The US current account deficit has been persistently large and has brought the country's ratio of foreign debt to GDP to 20%, a figure that is high by historical standards. This paper argues that while US solvency is not a near-term constraint on ongoing deficits, the sheer size of the US economy makes it likely that its current account will have to approach balance in the next five to ten years, if not sooner. The paper surveys a wide body of evidence suggesting that the US economy remains surprisingly closed to external trade in products and capital, and suggests that costs of international trade in goods can explain the evidence. Given the trade costs, a substantial real depreciation of the dollar will be needed to close the US current a...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
United States trade and current-account deficits have risen sharply in recent years. The current ac...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
A narrowing of the U.S. current account deficit through exchange rate movements is likely to entail ...
In recent years the US current account deficit has grown to the point that most observers consider i...
SUMMARY The evolution of global current account imbalances, especially the huge and growing US curre...
THIS IS THE third in a series of papers we have written over the past five years about the growing U...
The United States deficit on current account, now running at an annual rate of over $700 billion, ha...
In this paper the OECD’s interlink model is used to explore several possible channels through which ...
The United States has run an increasingly large current account deficit over the last few years. J. ...
In this paper we will consider issues relating to the historically low US saving rate and the large ...
We investigate the possibility that the large current account deficits of the U.S. are the outcome o...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
T he massive deficit in the U.S. trade and current accounts is one of the moststriking features of t...
institutions express increasing concern about the growing U.S. current account deficit. There is a g...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
United States trade and current-account deficits have risen sharply in recent years. The current ac...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
A narrowing of the U.S. current account deficit through exchange rate movements is likely to entail ...
In recent years the US current account deficit has grown to the point that most observers consider i...
SUMMARY The evolution of global current account imbalances, especially the huge and growing US curre...
THIS IS THE third in a series of papers we have written over the past five years about the growing U...
The United States deficit on current account, now running at an annual rate of over $700 billion, ha...
In this paper the OECD’s interlink model is used to explore several possible channels through which ...
The United States has run an increasingly large current account deficit over the last few years. J. ...
In this paper we will consider issues relating to the historically low US saving rate and the large ...
We investigate the possibility that the large current account deficits of the U.S. are the outcome o...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...
T he massive deficit in the U.S. trade and current accounts is one of the moststriking features of t...
institutions express increasing concern about the growing U.S. current account deficit. There is a g...
This Working Paper should not be reported as representing the views of the IMF. The views expressed ...
United States trade and current-account deficits have risen sharply in recent years. The current ac...
MANY ANALYSTS IN academia, the private sector, and applied research institutions express increasing ...