Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Fiscal Policy Taxing, Spending, & Borrowing Policies of the Federal Government— done by Congress.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Fiscal Policy Taxing, Spending, & Borrowing Policies of the Federal Government— done by Congress."— Presentation transcript:

1 Fiscal Policy Taxing, Spending, & Borrowing Policies of the Federal Government— done by Congress

2 Types of Taxes: Determined by the percentage of a person’s income paid to taxes  Federal tax revenues are controlled by the Internal Revenue System…part of the Department of Treasury  Proportional (flat tax) same % of income of all income earners $100,000 X 5% = $5,000; $10,000 X 5% = $500 Ex. Is social security—up to $106,800 after that amount, it is regressive Ex. Is property tax—in California 1.05% of assessed value  Progressive (or graduated)--% of income taxed increases as income rises Ex. Is income tax, estate tax, gift tax $24,000 X 15% = $3600; $263,000 X 39% = $102,570  Regressive--% of income taxed decreases as income rises Ex. social security after $106,800 Ex. excise tax, sales tax Ex. sales tax (spend a higher portion of their income on necessities)  purchase of $100 X 7.25% = $7.25; $7.25/$100,000=.00725%  purchase of $100 X 7.25% = $7.25; $7.25/$10,000 =.0725%

3 The most progressive taxes

4 Graduated Tax Brackets for Federal Income Taxes If you are single: 10%--$0-$8350 15%--$8350-$33,950 25%--$33,950-$82,250 28%--$82,250-$171,550 33%--$171,550-$372,950 35%--$372,950 and greater This is just the percentage of the federal income tax you pay. You still pay many other taxes. In 1954 the highest tax bracket was 91%

5 Taxes Collected: see handout  Income tax—became constitutional under the Sixteenth Amendment in 1913 automatically deducted from paycheck progressive IRS is in charge of collecting accounts for 43.6% of federal tax receipts First passed in 1913 as the 16 th Amendment  Payroll tax (Social Security) deducted from paycheck employer must match it funds social security, unemployment compensation, Medicare accounts for 36.9% fastest growing source of federal tax income-created in 1933 under New Deal  Corporate Income tax—levied on corporations after all expenses have been paid accounts for 9.3% of tax receipts critics argue it results in double taxation  tax on corporation; tax on dividends when paid out  stockholders pay at personal level and corporate level  Other Taxes excise taxes-imposed on manufacturers of certain items who then pass it on to the customer--- tobacco, cigarettes, gas, car tax…aka sin tax tariffs or custom duties—imposed on imports  discourages Americans from buying imported goods  high tariffs can result in trade war

6 Federal Revenues

7 Fiscal Policy Strategies  Supply-side economics—achieving economic stability by increasing the supply of goods/services. Milton Friedman fathered the theory and Ronald Reagan made famous as “trickle- down economics” or “Reaganomics” Done by lower taxes to businesses and wealthy to encourage business investment. Increased supply lowers price. Leads to increases production, meaning more workers need hired. Creating more jobs leads to increased spending and lower unemployment. Also done by reduced regulation on business “laissez-faire” because it leads to increased production costs What if businesses/ wealthy individuals don’t invest, but spend? Increase demand leading to inflation Favored by Republicans  Demand-side economics—increasing economic growth through the government’s influence on aggregate demand. John Maynard Keynes fathered this theory in 1936 designed to increase government spending and was made famous by FDR. Can lead to high national debts if not done correctly Involves gov’t drastically increasing spending and cutting taxes during a recession and cutting spending and raising taxes when recession ends.  Which part do you think rarely happens? Favored by Democrats

8 Tools of Fiscal Policy  Tax Rates Recession—lower taxes to increasing spending, aggregate demand Inflation—raise taxes to decrease spending, aggregate demand  Tax Incentives—special tax break to businesses to encourage investment spending Investment tax credit—deduct new capital spending from corporate taxes Recession—increase tax incentives Inflation—decrease tax incentives  Government Spending Recession—increase government spending, aggregate demand Inflation—decrease government spending, aggregate demand  Public Transfer Payments Recession—increase unemployment compensation, aggregate demand Inflation—decrease unemployment compensation, aggregate demand  Progressive Income Taxes Recession—drops people into lower income bracket, paying less taxes Inflation—puts people into higher income bracket, paying more taxes

9 Limitations on Fiscal Policy  Timing Problems identifying problem compromising a solution economic actors reaction of policy  Political Pressures—determined by elected officials restrictive fiscal policy—increases taxes, reduce gov’t spending expansionary fiscal policy—decreases taxes, increases gov’t spending  Unpredictable economic behaviors  Lack of Coordination among gov’t policies dealing with monetary policy dealing with local/ state gov’t taxing policies

10 Federal Budgets  Federal Budget Deficits—refer to pg. 494 Find any surpluses What have the largest deficits occurred?  Budget deficit—gov’t spends more than it collects  Budget surplus—gov’t spends less than it collects  Deficit spending—spending more money for its programs than is able to be covered by taxes  Reasons for Deficit Spending National emergencies Providing public goods Stimulate the economy

11 Federal Spending

12 National Debt  National Debt—total amount of money the gov’t has borrowed  Growth of Debt—refer to chart on pg. 496- 497 When did largest growth occur? Why? How long did it take to get $1 trillion in debt? How long did it take to add another $4 trillion?  Debt Ceilings—largest amount debt can reach; always adjusted when it approaches  Impact—in 2008 $240 billion paid on interest alone

13 National Debt

14 Holders of our National Debt

15 Foreign Holders of National Debt

16 Balancing the Federal Budget  Increasing Revenues—raising taxes  Decreasing Expenditures—cutting spending  Why will this never happen?

17 Review Questions  What category of taxes are hardest on the poor? Give examples.  What category of taxes are hardest on the wealthy? Give examples  Which specific tax accounts for the largest share of federal revenue?  Explain Supply-side economics? Who developed it? Who championed it? What party supports it?  Explain Demand-side economics? Who developed it? Who championed it? Which party supports it?  What is restrictive fiscal policy? Which economic problem is it designed to correct?  What is expansive fiscal policy? Which economic problem is it designed to correct?  Who enacts fiscal policy?  There are five fiscal policy tools. What would Congress do to each if practicing expansive fiscal policy? Restrictive fiscal policy?  What is the approximate federal debt? What caused it?  What is deficit spending and why do we do it?


Download ppt "Fiscal Policy Taxing, Spending, & Borrowing Policies of the Federal Government— done by Congress."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google