INTRODUCTION Chapter 1.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Government Spending Daniel Camit Derrik Overton Kevin Phipps Billy Raddell.
Advertisements

Public Ecnomics Dr. HE Chen Teaching Materials(textbook): –Randall G. Holcombe. Public Sector Economics:The Role of Government in The.
Government Spending Economics Chapter 10 Did you know… Between 1962 and 1993, federal transfer payments to people eligible for benefits because of poverty.
1 Fiscal Federalism in Iraq: OIL and GAS. The oil situation: a snapshot.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION.
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Taxes and Spending Chapter 14. SECTION 1 Taxes Three Major Federal Taxes The government collects three major federal taxes: personal income tax, corporate.
CHAPTER 1 Introduction Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Prepared by: FERNANDO QUIJANO, YVONN QUIJANO, KYLE THIEL & APARNA SUBRAMANIAN 1 Why Study Public Finance? © 2007 Worth Publishers Public Finance and Public.
Taxes and the Federal Budget
The Federal Budget and Social Security. Key Terms BUDGET : a financial plan for the use of money, personnel, and property The federal budget for 2016.
Chapter 7 The Government Sector. Introduction: The Growing Economic Role of Government Most of the growth over the past seven decades was due to the Depression.
Chapter Eighteen Economic Policy. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved Theories of Economic Policy Taxes and spending are the.
1 Public Finance Public finance is the field of economics that studies government activities and the alternative means of financing government expenditures.
© 2007 Thomson South-Western. “In this world nothing is certain but death and taxes.”... Benjamin Franklin Taxes paid in Ben Franklin’s.
Taxes, National Debt & Fiscal Policy. Taxes Types of taxes Regressive: If the rich pay a smaller proportion of their income for the tax than do the poor.
Financing Government Chapter 16 Notes
The U.S. Economy: Private and Public Sectors Chapter 4 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
HOLT, RINEHART AND WINSTON1 CIVICS IN PRACTICE HOLT Chapter 12 Paying for Government Section 1:Raising Money Raising MoneyRaising Money Section 2:Types.
5 - 1 Copyright McGraw-Hill/Irwin, 2002 Households as Income Receivers Households as Spenders The Business Population Legal Forms of Business Public Sector:
© 2007 Thomson South-Western 11. THE TAX SYSTEM. © 2007 Thomson South-Western U.S. NATIONAL DEBT CLOCK The Outstanding Public Debt as of Oct. 12, 2011.
The Role of Government in the United States Economy How does the United States government promote and regulate competition?
The government’s role in the US Economy:. Economic Functions of Government Providing a Legal Structure –Enforcing laws and contracts Maintaining Competition.
INTRODUCTION Econ 432: Chapter I. IN ORDER TO CONSIDER PUBLIC POLICY WE NEED A BASIC UNDERSTANDING OF THE FRAMEWORK IN WHICH OUR GOVERNMENT OPERATES AND.
Economic Policy. The politics of deficit spending The general landscape Deficit: government spending over and above the amount taken in by taxes National.
County Budgeting. December 9, 2010Budget2 Finance a. The science of the management of money and other assets. b. The disposition of public revenues by.
Government Finances Chapter 25. The Federal Government Section 1.
Economic Policy. The politics of deficit spending The general landscape Deficit: government spending over and above the amount taken in by taxes National.
The Economics of Government Spending
Economic Policy. The politics of deficit spending The general landscape Deficit: government spending over and above the amount taken in by taxes National.
What is the Public Sector?
Constitutional Law Part 2: The Federal Legislative Power
Chapter 3 Measuring the Size and Scope of Government Chapter outline 1 . The Challenge of Comparisons 2 . Federal Government Revenue and Spending 3 . State.
CHAPTER 1 Introduction Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
Congress at Work Taxing and Spending Bills Chapter 7, Section 2.
Harcourt Brace & Company Chapter 12 The Design of the Tax System (pp )
Financing Government Chapter 16
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 4-1 Households as Income Receivers Households as Spenders Business Population Legal Forms of Business The Public.
Chapter 9 Government’s Role in the Economy. What should the govt. provide? What are the characteristics of a free market? What are the characteristics.
Public Management Chapter 16 7E M ANAGERIAL E CONOMICS F U N D A M E N T A L S O F © 2003 South-Western/Thomson Learning M A R K H I R S C H E Y PowerPoint.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2008 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION.
It costs trillions of dollars to run the national government every year. The Constitution gives Congress the authority to decided where the money will.
1 Fiscal Policy © 2009, TESCCC. 2 Fiscal Policy defined The government’s (Congress and the President) use of taxing and spending to promote economic growth.
{ Topic 8:Taxes and Spending.  Governments collect taxes to pay for programs, but taxes can have powerful effects on the general economy  The federal.
Chapter 10 Government Spending Section 1: Per capita per person Every man, woman, and child.
Chapter 16 Taxes & Government Spending. The Constitutional Basis for Government Involvement in the Economy The power of the federal government to intervene.
Taxes & Government Spending Chapter 14 Section 1 What are Taxes?
Copyright 2008 The McGraw-Hill Companies 4-1 Households as Income Receivers Households as Spenders Business Population Legal Forms of Business The Public.
REAL ESTATE TAXATION SYSTEM IN ALBANIA AND CHALLENGES FOR A EUROPEAN FISCAL SYSTEM Puleri Thodhori 1 Kripa Dorina 2 1) 2) University of Tirana, Faculty.
Chapter 7: The Executive Branch at Work Section 3: Financing Government (pgs )
INTRODUCTION TO PUBLIC FINANCE IN CANADA
Chapter 1 - Introduction
Chapter 4 The U.S. Economy: Private and Public Sectors
Chapter 12 Paying for Government
Chapter1 Introduction CHENG Beinan PH.D
Where your money goes Chapter 10.2 & 10.3.
Public Finance Session1 - Definition.
INTRODUCTION Chapter 1.
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Thursday, April 13, 2017 CNN10 Topics Turkey Seoul Hydrogen
CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION.
INTRODUCTION Chapter 1.
Chapter Eleven: Taxes and Tax Policy.
American Free Enterprise
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
Chapter 16: Financing Government Opener
INTRODUCTION Chapter 1.
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Free Enterprise System
Presentation transcript:

