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13e Chapter 12: Deficits and Debt McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2013 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fiscal Stimulus and the Deficit • A fiscal stimulus package is designed to move the economy out of recession toward fullemployment GDP. • Tax cuts or increased government spending, or a combination of the two, increases the size of the budget deficit. • Borrowed funds to finance the stimulus must be paid for in the future by increased taxes or reduced spending, both fiscal restraint tools. 12-2 Learning Objectives • 12-01. Know the origins of cyclical and structural debt. • 12-02. Know how the national debt has accumulated. • 12-03. Know how and when “crowding out” occurs. • 12-04. Know what the real burden of the national debt is. 12-3 Budget Effects of Fiscal Policy • Using fiscal policy to solve macro problems implies that federal expenditures and federal receipts won’t always be equal. – In fiscal stimulus, G increases or T decreases. – In fiscal restraint, G decreases or T increases. • Budget deficit: amount by which G exceeds T in a given time period. Budget deficit = Government spending – Tax revenues > 0 12-4 Keynes’s View on Budget Deficits • Budget deficits are a routine by-product of fiscal policy, caused by a fiscal stimulus to increase AD. • The goal of macro policy is not to balance the budget but to move the economy to fullemployment GDP. • Keynes: Full employment first, then worry about the deficit. 12-5 Discretionary vs. Automatic Spending • Discretionary spending: those elements of the budget not determined by past legislative or executive commitments. • Automatic spending: those elements of the budget that are a result of decisions made in prior years; said to be “uncontrollable.” • Make up of the budget: – Automatic (uncontrollable): about 80 percent. – Discretionary (controllable ): about 20 percent. 12-6 Uncontrollable? • The president and Congress can repudiate prior commitments and enact new legislation. – – – – Reduce Social Security benefits. Refuse to pay interest on the accumulated debt. Terminate projects approved in prior years. Reduce payouts for other social welfare programs. • They would face political consequences in doing so. 12-7 Automatic Stabilizers • Automatic stabilizer: federal expenditure or revenue item that automatically responds countercyclically to changes in national income (GDP). – As a recession begins, unemployment compensation and welfare payments increase and income tax collections decrease, each stimulating economic growth in a small way. – As economic growth returns, the opposite happens, which puts a small restraint on economic growth. 12-8 Cyclical Deficits • Cyclical deficit: that portion of the budget deficit attributable to short-run changes in economic conditions. • The cyclical deficit – Widens when GDP growth slows or inflation increases. – Shrinks when GDP growth accelerates or inflation decreases. • As the economy slows – Tax revenues decline. – Unemployment benefits rise. – Other transfer payments rise. • As the economy grows – – – – Tax revenues rise. Unemployment benefits fall. Other transfer payments fall. Interest rates could rise, increasing debt payments. 12-9 Structural Deficits • Structural deficit: federal revenues at full employment minus expenditures at full employment under prevailing fiscal policy. • The structural deficit reflects fiscal policy decisions – that is, discretionary fiscal policy. • Therefore, part of the deficit arises from cyclical changes in the economy; the rest is a result of discretionary fiscal policy. 12-10 Who Is to “Blame” for Deficit Increases? • The impact of cyclical components (automatic stabilizers) and policy initiatives affect the budget at the same time. • According to the CBO, in 2009 the trilliondollar budget deficit increase was due in part to the recession ($278 billion) and the rest to discretionary fiscal policy ($675 billion). 12-11 Measuring the Impact of Fiscal Policy • We must focus on changes in the structural deficit, not the total deficit. – Fiscal stimulus is measured by an increase in the structural deficit (or shrinkage in the structural surplus). – Fiscal restraint is measured by a decrease in the structural deficit (or increase in the structural surplus). 12-12 Economic Effects of Deficits • Crowding out can occur, especially as the economy closes in on full employment. – Increased government borrowing to finance a growing deficit reduces the availability of funds for private sector spending. – Thus any increase in government expenditures will be offset by reductions in consumption and investment spending. – Tax cuts will increase consumer spending, but near full employment may force cutbacks in investment or government services. 12-13 Economic Effects of Deficits • Interest rate movements: – An increase in demand for funds will cause the price of borrowing – the interest rate – to rise. – Rising interest rates make it more costly for consumers or businesses to borrow, and they may cut back. – Rising interest rates also increase the borrowing costs of government, leaving less room in government budgets for financing new projects. 