Unit 5 Inflation, Unemployment, and Stabilization Policies
Fiscal Policy Government use of Government Spending (G) and Taxes (T) to affect AD/AS in order to stabilize the economy Two components of stabilization?
Fiscal Policy Draw a graph that would imply a need for expansionary fiscal policy. Draw a graph that would imply a need for contractionary fiscal policy.
Fiscal Policy Need ExpansionaryNeed Contractionary
Fiscal Policy- Basic Terms Surplus Balanced Budget Deficit Debt
Fiscal Policy- Basic Terms Discretionary v. Mandatory Spending
Fiscal Policy Basics Discretionary Fiscal Policy – Examples: Stimulus Spending Tax Cuts Automatic Stabilizers – Examples: Population qualifying for Food Stamp Applicable tax bracket within progressive tax system
Types of Deficits
Types of Deficits/Surpluses Total (Headline) Deficit/Surplus Structural- result from underlying imbalance in government budget Cyclical- deficit or surplus attributed to ups and downs of the business cycle
Types of Deficits
Debt to GDP Ratio Debt/GDP X 100
Debt to GDP Ratio
Components of National Debt National Debt- value of outstanding treasury securities (government bonds) Debt held by Public- $13 trillion – Securities held by Individuals Corporations Governments (state, local, and foreign (6 trillion) Intragovernmental ( Interdepartmental ) Debt- $5 trillion – Securities held by government itself Social Security Trust Fund
Fiscal Policy Expansionary – Decrease Taxes – Increase Spending and Transfers Contractionary – Increase Taxes – Decrease Spending and Transfers
Policy Lags Inside – Recognition – Decision – Implementation Outside – Impact (operational)
Policy Lags- Fiscal Decision and Implementation are generally considerable
Inside Lags- Fiscal Fiscal- 535 members of Congress and the President – Bill becomes law process (decision) – Federal Bureaucracy (implementation)
Outside Lags- Fiscal Impact Lag – Spending Multiplier
Fiscal Policy Complications Lags Ricardo-Barro Effect – Deficit spending leads public and businesses to save more for fear of future tax increases – Negates expansionary effect of gov’t spending Controlled by Politicians – Lag length – Policy reversals – Certain policies will NEVER be popular Current structural deficit problem
Fiscal Policy Complications… Uncoordinated State and Local Policies Crowding Out
Three Tools of MP Reserve Requirement Discount rate Open market operations – Main tool of MP – Buying/selling government securities on the open market
OMO and Interest Rates Fed target – the federal funds rate This “drives” all other interest rates
Evaluation of MP 2 advantages over FP A. speed and flexibility B. isolation from political pressure
Policy Lags- Monetary Policy Inside – Recognition – Decision – Implementation Outside – Impact
Policy Lags- Monetary Policy Decision and Implementation Lags are relatively short Meet every six weeks or SOONER
Inside Lags Monetary- 12 member open market committee – Quick decisions – Immediate implementation
Outside Lags and Complications Monetary – Deposit multiplier – Propensity to Save – Banks holding excess reserves – Cyclical Asymmetry Monetary policy may be better at controlling inflation than stimulating growth – Liquidity Trap Increases in Money Supply leads to cash hoarding, not spending
Stabilization Policy may be Destabilizing if poorly timed
Homework- Due Tomorrow Summary and provide your opinion of the recent Social Security Poll Paragraph
Phillips Curve SR- inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment
Rightward Shift (think leftward SRAS) Negative Supply Shock (increase in input prices) Increased inflation expectations
Leftward Shift (think rightward SRAS) Positive Supply Shock (decrease input prices) Decreased inflation expectations
Stagflation and the Phillips Curve 70s seemed to discredit the Phillips Curve Economist today see Phillips curve as a short run relationship
SRAS Shifts and Returns to LRE following expansionary policy
SRPC Shifts and Returns to LRE following expansionary policy
Phillips Curve Expectation of Future Inflation is the most important determinant of future inflation Rational Expectations Theory Rational Expectations Theory – Individuals use all available information in forming expectations about future inflation – Individuals do not assume future inflation will match or follow trend of current/past inflation
Supply-Side Economics “trickle down” Fiscal Policies that target SRAS and LRAS Key Methods – Decrease business regulation – Decrease business marginal tax rates – Decrease individual marginal tax rates Increase incentive to work more hours Leisure becomes more expensive
Laffer Curve