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Prepared by: Fernando & Yvonn Quijano © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 2 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Taxes, Purchases of Goods and Services, Government Transfers, and Borrowing © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 3 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Taxes, Purchases of Goods and Services, Government Transfers, and Borrowing © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 4 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Taxes, Purchases of Goods and Services, Government Transfers, and Borrowing Social insurance programs are government programs intended to protect families against economic hardship. The Government Budget and Total Spending (17-1) GDP = C + I + G + X - IM © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 5 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Expansionary and Contractionary Fiscal Policy © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 6 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Expansionary and Contractionary Fiscal Policy Expansionary fiscal policy increases aggregate demand. Fiscal policy that increases aggregate demand normally takes one of three forms: ■ An increase in government purchases of goods and services, such as the Japanese government’s decision to launch a massive construction program ■ A cut in taxes, such as the one the United States implemented in 2001 ■ An increase in government transfers, such as unemployment benefits © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 7 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Expansionary and Contractionary Fiscal Policy © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 8 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy: The Basics Expansionary and Contractionary Fiscal Policy Contractionary fiscal policy reduces aggregate demand. A Cautionary Note: Lags in Fiscal Policy Many economists caution against an extremely active stabilization policy, arguing that a government that tries too hard to stabilize the economy—through either fiscal policy or monetary policy—can end up making the economy less stable. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 9 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier Multiplier Effects of an Increase in Government Purchases of Goods and Services © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 10 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier Multiplier Effects of Changes in Government Transfers and Taxes Expansionary or contractionary fiscal policy need not take the form of changes in government purchases of goods and services. Governments can also change transfer payments or taxes. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 11 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier How Taxes Affect the Multiplier A lump-sum tax does not change when real GDP changes. A proportional tax increases when real GDP increases and decreases when real GDP decreases. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 12 of 31 chapter Fiscal Policy and the Multiplier How Taxes Affect the Multiplier Automatic stabilizers are government spending and taxation rules that cause fiscal policy to be expansionary when the economy contracts and contractionary when the economy expands. Discretionary fiscal policy is fiscal policy that is the result of deliberate actions by policy makers rather than of rules. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 13 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance The Budget Balance as a Measure of Fiscal Policy The budget balance is the difference between tax revenue and government spending. The budget surplus is the difference between tax revenue and government spending when tax revenue exceeds government spending. The budget deficit is the difference between tax revenue and government spending when government spending exceeds tax revenue. (17-2) Budget Balance = T – G – TR © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 14 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 15 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 16 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance The cyclically adjusted budget balance is an estimate of what the budget balance would be if real GDP were exactly equal to potential output. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 17 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance The Business Cycle and the Cyclically Adjusted Budget Balance © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 18 of 31 chapter The Budget Balance Should the Budget Be Balanced? Most economists don’t think so. They believe that the government should only balance its budget on average—that it should be allowed to run deficits in bad years, offset by surpluses in good years. Yet policy makers concerned about excessive deficits sometimes feel that rigid rules prohibiting—or at least setting an upper limit on— deficits are necessary. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 19 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt Fiscal years run from October 1 to September 30 and are named by the calendar year in which they end. Public debt is government debt held by individuals and institutions outside the government. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 20 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Deficits, Surpluses, and Debt © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 21 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Problems Posed by Rising Government Debt Crowding out is the negative effect of budget deficits on private investment. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 22 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Deficits and Debt in Practice © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 23 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Deficits and Debt in Practice The debt–GDP ratio is government debt as a percentage of GDP. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 24 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Deficits and Debt in Practice © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 25 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Implicit Liabilities Implicit liabilities are spending promises made by governments that are effectively a debt despite the fact that they are not included in the usual debt statistics. © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 26 of 31 chapter Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy Implicit Liabilities © 2007 Worth Publishers Essentials of Economics Krugman • Wells • Olney 27 of 31