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Macro Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy Quick Review #1 • Answer: E Quick Review #2 • Which of the following transactions would represent an addition to a nation’s current gross domestic product? • A. Ms. Smith purchases a share of stock in an automobile company • B. A retailer increases her stock of imported shoes • C. The government increases its domestic purchases of food for use by the military • D. A corporation sells shoes from last year’s inventory • E. A mother sells her car to her daughter • Answer: C Quick Check #3 • Goods and services that are purchased for resale or for further processing or manufacturing • Intermediate Goods Quick Check #4 • When unemployed people lack the skills or education, or geographically are misplaced to find work • Structural Unemployment Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) • Group of 3 economists appointed by the President to advise him on economic policy- mostly professors of economics • Obama and former Chr. Austin Goolsbee Fiscal Policy • Fiscal = “Financial” • Changes in government spending and taxation designed to achieve full employment, control inflation, and encourage economic growth Expansionary Fiscal Policy • Used during a recession to stimulate the economy Government has 3 Choices: 1. Increase government spending 2. Reduce taxes 3. Combo of both 1. Increased Gov’t Spending • Ceteris Paribus, an increase in govt spending will shift the AD to the right • New spending on highways, schools, etc. will lead to more GDP • ***the multiplier leads to an even greater increase in demand Fiscal Policy and the AD-AS Model Expansionary Fiscal Policy Full $20 Billion Increase in Aggregate Demand Price Level $5 Billion Additional Spending AS Recessions Decrease Aggregate Demand P1 AD2 AD1 $490 $510 Real Domestic Output, GDP 2. Reduce Taxes • Reducing taxes will also shift the AD curve to the right • ***Tax cuts must be greater than the increase in govt spending to achieve the same shift in GDP due to people saving part of a tax cut Tax Cuts and Real GDP • 1. Change in GDP = tax cut (MPC) x multiplier • 2. Tax Multiplier = -MPC/MPS Reduced Taxes Example • If the govt cuts taxes by $6.67 Billion and the MPC is .75, what is the total change in GDP? • 6.67 x .75 = $5 billion consumed, and $1.67 B saved • $5 B x 4 (multiplier 1/.25) = increase of $20 B in GDP 3. Combo of Govt Spending and Tax Cuts • Ex- $1.25 B in increased government spending and $5 B tax cut with an MPC of .75 • Govt spending = 1.25 x 4 = $5 B • Tax Cut = 5 x .75 = $3.75 B increase x 4 = $15 • $5 B + $15 B = $20 B increase in GDP Contractionary (Restrictive) Fiscal Policy • • • • • Used to fight inflation 3 Options: 1. decrease govt spending 2. raise taxes 3. combo of the two 1. Decreased Govt Spending • Decreased spending shifts the AD curve to the left • If prices are inflexible downwards, this policy will stop the inflation rather than return to original price level 2. Increased Taxes • Reduces consumption spending since people will have less disposable income 3. Combo Reduced Spending and Tax Increase • Ex- $2 B decline in spending coupled with a $4 B increase in taxes (MPC of .75) • Spending = 2 x 4 (multiplier) = $8 B • Taxes = 4 x .75 = 3 x 4 (multiplier) = $12 B • $8 B + $12B = decrease of $20 B in GDP Fiscal Policy and the AD-AS Model Contractionary Fiscal Policy Recessions Decrease Aggregate Demand $5 Billion Initial Decrease In Spending Price Level AS Full $20 Billion Decrease in Aggregate Demand P1 AD4 AD3 $510 $530 Real Domestic Output, GDP