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Module 30 Long-run Implications of Fiscal Policy: Deficits and the Public Debt KRUGMAN'S MACROECONOMICS for AP* Margaret Ray and David Anderson What you will learn in this Module: • Why governments calculate the cyclically adjusted budget balance • Why a large public debt may be a cause for concern • Why implicit liabilities of the government are also a cause for concern Web sites on budget deficit. The Budget Balance • Deficits • Surpluses • Good? Bad? U.S. NATIONAL DEBT CLOCK The Budget Balance as a Measure of Fiscal Policy • Sgov = T - G - Transfers • Expansionary policies reduce budget balance • Contractionary policies increase budget balance • G has a greater impact than T or Transfers • Changes in budget balance are often result, not cause, of economic fluctuations The Budget Balance as a Measure of Fiscal Policy Case 1: Recessionary Gap Expansionary fiscal policy is in order. 3 options: •Cut taxes. •Increase transfers. •Increase government spending. The Budget Balance as a Measure of Fiscal Policy Case 2: Inflationary Gap. Contractionary fiscal policy is in order. 3 options: •Increase taxes. •Decrease transfers. •Decrease government spending. The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance • Strong relationship between budget balance and business cycle Recessions are the shaded areas The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance (Continued) • Cyclically adjusted budget balance The budget deficit almost always rises when the unemployment rate rises and falls when the unemployment rate falls. Should the Budget Be Balanced? What does it mean to have a “cyclically balanced budget?” • Political motivation for running deficits or balancing the budget • Economists argue against balanced budget rule in favor of cyclically balanced budget • Limits on deficits as a compromise Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt •When spending exceeds tax revenue, government borrows •Fiscal years •Public Debt Problems Posed by Rising Government Debt •Government competes with private sector for investment funds •Financial pressure on future budgets •Possibility of Default •Monetizing the Debt •Cyclical budget Deficits and Debt in Practice •Debt-GDP Ratio Implicit Liabilities •Implicit Liabilities •Social Security •Demographics •Medicare •Medicaid Figure 30.6 Future Demands on the Federal Budget Ray and Anderson: Krugman’s Macroeconomics for AP, First Edition Copyright © 2011 by Worth Publishers Figure 30.2 The U.S. Federal Budget Deficit and the Unemployment Rate Ray and Anderson: Krugman’s Macroeconomics for AP, First Edition Copyright © 2011 by Worth Publishers Figure 30.5 Japanese Deficits and Debt Ray and Anderson: Krugman’s Macroeconomics for AP, First Edition Copyright © 2011 by Worth Publishers