University of California, Berkeley: Global Imbalances: The New Economy, the Dark Matter, the Savvy Investor, and the Standard Analysis

Author: Barry J. Eichengreen, George & Helen Pardee Professor of Economics & Political Science, University of California, Berkeley
March 2006

This paper reviews four perspectives on global imbalances. The standard analysis suggests that the U.S. current account deficit cannot be sustained at current levels. It suggests that there will have to be significant adjustments in asset prices to compress U.S. spending and significant changes in relative prices to crowd in net exports. At the same time, nonstandard analyses, focusing on the profitability of investment in the United States, the profitability of U.S. foreign investment, and the differential returns on U.S. foreign assets and liabilities suggest that U.S. current account deficits may be easier to sustain than implied by the standard analysis.

As for which view is correct, only time will tell. But uncertainty about whether a disorderly correction is imminent does not justify inaction.

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