INTRODUCTION Chapter 1

Defining the Field of Study Public Finance – Field of economics that analyzes government taxation and spending activities. Public Sector Economics or Public Economics Terms that better capture the fundamental issues of this field of economics - government’s role in the allocation of real resources - that includes, but is not limited to, government’s financial behavior. Focus on microeconomic functions of government.

Public Finance and Ideology Organic view of government Society is a natural organism Government is the heart. Individuals are parts of the organism that have significance only as part of the community, which is stressed above the individual. Mechanistic view of government Government is not an organic part of society, but created by individuals for individuals. Libertarians vs. Social Democrats: Role of government

Government at a Glance: The Legal Framework Federal Government: Constitutional Provisions Article 1, Section 8 Congress will “pay the Debts and provide for the common Defense and general Welfare of the United States.” “The Congress shall have Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises.” Article 1, Section 9 “No…direct Tax shall be laid, unless in Proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken”. 16th Amendment “Congress shall have power to levy and collect taxes…” 5th Amendment “No person shall be…deprived of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law…”

Government at a Glance: The Legal Framework State Governments Federal Constitution gives state governments board autonomy to spend and tax. Federal Constitution 10th Amendment controls states’ international economic policy. States’ Constitutions vary in spending and taxing restrictions and the economic issues with which they deal. Local Governments Derive power to tax and spend from the States. Fiscal independence of local governments.

Government at a Glance: The Size of Government How to measure the extent to which society’s resources are subject to control by government. Annual expenditures Types of government expenditure Purchases of goods and services Transfers of income Interest payments Budget documents Unified budget: Itemized list of federal government revenues and expenditures. Regulatory budget: Economic costs of government regulations.

The Size of Government State, Local, and Federal Government Expenditures (selected years) Adjusting for Inflation Adjusting for Population Relative to Economy 1 2 3 4 Total Expenditures (billions) 2011 Dollars (billions)* 2011 Dollars per capita Percent of GDP 1970 295 1,375 6,703 28.4% 1980 847 2,007 8,815 30.4% 1990 1,880 2,948 11,784 32.4% 2000 2,906 3,712 13,155 29.2% 2011 5,410 17,362 35.9% *Conversion to 2011 dollars done using the GDP deflator Source: Calculations based on Economic Report of the President, 2012 [pp. 316, 320, 359, 415]. Callouts highlight real, per capital and relative values

The Size of Government Government Expenditures as a % of GDP (2011) United States Bar representing US slides along graph from left to right Source: Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development [2011b].

The Size of Government Composition: 2011 Federal Expenditures & Revenues Source: Economic Report of the President, 2012 [p. 413].

The Size of Government Composition: 2011 State & Local Expenditures & Revenues Source: Economic Report of the President 2012 [p. 419].

The Size of Government Revenues At the Federal level, the personal income tax is the single most important source of revenue. At the State and Local levels: Grants from the federal government are over 20% of revenues Sales taxes and Property taxes are each about 18% of revenues. Changes in the Real Value of Debt is also an important source of government revenue.

Chapter 1 Summary Public Finance/Public Sector Economics focuses on government’s role in the allocation of real resources - that includes, but is not limited to, taxing and govt spending. The Mechanistic view vs. Organic view of government. The U.S. embraces the mechanistic view, which nevertheless leads to disagreements on the appropriate size of the government. Evidence shows that the impact of the U.S. government on the allocation of national resources has increased over time. The U.S. Constitution outlines the roles of and constraints placed on state, and federal government economic activity.

Appendix: Doing Research in Public Finance Public Finance journals International Tax and Public Finance Journal of Public Economics National Tax Journal Public Finance Public Finance Quarterly General-interest journals American Economic Review Journal of Economic Perspectives Journal of Political Economy Quarterly Journal of Economics Review of Economics and Statistics

Doing Research in Public Finance Other sources Journal of Economic Literature Brookings Institution’s Studies of Government Finance Congressional Budget Office reports National Bureau of Economic Research working papers Tax Foundation’s Facts and Figures on Government Finance U.S. Government Printing Office publications Statistical Abstract of the United States Economic Report of the President Budget of the United States U.S. Census of Governments Historical Statistics of the United States from Colonial Times to 1970

Doing Research in Public Finance Public Finance data available on Internet Resources for Economists on the Internet (www.rfe.org) U.S. Census Bureau (www.census.gov) University of Michigan’s Office of Tax Policy Research (www.otpr.org) Urban-Brookings Tax Policy Center (www.taxpolicycenter.org)