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McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Chapter 13 McGraw-Hill/IrwinCopyright © 2015 by McGraw-Hill Education. All rights reserved.
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Discretionary Fiscal Policy I. Two Types of Fiscal Policies 1.Fiscal policies = the government using government spending (G) and taxes (T) to affect Y. 2.Type 1: Discretionary fiscal policies (i)During economic recession - The government chooses to increase G and/or decrease T to minimize recession (from Chapter 12). These are expansionary fiscal policies. (ii)During economic boom - The government chooses to decrease G and/or increase T to minimize inflation (from Chapter 12). These are contractionary fiscal policies.
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Automatic Fiscal Policy LO1 3.Type 2: Automatic, or built-in, fiscal policies - If taxes are set as a percentage of income, such as T = 0.2Y, then … (i)Tax revenue will automatically fall during economic recession. - Example: - Case 1: Y = 1,000, T = 200 versus T = 0.2Y, tax revenue = ___________. - Case 2: Y = 800, T = 200 versus T = 0.2Y, tax revenue = _____________. - The recession will be less severe in case _______ because consumption will fall by less, given that C = 100 + 0.8 (Y-T). (ii)Exercise: Show that tax revenue will automatically rise during economic boom. (iii)When taxes are set as a percentage of Y, taxes act as an automatic stabilizer for the economy. Need for government intervention is less.
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Automatic Fiscal Policy 4.Most countries have a progressive percentage tax system. - Progressive tax system = the higher the income, the higher is the tax rate. (i)Thailand - Income above 150,000 baht per year is taxed from 10% to 37%. Source: http://www.expatfocus.com/expatriate-thailand-taxationhttp://www.expatfocus.com/expatriate-thailand-taxation (ii)Canada - Income above C$11,138 per year is taxed from 31% to 58.75%. Source: http://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tx/ndvdls/fq/txrts-eng.htmlhttp://www.cra-arc.gc.ca/tx/ndvdls/fq/txrts-eng.html
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Actual Fiscal Budgets LO3 II. Actual Fiscal Budget Balance 1.Actual fiscal budget balance = BB = tY-G. - For a given year, we can find data on the tax revenue of the government (tY) and compare it with the expenditure of the government (G). (i)If BB = tY – G > 0, then the government ran a budget surplus. (ii)If BB = tY – G < 0, then the government ran a budget deficit. 2.If BB < 0, is it necessarily due to increasing G and/or decreasing T, that is, the government’s “fault”? 3.Or is the BB < 0 due to a falling Y?
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Actual Fiscal Budgets LO3 4.Graphically, suppose t=0.2 and G=200, so BB = 0.2Y - 200. - We can see that even when G and t are held constant, i.e., the government is not doing anything differently, BB can become > 0, < 0 or = 0 if Y changes. - Therefore, if Thailand goes into a budget deficit, it could be due to changes in G, t or Y, or all. By just looking at the value of BB does not tell us much. - Is BB<0 during a recession necessarily a concern?
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Cyclical Fiscal Budgets LO3 III. Cyclically-adjusted Fiscal Budget Balance 1. We want a measurement that keeps Y relatively constant, so that changes in the budget are due to t and/or G changes. 2.This allows us to examine how the government has changed t and/or G. The result is the cyclically-adjusted BB. 3.The news media sometimes refers to the cyclically-adjusted BB as the structural BB (SBB).
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Cyclical Fiscal Budgets 4.Structural budget balance = SBB = tYp-G. - We replace actual Y with potential Yp, which does not fluctuate as much as actual Y. Therefore, changes in SBB are due to G and t changes, not Y changes. 5.Given that SBB is evaluated at the potential Yp, and the potential Yp is much more stable than actual Y, changes in SBB are mainly due to changes in t and/or G. (i)If SBB = tYp – G > 0, then the surplus is mainly due to (contractionary, expansionary) fiscal policies. (ii)If SBB = tYp – G < 0, then the deficit is mainly due to (contractionary, expansionary) fiscal policies.
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Deficits and Debts IV.Public Debt 1.Public debt is the accumulation of past annual deficits and surpluses. 2.Public debt changes with current deficits or surpluses. Specifically, Public Debt = -BB - if BB > 0, public debt (drops, rises). - if BB < 0, public debt (drops, rises). LO4
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Thailand’s Data LO3 V. Thailand’s Data and Observations Source: http://data.imf.org/?sk=388DFA60-1D26-4ADE-B505-A05A558D9A42http://data.imf.org/?sk=388DFA60-1D26-4ADE-B505-A05A558D9A42
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