Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction ...

20
Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?

Transcript of Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction ...

Page 1: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Fiscal Policy

How much spending does it take?

Page 2: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Introduction

• http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1qhJPqyJRo8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI%3D

What is FISCAL Policy?

Page 3: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Fiscal Policy Spending – where does it all go?

• http://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2012/02/13/us/politics/2013-budget-proposal-graphic.html

Page 4: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

HOW FISCAL POLICY INFLUENCES AGGREGATE DEMAND

• Fiscal policy – taxing, spending, and borrowing• influences saving, investment, and growth in the

long run.• In the short run, fiscal policy primarily affects the

aggregate demand.

• What are challenges to fiscal policy implementation?

Page 5: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Changes in Government Purchases

• There are two macroeconomic effects from the change in government purchases: – The multiplier effect– The crowding-out effect

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H3nyc8XHrQc

Page 6: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

The Multiplier Effect

• Government purchases are said to have a multiplier effect on aggregate demand.– Each dollar spent by the government can raise the

aggregate demand for goods and services by more than a dollar.

Page 7: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Figure 4 The Multiplier Effect

Quantity ofOutput

PriceLevel

0

Aggregate demand, AD1

$20 billion

AD2

AD3

1. An increase in government purchasesof $20 billion initially increases aggregatedemand by $20 billion . . .

2. . . . but the multipliereffect can amplify theshift in aggregatedemand.

Page 8: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

A Formula for the Spending Multiplier

• The formula for the multiplier is:– Multiplier = 1/(1 – MPC)– An important number in this formula is the

marginal propensity to consume (MPC).• It is the fraction of extra income that a household

consumes rather than saves.

Page 9: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

A Formula for the Spending Multiplier

• If the MPC = 3/4, then the multiplier will be:Multiplier = 1/(1 – 3/4) = 4

• In this case, a $20 billion increase in government spending generates $80 billion of increased demand for goods and services.

Page 10: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

The Crowding-Out Effect

• Fiscal policy may not affect the economy as strongly as predicted by the multiplier.

• An increase in government purchases causes the interest rate to rise.

• What are the consequences of a higer interest rate?

Page 11: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

The Crowding-Out Effect

• This reduction in demand that results when a fiscal expansion raises the interest rate is called the crowding-out effect.

• The crowding-out effect tends to dampen the effects of fiscal policy on aggregate demand.

Page 12: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Figure 5 The Crowding-Out Effect

Quantityof Money

Quantity fixedby the Fed

0

InterestRate

r

Money demand, MD

Moneysupply

(a) The Money Market

3. . . . whichincreases

theequilibriuminterestrate . . .

2. . . . the increase inspending increasesmoney demand . . .

MD2

Quantityof Output

0

PriceLevel

Aggregate demand, AD1

(b) The Shift in Aggregate Demand

4. . . . which in turnpartly offsets theinitial increase inaggregate demand.

AD2

AD3

1. When an increase in government purchases increases aggregate

demand . . .

r2

$20 billion

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RGlt0nEQdRI&feature=plcp&context=C48ec1e6VDvjVQa1PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUByRZ_JiwOoaMf6ZO6WVkJM%3D

Page 13: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Changes in Taxes

• When the government cuts personal income taxes, it increases households’ take-home pay.

• Households save some of this additional income.

• Households also spend some of it on consumer goods.

• Increased household spending shifts the aggregate-demand curve to the right.

Page 14: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Changes in Taxes

• The size of the shift in aggregate demand resulting from a tax change is affected by the multiplier and crowding-out effects.

• It is also determined by the households’ perceptions about the permanency of the tax change.

Page 15: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

What are the Types of Taxes?

• Proportional Taxes• A tax with a constant % paid regardless of income• Flat tax

• Progressive Taxes• A tax where the % paid in taxes increases as income

increases• U.S. Personal Income Tax

• Regressive Taxes• The lower your income the higher % you pay in taxes• Sales Tax

Page 16: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Proportional, regressive, or progressive?

Page 17: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

USING POLICY TO STABILIZE THE ECONOMY

• Economic stabilization has been an explicit goal of U.S. policy since the Employment Act of 1946, which states that:– “it is the continuing policy and responsibility of

the federal government to…promote full employment and production.”

Page 18: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

The Case for Active Stabilization Policy

• The Employment Act has two implications:– The government should avoid being the cause of

economic fluctuations.– The government should respond to changes in the

private economy in order to stabilize aggregate demand.

– What economic school of thought does this follow? Who would be against active stablization?

Page 19: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

The Case against Active Stabilization Policy

• Some economists argue that monetary and fiscal policy destabilizes the economy.

• Monetary and fiscal policy affect the economy with a substantial lag – rational expectations!!!

• They suggest the economy should be left to deal with the short-run fluctuations on its own.

Page 20: Fiscal Policy How much spending does it take?. Introduction  o8&feature=plcp&context=C49f6c9cVDvjVQa1 PpcFMdkWSNt1EsUKtB5fYByDq14YICcdVaANI.

Automatic Stabilizers

• Automatic stabilizers are changes in fiscal policy that stimulate aggregate demand when the economy goes into a recession without policymakers having to take any deliberate action.

• Automatic stabilizers include the tax system and some forms of government spending.