Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/123456789/3924
Title: US current account and dollar
Authors: Naithani, Sharad 
Issue Date: 2005
Publisher: Indian Institute of Management Bangalore
Series/Report no.: Contemporary Concerns Study;CCS.PGP.P5-115
Abstract: BALANCE OF PAYMENTS Balance Of Payments is the method used by the countries to track all international monetary transactions for a period of time. The BOP is calculated on a quarterly as well as annually basis. BOP is used to determine how much money is flowing in and out of the country. All private as well as public transactions are accounted for in the BOP. BOP can be divided in three parts, which are: 􀂾 Current Account 􀂾 Capital Account 􀂾 Financial Account 􀂾 Current Account It is used to mark the inflow and outflow of the capital goods and services in the country. Earnings on investments both public as well as private are also taken into consideration. Within the current account are credits and debits on the trade of merchandise, which includes goods such as raw materials and manufactured goods that are bought, sold or given away (possibly in the form of aid). Services refer to receipts from tourism, transportation (like the levy that must be paid in Egypt when a ship passes through the Suez Canal), engineering, business service fees (from lawyers or management consulting, for example), and royalties from patents and copyrights. When combined, goods and services together make up a country's balance of trade (BOT). The BOT is typically the biggest bulk of a country's balance of payments as it makes up total imports and exports. If a country has a balance of trade deficit, it imports more than it exports, and if it has a balance of trade surplus, it exports more than it imports. Receipts from income-generating assets such as stocks (in the form of dividends) are also recorded in the current account. The last component of the current account is unilateral transfers. These are credits that are mostly BOP Current Account Capital Account Financial Accountworker's remittances, which are salaries sent back into the home country of a national working abroad, as well as foreign aid that are directly received. 􀂾 Capital Account The capital account is where all international capital transfers are recorded. This refers to the acquisition or disposal of non-financial assets (for example, a physical asset such as land) and non-produced assets, which are needed for production but have not been produced, like a mine used for the diamond extraction. The capital account is broken down into the monetary flows branching from debt forgiveness, the transfer of goods, and financial assets by migrants leaving or entering a country, the transfer of ownership on fixed assets (assets such as equipment used in the production process to generate income), the transfer of funds received to the sale or acquisition of fixed assets, gift and inheritance taxes, death levies, and, finally, uninsured damage to fixed assets. 􀂾 Financial Account In the financial account, international monetary flows related to investment in business, real estate, bonds and stocks are documented. Also included are government-owned assets such as foreign reserves, gold, special drawing rights (SDRs) held with the International Monetary Fund, private assets held abroad, and direct foreign investment. Assets owned by foreigners, private and official, are also recorded in the financial account. When there is a deficit in the current account, which is a balance of trade deficit, the difference can be borrowed or funded by the capital account. If a country has a fixed asset abroad, this borrowed amount is marked as a capital account outflow. However, the sale of that fixed asset would be considered a current account inflow (earnings from investments). The current account deficit would thus be funded When a country has a current account deficit that is financed by the capital account, the country is actually foregoing capital assets for more goods and services. If a country is borrowing money to fund its current account deficit, this would appear as an inflow of foreign capital in the BOP.
URI: http://repository.iimb.ac.in/handle/123456789/3924
Appears in Collections:2005

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