he balance of payments (BoP) is like a big ledger for countries. It helps to track all financial transactions with the rest of the world. Think of it as the country's "wallet" that includes three major sections:
Let's dive into each part!
Exports (credits): Think of the USA selling burgers to Canada; that's a plus for the USA.
Imports (debits): If India buys a French perfume, that's a minus for India.
Balance: If exports exceed imports, there's a surplus; otherwise, a deficit. If Japan sells more video games than it buys wine, it's in surplus!
Examples: Tourism, education, legal services.
Real World Case: When Germans visit India for the Taj Mahal, it's a plus for India and a minus for Germany.
Balance: Similar to goods, if your country sells more services than it buys, hooray, surplus! If not, then deficit.
Includes: Gifts, foreign aid (like sending emergency food after a disaster).
Balance of Current Account: All these factors combined give us either a surplus or a deficit.
Often small and not so important, like that loose change in your pocket! Includes:
This is where the big bucks are! Includes
Greenfield investment: Building a new factory from scratch.
Brownfield investment: Buying an existing company.
Example: A US company building a toy factory in China.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 π
he balance of payments (BoP) is like a big ledger for countries. It helps to track all financial transactions with the rest of the world. Think of it as the country's "wallet" that includes three major sections:
Let's dive into each part!
Exports (credits): Think of the USA selling burgers to Canada; that's a plus for the USA.
Imports (debits): If India buys a French perfume, that's a minus for India.
Balance: If exports exceed imports, there's a surplus; otherwise, a deficit. If Japan sells more video games than it buys wine, it's in surplus!
Examples: Tourism, education, legal services.
Real World Case: When Germans visit India for the Taj Mahal, it's a plus for India and a minus for Germany.
Balance: Similar to goods, if your country sells more services than it buys, hooray, surplus! If not, then deficit.
Includes: Gifts, foreign aid (like sending emergency food after a disaster).
Balance of Current Account: All these factors combined give us either a surplus or a deficit.
Often small and not so important, like that loose change in your pocket! Includes:
This is where the big bucks are! Includes
Greenfield investment: Building a new factory from scratch.
Brownfield investment: Buying an existing company.
Example: A US company building a toy factory in China.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Economics SL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 π
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