Enter Values
BOP Identity
BOP Analysis Results
Account Summary
| Component | Sub-component | Value ($B) | Status |
|---|
Current Account Components
Balance of Payments Waterfall
- Uses the simplified analytic sign convention from Madura's International Financial Management (not strict IMF BPM6 presentation)
- Double-entry accounting: CA + FA + KA + Statistical Discrepancy = 0 by construction
- Single-period flow data for a consistent reporting period (quarter or year), not stock values
- All values in billions of domestic currency (USD as default illustration)
- Positive values = credits/inflows; negative = debits/outflows (for financial account net fields)
- Reserve assets: positive change = drawdown/use; negative change = accumulation
- Financial derivatives omitted: BPM6 includes a 5th financial account sub-component (financial derivatives other than reserves). Omitted for simplicity.
- Does not account for valuation changes, reclassifications, or SDR allocations
- For educational purposes. Not financial advice. Market conventions simplified.
Understanding the Balance of Payments
What is the Balance of Payments?
The balance of payments (BOP) is a comprehensive record of all economic transactions between residents of one country and the rest of the world during a specific period. It captures trade in goods and services, investment income flows, capital transfers, and financial investment flows.
Current Account + Financial Account + Capital Account + Errors & Omissions = 0
Current Account vs. Financial Account
Current Account
Goods, services, and income flows
Tracks exports, imports, investment income, compensation of employees, and current transfers (remittances, foreign aid). A deficit means a country consumes more than it produces.
Financial Account
Investment and capital flows
Tracks foreign direct investment, portfolio investment (stocks, bonds), other investment (bank loans), and central bank reserve changes. A surplus means net capital inflows.
The Statistical Discrepancy
In theory, the BOP sums to zero because every international transaction has offsetting entries. In practice, data collection from multiple sources introduces measurement errors. The statistical discrepancy (errors and omissions) is the balancing item that reconciles the accounts.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer
This calculator is for educational and analytical purposes. It uses a simplified analytic sign convention from Madura's International Financial Management textbook, not the strict IMF BPM6 presentation. Real-world BOP data involves complex adjustments for timing, valuation, and residency definitions. Results should not be used for policy analysis without consulting official national accounts data.