Equilibrium & Disequilibrium in Balance of Payments
Equilibrium & Disequilibrium in Balance of Payments
Equilibrium & Disequilibrium in Balance of Payments
Since the Balance of Payments statement was drawn up in the terms of debits and credits based on a system of
double entry bookkeeping, If all the entries are made correctly, total debits must equal total credit.
This is because of two aspects (debit and credits) of each transaction recorded are equal in amount but appear
on the opposite sides of the BOP account. In this accounting sense, the balance of payments of a country must
always balance.
In other words, debits or payments side of balance of payments account of a country represent the total of all
the uses made out of the total foreign exchange acquired by the country during a given period, While the credit
or receipt side represents the sources from which this foreign exchange was acquired by this nation in the same
period. The two sides as such area necessary balance.
In a functional Sense, thus, there may be disequilibrium in the balance of payments of a country. Operationally,
a country at a time may be receiving more payments from abroad than what it has to make.
Thus, when total receipts exceed total payments, there is a surplus balance of payments, it is regarded as “A
Favourable Balance.” Sometimes a country has to make more payments abroad then what it receives.
Then, there is a deficit in its balance of payments, it is regarded as an “Unfavorable balance”.
Hence, the unusual analytical approach to the balance of payments is to consider it as the difference between
receipts from payments to foreigners by the residents of a country.