A closed economy is one with no international trade or financial flows, so all production is consumed domestically and national saving must equal domestic investment.
A closed economy is one that doesn't interact with the rest of the world. There are no imports, no exports, and no cross-border flows of financial capital. Everything a country produces gets used at home, and any investment a country wants to fund has to come from its own saving.
In practice, fully closed economies are basically nonexistent today because almost every country trades and borrows internationally. But economists use the closed-economy assumption as a starting point. It strips out foreign factors so you can focus on how a country's saving, investment, and interest rates fit together before you add the complications of trade and global capital markets.
This idea shows up in Topic 23.4, The National Saving and Investment Identity. In a closed economy the identity simplifies to a clean statement: national saving equals domestic investment (S = I). There's no foreign borrowing or lending to bridge any gap, so whatever the country invests has to be financed entirely by what it saves. Once you understand the closed-economy version, the open-economy version makes a lot more sense, because you can see exactly what the trade balance and foreign capital flows are adding. Getting comfortable with the closed-economy baseline is what lets you reason about why a trade deficit connects to a country's saving and investment decisions.
Keep studying Principles of Economics Unit 23
Visual cheatsheet
view galleryOpen Economy (Unit 23)
An open economy is the realistic counterpart that adds imports, exports, and foreign capital flows. Compare the two and you can see exactly what foreign borrowing and lending change in the saving-investment identity.
National Income Accounting (Unit 23)
The closed-economy saving-investment identity comes straight out of national income accounting. With no net exports term, the accounting collapses to national saving equals domestic investment.
Autarky (Unit 23)
Autarky is the policy goal of total self-sufficiency, which is basically a closed economy by design. The closed economy is the model; autarky is what a country would have to choose to actually live there.
Private Investment (Unit 23)
In a closed economy, domestic saving is the only pool that can fund private investment. That direct link is why interest rates in the model are set entirely by domestic saving and investment behavior.
Expect this on problem sets and quizzes covering the national saving and investment identity. You'll often be asked to write or simplify the identity for a closed economy (S = I) and contrast it with the open-economy version. Multiple-choice questions tend to test whether you know that a closed economy has no trade balance and no foreign capital flows, so saving must equal investment. In short-answer or essay work, you may need to explain why the closed-economy assumption is useful for analysis even though no real country fully fits it.
A closed economy has zero trade and zero foreign capital flows, so saving must equal domestic investment. An open economy allows imports, exports, and foreign borrowing or lending, so a country can invest more than it saves (or less) by drawing on or sending capital abroad.
A closed economy has no imports, no exports, and no international flows of financial capital.
In a closed economy, national saving must equal domestic investment because there are no foreign funds available.
The closed-economy assumption is a simplifying tool, not an accurate picture of modern globalized countries.
Comparing a closed economy to an open economy shows you exactly what trade and foreign capital flows add to the saving-investment identity.
Autarky is the real-world attempt at a closed economy, chosen as a policy goal of self-sufficiency.
A closed economy is one that doesn't trade or move financial capital with other countries, so all production is consumed at home and national saving has to equal domestic investment.
Essentially no. Almost every country imports, exports, or borrows internationally, so the closed economy is mainly a modeling assumption used to simplify analysis.
A closed economy has no trade or foreign capital flows and forces saving to equal investment, while an open economy allows imports, exports, and foreign borrowing or lending, so investment can exceed or fall short of domestic saving.
Because there's no foreign source of funds. Any investment a country wants to make has to be financed entirely out of its own national saving, which makes S = I.
They're closely linked but not identical. A closed economy is the economic model with no foreign flows, while autarky is the deliberate policy of pursuing total self-sufficiency, which would create a closed economy in practice.