Economy, asked by rohanpaul53377, 9 months ago

what is the difference between trade deficit and current account deficit​

Answers

Answered by anushkasingh9487
1

Here is a brief overview.

The trade balance is the amount a country receives for the export of goods and services minus the amount it pays for its import of goods and services.

The current account is the trade balance plus the net amount received for domestically-owned factors of production used abroad.

Hence, if an American owns an apartment building in London, the rent he receives is part of the current account but not part of the trade balance. In essence, the current account is a very broad measure of the trade balance where the income from domestically-owned factors used abroad are considered an export of factor services and the payments for foreign-owned factors used here are considered an import of factor services. To continue our example, the current account treats our American landlord as if he were an exporter of housing services.

Two things to note: 1. If a Brit owns an apartment building in Boston, the treatment of the rent he receives is similar, but with the opposite sign for the U.S. current account balance. 2. When an American buys an apartment building in London (or a Brit in Boston), that purchase appears neither in the trade balance nor in the current account. It is a capital account transaction.

You might ask, when we write Y=C+I+G+NX, what is NX? The answer depends on how we define Y. If Y is Gross Domestic Product, then NX is the trade balance. If Y is Gross National Product, then NX is the current account.

For the U.S. economy, these two measures are close, and so economists sometimes use the terms interchangeably (even though they are not precisely the same). But for countries with large net foreign assets or debts, the difference can be larger.

They are very related concepts but they are not completely same.

Current account deficit occurs when country spends more on imports than it receives in imports.

Trade deficit means that more imports are being sold than exports by a country.

A trade deficit is also a part of current account deficit as current account can be decomposed as:

CA=X−M+NI+NTCA=X−M+NI+NT

Where X−MX−M is the trade balance and and if X−M<0X−M<0 we say country has a trade deficit, but as you can see the current account also includes net income which is income of country’s resident minus income paid to foreigners and NT is net transfers which includes things like foreign aid and remittances. A current account deficit occurs when X−M+NI+NT<0X−M+NI+NT<0.

So although they are related and trade deficit is usually a big component of current account deficit they are definitely not same. It’s even possible for country to have current account surplus while having trade deficit.

Answered by kavitapawar621
1

Answer:

a current account deficit occurs when a country spends more on its import than what it receives for its export

a trade deficit means there is more being bought than there is being sold by a country

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