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Fiscal Policy Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved Taxes and Spending In 1902, the federal government employed fewer than 350,000 people and spent about $650 million. Today, the federal government employs over 4 million and spends roughly $3 trillion a year. 2 Government Revenue Government expansion started with the 16th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution (1913) which extended the taxing power to incomes. Today, the federal government collects nearly $3 trillion a year in taxes. 3 Government Expenditure Government spending directly affects aggregate demand. Aggregate demand is the total quantity of output demanded at alternative price levels in a given time period, ceteris paribus. 4 Purchases vs. Transfers Income transfers are payments to individuals for which no current goods or services are exchanged. Government purchases are part of aggregate demand, income transfers are not. 5 Fiscal Policy The federal government can alter aggregate demand by: Purchasing more or fewer goods and services. Raising or lowering taxes. Changing the level of income transfers. 6 Fiscal Policy The federal budget is a tool that can shift aggregate demand and thereby alter macroeconomic outcomes. Fiscal policy is the use of government taxes and spending to alter macroeconomic outcomes. 7 Fiscal Policy DETERMINANTS Internal market forces OUTCOMES AS Output Jobs Prices External shocks Growth Policy levers: Fiscal policy AD International balances 8 Fiscal Stimulus Suppose the economy is experiencing a recessionary GDP gap of $400 billion. The recessionary GDP gap is the difference between full-employment GDP and equilibrium GDP. 9 Price Level (average price) The Policy Goal AS Full-employment GDP AD1 a PE b The goal is to close GDP gaps GDP Equilibrium GDP gap QE = 5.6 6.0 = QF Real GDP (trillions of dollars per year) 10 Keynesian Strategy From a Keynesian perspective, the way out of recession is to get someone to spend more on goods and services. A fiscal stimulus is tax cuts or spending hikes intended to increase (shift) aggregate demand. 11 Keynesian Strategy Two strategic policy questions must be answered: By how much do we want to shift the AD curve to the right? How can we induce the desired shift? 12 The Fiscal Target If GDP gap is $400 billion, why not just increase AD by that much? 13 The Naive Keynesian Model In the naive Keynesian model an increase in AD by $400 billion will achieve full employment. This is only possible if the aggregate supply curve is horizontal. Aggregate supply is the total quantity of output producers are willing to supply at alternative price levels in a given time period, ceteris paribus. 14 Price Level Changes When the AD curve shifts to the right, the economy moves up the AS curve, not horizontally to the right. Both real output and prices change. 15 Price Level Changes Shifting (increasing) aggregate demand by the amount of the GDP gap will achieve full employment only if the price level doesn’t rise. 16 The AD Shortfall So long as the AS curve slopes upward, AD must increase by more than the size of the recessionary GDP gap to achieve full employment. LO1 17 The AD Shortfall The AD shortfall is the fiscal target. The AD shortfall is the amount of additional aggregate demand needed to achieve full employment after allowing for price level changes. LO1 18 Price Level (average price) The AD Shortfall AS AD3 AD2 d AD1 c a PE b e Recessionary GDP gap AD shortfall QE = 5.6 QF = 6.0 6.4 Real GDP (trillions of dollars per year) LO1 19 More Government Spending Increased government spending is a form of fiscal stimulus. LO3 20 Multiplier Effects Every dollar of new government spending has a multiplied impact on aggregate demand. LO3 21 Multiplier Effects How much of a boost the economy gets depends on the value of the multiplier. The multiplier is the multiple by which an initial change in aggregate spending will alter total expenditure after an infinite number of spending cycles. LO3 22 Multiplier Effects The total spending change equals the multiplier times the new spending injections. Total change new spending multiplier in spending injection LO3 23 Multiplier Effects The impact of fiscal stimulus on aggregate demand includes: The new government spending, plus All subsequent increases in consumer spending triggered by multiplier effects. LO3 24 Multiplier Effects Cumulative increase (horizontal shift) in AD new spending injection (fiscal stimulus) fiscal stimulus multiplier X (new spending injection) + induced increase in consumption The second equation is identical to the first but expressed in the terminology of fiscal policy. LO3 25 Price Level (average price) Multiplier Effects Direct impact