Consequences of Fiscal Policy
Fiscal Policy The use of government spending and revenue collection to influence the economy
Expansionary Fiscal Policy Used to encourage growth/output, often through increased spending or tax cuts
Government buys more goods and services Companies that sell goods to the government earn profits, which they use to pay their workers and investors, and to hire new workers Workers and investors have more money and spend more in shops and restaurants In the short-term, government spending leads to more jobs and more output Expansionary Fiscal Policy
What happens to demand? What happens to the equilibrium price and GDP?
Contractionary Fiscal Policy Used to reduce economic growth/output, often through decreased spending or higher taxes
Government buys fewer goods and services Companies that sell goods to the government have lower profits and less money available to pay workers Workers and investors have less money to spend in shops and restaurants Decreased demand tends to cause lower prices, forcing suppliers to cut production and possibly lay off workers Contractionary Fiscal Policy The growth rate of the economy slows
What happens to demand? What happens to the equilibrium price and GDP?
Purpose of Fiscal Policy Expansionary Used to prevent a recession or move the economy out of a recession Contractionary Fast-growing demand can exceed supply. Producers respond by raising prices, which leads to inflation. Slowing the economy can prevent high inflation.