The Federal Budget A detailed estimate of revenue and spending – Revenue – Money that comes in to the government – Spending (Expenditures) – Money that the government spends
Types of Revenue Two main sources of revenue – Taxes Income, payroll, capital gains, gift, estate, excise – Borrowing
Types of Spending Mandatory Spending – Spending mandated by law – This spending is not controlled by Congress each year Discretionary Spending – Spending that is decided by Congress each year
Mandatory Spending Spending by programs where the amount depends on how many people sign up – Medicare/Medicaid – SNAP – Interest on the Debt – Social Security
Mandatory Spending cont. Mandatory spending is like spending money on a birthday party – You make estimates about how much it will cost per person – How much you spend depends on the number of people who come
Birthday Example Cake and ice cream costs $1.50 per person – If 10 people come, the party costs $15 – If 20 people come, the party costs $30
Discretionary Spending Spending decided by Congress each year – Defense spending – Education spending – Environmental protection spending
Surplus vs. Deficit Surplus – When revenues are greater than spending Deficit – When spending is greater than revenues
Are deficits good or bad? It depends Ideally, the government’s budget would be balanced – Usually that’s not the case
Bad Deficits When the economy is strong, a deficit is bad When people make more money, they pay more in taxes, which should balance the budget or lead to a surplus
Good Deficits When the economy is poor a deficit can be neutral or good People are making less money, which means the government collects less in taxes The government can spend more on unemployment/Social Security/SNAP to give people money directly Or the government can spend money on infrastructure to help give people jobs
What about now? Most economists say the government should spend money Interest rates are low (which means the government doesn’t have to pay much for debt)