of rise in government spending + $200 billion P1 Indirect impact via increased consumption + $600 billion a b AD1 5.6 QE LO3 5.8 AD2 Current price level AD3 6.4 Real GDP ($ trillions per year) 26 The Desired Stimulus The general formula for computing the desired stimulus is a simple rearrangement of the earlier formula: AD shortfall Desired fiscal stimulus = the multiplier LO3 27 Tax Cuts By lowering taxes, the government increases the disposable income of the private sector. Disposable income is the after-tax income of consumers; personal income less personal taxes. LO2 28 Taxes and Consumption Tax cuts directly increase the disposable income of consumers. The amount consumption increases depends on the marginal propensity to consume. Initial increase MPC tax cut in consumption LO2 29 Taxes and Consumption An AD shortfall can be closed with a tax cut. A dollar of tax cut contains less fiscal stimulus than an increase of government purchase of the same size. Desired fiscal stimulus Desired tax cut = MPC LO2 30 The Tax Cut Multiplier Tax Cut First round of spending: Second round of spending: More consumption = MPC X tax cut More saving = MPS X tax cut More income More saving More consumption More income Third round of spending: More saving More consumption Cumulative change in saving: = tax cut LO2 31 Taxes and Investment A tax cut may also be an effective mechanism for increasing investment spending. Tax cuts have been used numerous times to stimulate the economy. LO2 32 Increased Transfers Increasing transfer payments stimulates the economy. The initial fiscal stimulus of increased transfer payments is: Initial fiscal stimulus (injection) LO3 MPC X increase in transfer payments 33 Fiscal Restraint There are times when the economy is expanding too fast and fiscal restraint is more appropriate. Fiscal restraint is using tax hikes or spending cuts intended to reduce (shift) aggregate demand. LO1 34 The Fiscal Target The AD excess is the amount by which aggregate demand must be reduced to achieve price stability after allowing for price-level changes. The AD excess exceeds the inflationary GDP gap. LO1 35 The Fiscal Target The first task is to determine how much AD needs to fall: desired AD reduction Desired fiscal restraint = the multiplier excess AD = the multiplier LO1 36 Price Level (average price) Excess Aggregate Demand AS PE f E1 E2 PF Inflationary GDP gap Excess AD Q2 = 5.8 QF = 6.0 AD1 AD2 Q1 = 6.2 Real Output (trillions of dollars per year) LO1 37 Budget Cuts Budget cuts reduce government spending and induces cutbacks in consumer spending. Cumulative reduction in spending LO3 Initial multiplier X budget cut 38 Tax Hikes Tax hikes can be used to shift the AD curve to the left. The direct effect of tax increases is a reduction in disposable income. LO2 39 Tax Hikes Taxes must be increased more than a dollar to get a dollar of fiscal restraint. Desired increase in taxes LO2 = Desired fiscal restraint MPC 40 Reduced Transfers A cut in transfer payments works like a tax hike, reducing the disposable income of transfer recipients. The desired reduction in transfers is the same as a desired tax increase. LO3 41 Fiscal Guidelines The essence of fiscal policy is the deliberate shifting of the aggregate demand curve. LO3 42 A Primer: Simple Rules The steps required to formulate fiscal policy are: Specify the amount of the desired AD shift. Select the policy tools needed to induce the desired shift. LO3 43 Weak Economy: Fiscal Stimulus AD shortfall Desired fiscal stimulus the multiplier Policy Tools LO3 Amount Increase government purchases desired fiscal stimulus Cut taxes desired fiscal stimulus MPC Increased transfers desired fiscal stimulus MPC 44 Overheated Economy: Fiscal Restraint Desired fiscal restraint Policy Tools LO3 excess AD the multiplier Amount Reduce government purchases desired fiscal restraint Increase taxes desired fiscal restraint MPC Reduce transfers desired fiscal restraint MPC 45 A Warning: Crowding Out Some of the intended fiscal stimulus may be offset by the crowding out of private expenditure. Crowding out is a reduction in private-sector borrowing (and spending) caused by increased government borrowing. 46 Time Lags It takes time to recognize that a problem exists and then formulate policy to address the problem. The very nature of the macro problems could change if the economy is hit with other internal or external shocks. 47 Pork-Barrel Politics Members of Congress want their constituents to get the biggest tax savings. They don’t want spending cuts in their own districts. They don’t want a tax hike or spending cut before the election. 48 Fiscal Policy End of Chapter 11 McGraw-Hill/Irwin ©2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies, All Rights Reserved