12-14 Economic Effects of Surpluses • If the government runs a surplus – that is, tax revenues are greater than government expenditure - it is a leakage to the circular flow. It is a drag on the economy. • Potential uses for a budget surplus: – – – – Spend it on goods and services. Cut taxes. Increase income transfers. Pay off old debt (“save it”). 12-15 Economic Effects of Surpluses • Spending a surplus increases the size of the public sector. • Cutting taxes or increasing income transfers puts money in the peoples’ hands and enlarges the private sector. • Paying off some accumulated debt puts money in the hands of the debt holders: – They buy more goods and services. – Expands the private sector. – Lowers the demand for funds and the interest rates. 12-16 The Accumulation of Debt • The national debt is the accumulation of many more years of running budget deficits than budget surpluses. – The U.S. Treasury borrows by issuing Treasury bonds to lenders who want a safe investment paying out interest. – When there is a deficit, the national debt increases. – When there is a surplus, the national debt can be pared down. 12-17 The National Debt • In 2011 the national debt was nearing $15 trillion. • That is an average of more than $50,000 for every U.S. citizen. • A better indicator is the debt-to-GDP ratio. – Except for the Civil War, this ratio was about 10 percent from 1790 to 1917. – During World War II, it rose to 130 percent. – In 2000 it was about 35 percent. – By 2012 it will rise above 100 percent. 12-18 Who Owns the Debt? • The national debt creates as much wealth for bondholders as it does liabilities for the U.S. Treasury. • Who are the bondholders (owners)? – Federal agencies (such as the Federal Reserve and the Social Security Administration) hold 40 percent of all outstanding Treasury bonds. – State and local governments hold 5 percent. – The private sector holds 24 percent. – Foreigners hold 31 percent. 12-19 Why Hold U.S. Government Debt? • Relative to other investments: – They are safe. – There is no question of the debt being repaid. – They pay interest. – Dollar-denominated assets are generally acceptable in world trade. 12-20 The Burden of the Debt • Refinancing: the issuance of new debt in payment of debt issued earlier. – When a Treasury bond matures, new funds are borrowed to pay it off. – So the debt remains debt. There is no addition to the debt. Only another deficit adds to the debt. 12-21 The Burden of the Debt • Debt service: the interest required to be paid each year on outstanding debt. – Increased interest payments use up funds that cannot be used for other government expenditures. – Debt servicing is a redistribution of income from taxpayers to bondholders. 12-22 The Burden of the Debt • Opportunity cost: – The true burden of the debt is the opportunity cost of the activities financed by the debt. – Funds spent on government expenditures cannot be used for other (public or private) expenditures. – Resources consumed by a government expenditure cannot be used to produce other goods and services. – The value placed on these forgone goods and services is the opportunity cost, however financed. 12-23 The Real Trade-Offs • Deficit spending changes the mix of output in the direction of more public sector goods. • The burden of the debt is really the opportunity cost (crowding out) of deficitfinanced government activity. 12-24 The Debt and Economic Growth • If deficit-financed government spending crowds out private investment, future generations will bear some of the debt burden. – We will have smaller-than-anticipated productive capacity. – There will be some question about achieving an optimal mix of output. • The public sector grows at the expense of the private sector. 12-25 Repayment • If the U.S. Treasury pays off maturing bonds with taxes, it is a redistribution of income from taxpayers to bondholders. – The heirs of current bondholders receive the payout. – The taxpayers in the future are hit with the taxes to pay off the maturing bonds. 12-26 External Debt • Borrowing from foreigners eliminates crowding out. – We get more public sector goods without cutting back on private sector production. – Foreigners get the dollars by selling us more imports than they buy of our exports. – We can consume an amount greater than the domestic-only PPC would allow us to consume. • As long as foreigners are willing to hold U.S. debt, external financing imposes no real cost. 12-27 External Debt • If foreigners no longer want to hold U.S. debt, they will sell their bonds and hold dollars, which they can use to buy dollardenominated goods and services, mainly U.S. exports. • External debt will be repaid with exports of real goods and services. 12-28 Deficit and Debt Limits • The only way to stop the growth of the debt is to eliminate budget deficits. – One way is to balance the budget (G = T). – A gradual way is to impose a debt ceiling that is decreased each year until it reaches zero. • Debt ceiling: an explicit, legislated limit on the amount of outstanding national debt. – This leads to compromises on how best to use budget deficits. – Usually, when the debt ceiling is reached, Congress simply increases it. 12-29