Chapter 9 Fiscal Policy Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy.
Advertisements

Section 3 Monetary Policy
Fiscal Policy. Definition O Fiscal policy includes the use of government spending and tax policies to facilitate the government’s mandate. O By mandate.
1 Chapter 21 Fiscal Policy Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
Chapter 11 Presentation 2. Quick Review #1 Suppose consumption is $400 and that the MPC is 0.8. If disposable income increases by $1200, consumption spending.
Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Macroeconomics 7/e by Jackson and McIver Slides prepared by Muni Perumal, University of Canberra,
Fiscal Policy © 2011 Worth Publishers ▪ CoreEconomics ▪ Stone.
Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy
Today’s Warm Up Turn to page 396 and read the section, “A New Role for Government” In your notes, define Keynesian Economics and be ready to share!
1 Fiscal Policy Chapter 9. 2 Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy is the purposeful movement in government spending or tax policy designed to direct an economy.
Chapter 10 Monetary Policy Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Automatic Stabilizers. Building Fiscal Policies Into Institutions Economists have attempted to create built-in fiscal policies. Automatic stabilizers.
Chapter 12 The Recession of : Causes and Policy Responses Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Economics, Sixth Edition Boyes/Melvin
Fiscal Policy Notes A Review of Reading IP.
Relationship Between Businesses & The Economic Environment
Copyright  2005 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPT Slides t/a Economics for Business 3e by Fraser, Gionea and Fraser 22-1 Chapter 22 Fiscal policy Budget.
Chapter 30 Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Chapter 11 and 15.  The use of government taxes and spending to manipulate the economy. Chapter 11 2.
 Gov. can affect AD through G or T  Directly: increase or decrease G, AD shifts  Indirectly: increase or decrease T and C and I will change, which.
Fiscal Policy 1.
Fiscal Policy Chapter 12. Stabilization The United States government has 4 basic goals in terms of economic policy Full employment Price Stability High.
Chapter 12 Econ104 Parks Fiscal Policy. Stabilization Policy Stabilization policy is an attempt to dampen the fluctuations in the economy's level of output.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2002 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 12 Monetary Policy.
Chapter 12Copyright ©2010 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved ECON Designed by Amy McGuire, B-books, Ltd. McEachern 2010-
FISCAL POLICY 12 C H A P T E R LEGISLATIVE MANDATES Employment Act of 1946 Commits the Federal Government to take action on the economy Council of.
Fiscal Policy Chapter 11 Discretionary Fiscal Policy (active): Discretionary Fiscal Policy (active): Tax or spending changes that are enacted by choiceTax.
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Chapter 30 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Unit 3-6: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy 1.
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 11-1 Chapter 12 Fiscal Policy O 11.1.
Chapter 12: Fiscal Policy Major function of government is to stabilize the economy Prevent unemployment & Inflation Stabilization can be achieved by manipulating.
Fiscal Policy The use of government spending and/or taxing to alter Aggregate Demand.
MACROECONOMIC OBJECTIVES OF THE GOVERNMENT. Learning Objectives Identify the four major macroeconomic objectives; Explain how the government can control.
Congress The President BUDGET TaxesSpending Fiscal Policy.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 10 Monetary Policy.
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy 2012 Copyright  2004 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Macroeconomics 7/e by Jackson and McIver Slides prepared by Muni Perumal, University.
Fiscal Policy. Fiscal Policy - the use of government spending (expenditures) and revenue collection (taxes) to influence the economy. 1. Congress’s Role.
Principles of Macroeconomics Lecture 3b FISCAL POLICY.
Fiscal Policy Today’s LEQ: How do government policies and actions impact economic stability?
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 09 Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy How the Government affects my money! Because the government is so large and has such an impact on business, the decisions it makes has a.
10-1 Copyright  2007 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd PPTs t/a Economic Principles 2e, by Jackson, McIver & Bajada By Muni Perumal Chapter 10 Fiscal policy.
Fiscal Policy & The Multiplier Chapter Fiscal policy & The Multiplier  Fiscal policy has a multiplier effect on the economy.  Expansionary fiscal.
The President Congress BUDGET Taxes Spending Fiscal Policy.
CHAPTER 12 AP I. FISCAL POLICY-THE USE OF GOVERNMENT SPENDING AND TAXATION TO MAINTAIN A STABLE ECONOMY. II. FISCAL POLICY AND THE AD/AS MODEL A. DISCRETIONARY.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy.
FISCAL POLICY 12 C H A P T E R Fiscal Policy One major function of the government is to stabilize the economy (prevent unemployment or inflation). Stabilization.
Lecture Nine Government budget and Fiscal Policy Cyclically Adjusted Budget Public Debt.
Fiscal Policy The use of government spending and/or taxing to alter Aggregate Demand.
Unit 3: Aggregate Demand and Supply and Fiscal Policy 1 Copyright ACDC Leadership 2015.
F ISCAL P OLICY. T HE C AR A NALOGY The economy is like a car… You can drive 120mph but it is not sustainable. (Extremely Low unemployment) Driving 20mph.
Slides prepared by Muni Perumal, University of Canberra, Australia
Fiscal Policy.
How does the Government Stabilizes the Economy?
Chapter 12 Monetary Policy
Fiscal Policy Use of budgetary actions to try to “stimulate the economy” or “control inflation” FP involves changes in taxation and government spending.
Economic Policy and the Aggregate Demand-Supply model
What is Fiscal Policy Unit 15.1.
Chapter 9 Fiscal Policy.
Section 3 Monetary Policy
How can policymakers influence the economy?
Problems, Criticisms, and Complications
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Remember Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply?
Review What occurs during a prolonged expansion of the economy?
Ch 11: Fiscal Policy.
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION TO MACROECONOMIC
11 Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt O 11.1.
Fiscal Policy © Robin Foster
Presentation transcript:

