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Unit 5 Inflation, Unemployment, and Stabilization Policies
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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?
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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.
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Fiscal Policy Need ExpansionaryNeed Contractionary
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Fiscal Policy- Basic Terms Surplus Balanced Budget Deficit Debt
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Fiscal Policy- Basic Terms Discretionary v. Mandatory Spending
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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
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Types of Deficits
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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
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Types of Deficits
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Debt to GDP Ratio Debt/GDP X 100
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Debt to GDP Ratio
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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
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Fiscal Policy Expansionary – Decrease Taxes – Increase Spending and Transfers Contractionary – Increase Taxes – Decrease Spending and Transfers
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Policy Lags Inside – Recognition – Decision – Implementation Outside – Impact (operational)
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Policy Lags- Fiscal Decision and Implementation are generally considerable
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Inside Lags- Fiscal Fiscal- 535 members of Congress and the President – Bill becomes law process (decision) – Federal Bureaucracy (implementation)
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Outside Lags- Fiscal Impact Lag – Spending Multiplier
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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
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Fiscal Policy Complications… Uncoordinated State and Local Policies Crowding Out
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Three Tools of MP Reserve Requirement Discount rate Open market operations – Main tool of MP – Buying/selling government securities on the open market
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OMO and Interest Rates Fed target – the federal funds rate This “drives” all other interest rates
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Evaluation of MP 2 advantages over FP A. speed and flexibility B. isolation from political pressure
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Policy Lags- Monetary Policy Inside – Recognition – Decision – Implementation Outside – Impact
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Policy Lags- Monetary Policy Decision and Implementation Lags are relatively short Meet every six weeks or SOONER
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Inside Lags Monetary- 12 member open market committee – Quick decisions – Immediate implementation
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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
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Stabilization Policy may be Destabilizing if poorly timed
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Homework- Due Tomorrow Summary and provide your opinion of the recent Social Security Poll Paragraph
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Phillips Curve SR- inverse relationship between inflation and unemployment
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Rightward Shift (think leftward SRAS) Negative Supply Shock (increase in input prices) Increased inflation expectations
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Leftward Shift (think rightward SRAS) Positive Supply Shock (decrease input prices) Decreased inflation expectations
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Stagflation and the Phillips Curve 70s seemed to discredit the Phillips Curve Economist today see Phillips curve as a short run relationship
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SRAS Shifts and Returns to LRE following expansionary policy
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SRPC Shifts and Returns to LRE following expansionary policy
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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
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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
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Laffer Curve
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