Lecture 9 - International Finance by Krugman 11th Edition
Lecture 9 - International Finance by Krugman 11th Edition
International Finance
Chapter 9
Financial Globalization:
Opportunity and Crisis
Learning Objectives (1 of 2)
9.1 Understand the economic function of international
portfolio diversification.
9.2 Explain factors leading to the explosive recent growth
of international financial markets.
9.3 Analyze problems in the regulation and supervision of
international banks and non-bank financial institutions.
9.4 Describe some different methods that have been used
to measure the degree of international financial integration.
Learning Objectives (2 of 2)
9.5 Understand the factors leading to the worldwide
financial crisis that started in 2007.
9.6 Evaluate the performance of the international capital
market in linking the economies of the industrial countries.
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Preview
• Gains from trade
• Portfolio diversification
• Players in the international capital markets
• Attainable policies with international capital markets
• Offshore banking and offshore currency trading
• Regulation of international banking
• Tests of how well international capital markets allow
portfolio diversification, allow intertemporal trade, and
transmit information
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Residents of different countries can trade goods and services for other goods and
services, goods and services for assets (that is, for future goods and services), and
assets for other assets. All three types of exchange lead to gains from trade.
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Portfolio Diversification (1 of 3)
• Suppose that two countries have an asset of farmland that
yields a crop, depending on the weather.
• The yield (return) of the asset is uncertain, but with bad
weather the land can produce 20 tons of potatoes, while with
good weather the land can produce 100 tons of potatoes.
1 1
• On average, the land will produce 20 100 60 tons
2 2
• if bad weather and good weather are equally likely (both with a
probability of 1 2).
Portfolio Diversification (2 of 3)
• Suppose that historical records show that when the domestic
country has good weather (high yields), the foreign country has
bad weather (low yields).
– and that we can assume that the future will be like the past.
• What could the two countries do to avoid suffering from a bad
potato crop?
• Sell 50% of one’s assets to the other party and buy 50% of the
other party’s assets:
– diversify the portfolios of assets so that both countries
always achieve the portfolio’s expected (average) values.
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Portfolio Diversification (3 of 3)
• With portfolio diversification, both countries could always enjoy a
moderate potato yield and not experience the vicissitudes of feast
and famine.
– If the domestic country’s yield is 20 and the foreign country’s
yield is 100, then both countries receive
50% 20 50% 100 60.
Classification of Assets
Assets can be classified as either
1. Debt instruments
– Examples include bonds and deposits.
– They specify that the issuer must repay a fixed amount
regardless of economic conditions.
or
2. Equity instruments
– Examples include stocks or a title to real estate.
– They specify ownership (equity = ownership) of variable profits
or returns, which vary according to economic conditions.
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Offshore Banking (1 of 2)
• Offshore banking refers to banking outside of the
boundaries of a country.
• There are at least three types of offshore banking
institutions, which are regulated differently:
1. An agency office in a foreign country makes loans
and transfers, but does not accept deposits, and is
therefore not subject to depository regulations in
either the domestic or foreign country.
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Offshore Banking (2 of 2)
2. A subsidiary bank in a foreign country follows the
regulations of the foreign country, not the domestic
regulations of the domestic parent.
3. A foreign branch of a domestic bank is often subject
to both domestic and foreign regulations, but
sometimes may choose the more lenient regulations
of the two.
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1. Deposit insurance
– Insures depositors against losses up to $100,000 in
the United States when banks fail.
– Prevents bank panics due to a lack of information:
because depositors cannot determine the financial
health of a bank, they may quickly withdraw their
funds if they are not sure that a bank is financially
healthy enough to pay for them.
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4. Bank examination
– Regular examination prevents banks from engaging in
risky activities.
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6. Government-organized bailouts
– Failing all else, the central bank or fiscal authorities
may organize the purchase of a failing bank by
healthier institutions, sometimes throwing their own
money into the deal as a sweetener.
– In this case, bankruptcy is avoided thanks to the
government’s intervention as a crisis manager, but
perhaps at public expense.
• Safeguards were not nearly sufficient to prevent the
financial crisis of 2007–2009.
Generalized banking crises have been plentiful around the world since the mid-1970s,
mainly in poorer countries, but starting in 2008, a substantial number of richer
countries were also hit hard.
Source: Reproduced from Laeven and Valencia, op. cit. Thanks to Luc Laeven for
supplying these data
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1. Financial stability.
2. National control over financial safeguard policy.
3. Freedom of international capital movements
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Figure 9.3
Saving and
Investment
Rates for
24
Countries,
1990–2019
Averages
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The difference between the London and U.S. interest rates on dollar deposits is usually
very close to zero, but it spiked up sharply in the fall of 2008 as the investment bank
Lehman Brothers collapsed and has remained volatile.
Source: Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and OECD, monthly data.
Rt R t
E e
t 1 Et
Et
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(E e t 1 E t )
Rt R t t
Et
Rt R t
E e
t 1 Et
t
Et
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Summary (1 of 3)
Summary (2 of 3)
Summary (3 of 3)
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