Chapter 9 Fiscal Policy Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.McGraw-Hill/Irwin

9-2 Chapter Outline NONDISCRETIONARY AND DISCRETIONARY FISCAL POLICY USING FISCAL POLICY TO COUNTERACT “SHOCKS” EVALUATING FISCAL POLICY OBAMA STIMULUS PLAN

9-3 You Are Here

9-4 Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy is the purposeful movement in government spending or tax policy designed to direct an economy Discretionary Fiscal Policy: government spending and tax changes enacted at the time of the problem to alter the economy Nondiscretionary Fiscal Policy: that set of policies that are built into the system to stabilize the economy

9-5 How Nondiscretionary Fiscal Policy Works Nondiscretionary fiscal policy consists of policies that are built into the system so that an expansionary or contractionary stimulus can be given automatically. The welfare state and the progressive income tax serve as the built-in policies. –If the economy is in recession, those who lose their jobs are granted unemployment and welfare benefits and they owe less in taxes. –If the economy is growing at an unsustainable rate, people are making a lot of money and are faced with higher tax rates and there are fewer people eligible for government benefits.

9-6 How Discretionary Fiscal Policy Works If we are in a recession the fiscal policy to stimulate the economy would consist of –Increases in government spending –Decreases in taxes If we are in an inflationary period the fiscal policy to contract the economy would consist of –Decreases in government spending –Increases in taxes

9-7 Expansionary Fiscal Policy AS AD RGDP PI RGDP* PI* AD’ RGDP’ PI’

9-8 Contractionary Fiscal Policy AS AD RGDP PI PI* RGDP* AD’ PI’ RGDP’

9-9 Shocks A Shock is any unanticipated economic event. –Aggregate Demand Shock: an unexpected event which causes aggregate demand to increase or decrease, e.g. the Sept 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. –Aggregate Supply Shock: an unexpected event which causes aggregate supply to increase or decrease, e.g. Iraq’s 1990 invasion of Kuwait and threat to Saudi Arabia.

9-10 Nondiscretionary and Discretionary Fiscal Policy Combats a Recession AS PI RGDP AD 1 RGDP* PI* AD 2 Shock AD 3 DFP NDFP

9-11 Nondiscretionary and Discretionary Fiscal Policy Combats an Overheated Economy AS PI RGDP AD 1 RGDP* PI* AD 2 Shock AD 3 NDFP DFP

9-12 Evaluating Nondiscretionary Fiscal Policy Most economists believe that the built-in stabilizers have had a modestly positive effect on diminishing the severity of modern recessions.

9-13 The Mistiming of Discretionary Fiscal Policy Recognition Lag: the time it takes to measure the state of the economy Administrative Lag: the time it takes for Congress to agree on a course of action with the president Operational Lag: the time it takes for the full impact of a government program or tax change to have its effect on the economy

9-14 Political Problems with Fiscal Policy Expansionary bias is the problem where politicians are more willing to deal with recessions with tax cuts and spending increases than they are to deal with inflationary pressures with tax increases and spending cuts. The Political Business Cycle suggests that politically motivated fiscal policy is used for short term gain just prior to elections

9-15 The Rise, Fall and Rebirth of Discretionary Fiscal Policy Between 1975 and 2001 fiscal policy was pretty much abandoned as a mechanism for controlling the economy. Monetary policy was used to expand or contract prices and GDP. In 2001, the impending recession motivated tax rebates and the Sept. 11 attacks motivated a variety of tax cut and spending increase ideas in Congress. In 2003, the continuing slow growth motivated a renewal of the tax credit rebate idea.

9-16 Growth Rates by Presidential Terms FirstSecondThirdFourth Truman-0.5%8.7%7.7%3.8% Eisenhower I4.6%-0.7%7.1%1.9% Eisenhower II2.0%-1.0%7.1%2.5% Kennedy/Johnson2.3%6.1%4.4%5.8% Johnson6.4%6.5%2.5%4.8% Nixon I3.1%0.2%3.4%5.3% Nixon II/ Ford5.8%-0.5%-0.2%5.3% Carter4.6%5.6%3.2%0.2% Reagan I2.5%-1.9%4.5%7.2% Reagan II4.1%3.5%3.4%4.1% Bush GHW3.5%1.9%-0.2%3.3% Clinton I2.7%4.0%2.5%3.7% Clinton II4.5%4.2%4.4%3.7% Bush GW I0.8%1.9%3.0%4.0% Bush GW II3.2%3.3%2.2%-0.8% Average3.3%2.8%3.8%4.0%

9-17 The 2003 Rebate

9-18 Obama Stimulus Plan Stimulus Plan Element Amount in Millions Non-Discretionary Fiscal Policy: Unemployment, Welfare, Medicaid$135,832 Aid to States$53,600 Discretionary Fiscal Policy: Tax Cuts$301,135 Discretionary Fiscal Policy: Spending Increases$300,047

9-19 Kick it Up a Notch Aggregate Supply Shocks

9-20 Nondiscretionary and Discretionary Fiscal in the Wake of a Negative Aggregate Supply Shock AS 1 PI RGDP AD 1 RGDP* PI* Shock AS 2 AD 2 NDFP AD 3 DFP

9-21 AS 1 PI RGDP AD 1 RGDP* PI* Nondiscretionary and Discretionary Fiscal in the Wake of a Positive Aggregate Supply Shock ShockAS 2 AD 2 NDFP