal, consulting, and engineering services,
royalties for patents and intellectual properties, insurance premiums, shipping
Services fees, and tourist expenditures. These trades in services are sometimes called
invisible trade.
• consists largely of payments and receipts of interest, dividends, and other income
Primary income on foreign investments that were previously made.
Component:
Capital transfers, unlike current transfers (i.e., secondary income), involve change of
ownership, acquisition, or disposal of an asset and tend to be large and infrequent.
Non-produced, nonfinancial assets include natural resources such as land, mineral rights, and
air space; marketing assets such as brand and domain names; and contracts, leases, and licenses.
(3) Financial Account
The financial account balance measures the difference between U.S. sales of assets to foreigners
and U.S. purchases of foreign assets.
Foreign Direct • Direct investment occurs when the investor acquires a measure of control of the
investment foreign business.
Portfolio • Mostly represents sales and purchases of foreign financial assets such as stocks
investment and bonds that do not involve a transfer of control.
2. In the balance of payments, any transaction resulting in a receipt from foreigners is recorded as a
credit, with a positive sign, whereas any transaction resulting in a payment to foreigners is recorded as
a debit, with a minus sign.
3. A country’s international transactions can be grouped into three main categories: the current account,
the capital account, and the official reserve account. The current account includes exports and imports
of goods and services, whereas the capital account includes all purchases and sales of assets such as
stocks, bonds, bank accounts, real estate, and businesses. The official reserve account covers all
purchases and sales of international reserve assets, such as dollars, foreign exchanges, gold, and SDRs.
Summary
4. The current account is divided into four subcategories: merchandise trade, services, factor income,
and unilateral transfers. Merchandise trade represents exports and imports of tangible goods, whereas
trade in services includes payments and receipts for legal, engineering, consulting, and other
performed services and tourist expenditures. Factor income consists of payments and receipts of
interest, dividends, and other income on previously made foreign investments. Lastly, unilateral
transfer involves unrequited payments such as gifts, foreign aid, and reparations.
5. The capital account is divided into three subcategories: direct investment, portfolio investment, and
other investment. Direct investment involves acquisitions of controlling interests in foreign businesses.
Portfolio investment represents investments in foreign stocks and bonds that do not involve
acquisitions of control. Other investment includes bank deposits, currency investment, trade credit, and
the like.
Summary
6. When we compute the cumulative balance of payments including the current account, capital
account, and the statistical discrepancies, we obtain the overall balance or official settlement balance.
The overall balance is indicative of a country’s balance-of-payments gap that must be accommodated
by official reserve transactions. If a country must make a net payment to foreigners because of a
balance-of payments deficit, the country should either run down its official reserve assets, such as
gold, foreign exchanges, and SDRs, or borrow anew from foreigners.
7. A country can run a balance-of-payments surplus or deficit by increasing or decreasing its official
reserves. Under the fixed exchange rate regime, the combined balance on the current and capital
accounts will be equal in size, but opposite in sign, to the change in the official reserves. Under the
pure flexible exchange rate regime where the central bank does not maintain any official reserves, a
current account surplus or deficit must be matched by a capital account deficit or surplus.
Thank you for your attention!
END OF CHAPTER