Thursday, May 12, 2016

Unit 7 Part 2

Unit 7 Notes Continued....

Foreign Exchange (FOREX):

  • The buying and selling of currency.
  • Any transition that occurs in the Balance of Payments necessitates foreign exchange.
  • The exchange rate (e) is determined in the foreign currency market. 

Changes in Exchange Rates:
·         Exchange rates (e) are a function of the supply and demand for currency.
    • Supply of a currency à in exchange rate of a currency 
    • Supply of a currency à in exchange rate of a currency
    • Demand for a currency à in exchange rate of a currency
    • Demand for a currency à in exchange rate of a currency 
Appreciation & Depreciation: 
  • Appreciation: When the exchange rate of that currency (e
  • Depreciation: When the exchange rate of that currency (e

Exchange Rate Determinants:
  • Consumer Tastes
  • Relative Income
  • Relative Price Level
  • Speculation 

Exports and Imports: 
  • Appreciation: U.S. goods à more expensive
    • Foreign goods à cheaper = Reduces exports and increasing imports

  • Depreciation: U.S. goods à cheaper
    • Foreign goods à more expensive = Increasing exports and reducing imports
Flexible Rates:
  • It’s very sensitive to the business cycle and it provides options for investments 

Fixed Rates: 
  • It is based on a countries willingness to contribute currency and control the amount. 

Absolute Advantage: 
  • Individual: Exists when a person can produce more of a certain good/service than someone else in the same amount of time (or can produce a good using the least amount of resources)
  • National: Exists when a country can produce more of a good/service than another country can in the same time period. 

Comparative Advantage:

  • A person or a nation has a comparative advantage in the production of a product when it can produce the product at a lower domestic opportunity cost than can a trading partner.

Examples of Output Problems: 
  1. Words per minute
  2. Miles per gallons
  3. Tons per acre
  4. Apples per tree
  5. Televisions produced per hour

Examples of Input Problems: 
  1. # of hrs to do a job
  2. # of acres to feed a horse
  3. # of gallons of paint to paint a house
Specialization and Trade:
  • Gains from trade are based on comparative advantage, not absolute advantage.

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1 comment:

  1. Your notes are very helpful and easy to understand. I can see how Absolute Advantage can affect the country's Economic growth. For example, China produces all kinds of goods and is one of the biggest exporters. This gives China an Absolute Advantage over the other countries.

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