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Splash Screen. Chapter Intro 2 Section 1: The Federal Government Under our federal system, the executive, legislative, and judicial branches share the.

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Presentation on theme: "Splash Screen. Chapter Intro 2 Section 1: The Federal Government Under our federal system, the executive, legislative, and judicial branches share the."— Presentation transcript:

1 Splash Screen

2 Chapter Intro 2 Section 1: The Federal Government Under our federal system, the executive, legislative, and judicial branches share the responsibility of governing the nation. The president and Congress work together to create the budget—a blueprint for raising and spending the nation’s money.

3 Chapter Intro 2 Section 2: State and Local Governments Political and economic institutions evolve to help individuals and groups accomplish their goals. State and local governments have their own revenue sources and decide how to spend the money they take in.

4 Chapter Intro 2 Section 3: Managing the Economy Political and economic institutions evolve to help individuals and groups accomplish their goals. Governments use various tools to manage the economy.

5 Chapter Preview-End

6 Section 1-Main Idea Guide to Reading Big Idea Under our federal system, the executive, legislative, and judicial branches share the responsibility of governing the nation.

7 Section 1 Preparing the Budget The federal budget, created by the president and Congress, is the government’s blueprint for raising and spending money.

8 Section 1 Preparing the Budget (cont.) The president and Congress create the federal budget, which determines how the government raises and spends money.budget Government’s fiscal year (FY): October 1 to September 30

9 Section 1 Budget process: –President proposes budget to Congress by first Monday in February –President sends proposed budget to Congress, with annual budget message Preparing the Budget (cont.)

10 Section 1 –Congress passes budget resolution Mandatory spending does not need annual approvalMandatory spending Discretionary spending (about one-third of the budget) is approved each yearDiscretionary spending Preparing the Budget (cont.)

11 Section 1 –Both houses must approve appropriations bills appropriations bills –President signs into law or vetoes Preparing the Budget (cont.)

12 Section 1 Revenues and Expenditures The federal budget has two main parts—revenues and expenditures.

13 The Federal Budget, FY 2007 Section 1 Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) Revenues: –Half from individual income tax returns –Corporate income tax –Payroll taxes fund Social Security and MedicareSocial Security Medicare

14 Section 1 –Other taxes: Excise tax on gasoline, tobacco, telephone Estate tax on wealth to heirs Tax on gifts Miscellaneous income such as national park fees Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) The Federal Budget, FY 2007

15 Section 1 Forms of taxation: –Proportional tax—same percentage from everyone –Progressive tax (such as the federal income tax)—proportion increases with income –Regressive tax—proportion decreases with income Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) The Federal Budget, FY 2007

16 Section 1 Expenditures: –Social Security—largest category in 2007 –Income security –Health costs –Defense—second largest category— 17.4 cents of every dollar spent in 2007 Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) The Federal Budget, FY 2007

17 Section 1 –Interest on debt –Programs such as education, highways, natural resources Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) The Federal Budget, FY 2007

18 Section 1 Changes to budget: –Early government had few expenditures –Budget and Accounting Act of 1921 –Increased role of President Revenues and Expenditures (cont.) The Federal Budget, FY 2007

19 Section 1-End

20 Section 2-Main Idea Guide to Reading Big Idea Political and economic institutions evolve to help individuals and groups accomplish their goals.

21 Section 2 Revenues State and local governments have their own revenue sources.

22 Section 2 Revenues (cont.) State and local governments have their own budgets, revenues, and expenditures. State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

23 Section 2 State government revenues in order of importance: –Intergovernmental revenues from federal governmentIntergovernmental revenues Revenues (cont.) For welfare, highways, hospitals, etc. State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

24 Section 2 –State sales taxsales tax Revenues (cont.) –Contributions from state employees to retirement funds Five states have no sales tax Other states charge 2.9 to 7.25 percent State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

25 Section 2 –Income tax Revenues (cont.) Seven states have none Some charge percentage of federal income tax Some charge single rate Some use progressive tax State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

26 Section 2 Local government revenues: –For many local governments, most comes from state –Property taxes, usually only on real propertyProperty taxes Revenues (cont.) Real property—land and buildings Personal property—portable objects State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

27 Section 2 –Local sales tax –Fines and fees –Revenue from water and utilities Revenues (cont.) State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

28 Section 2 Expenditures State and local governments use the revenues they receive to fund many different expenditures.

29 Section 2 Expenditures (cont.) State and local governments use revenues to fund many human services. State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

30 Section 2 State governments –Entitlement programs for the poorEntitlement programs –Subsidize college tuitionSubsidize –Maintain highways –Retirement, hospitals, corrections, education Expenditures (cont.) State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

31 Section 2 Local governments –Public schools –Police and fire protection –Water supply –Sewage and sanitation Expenditures (cont.) State and Local Governments: Revenues and Expenditures

32 Section 2-End

33 Section 3-Main Idea Guide to Reading Big Idea Political and economic institutions evolve to help individuals and groups accomplish their goals.

34 Section 3-Key Terms Guide to Reading Content Vocabulary surplus deficit bond debt balanced budgetbalanced budget automatic stabilizerautomatic stabilizer Academic Vocabulary precise ideological

35 Section 3 Surpluses and Deficits Government budgeting can result in either a surplus, a deficit, or a balanced budget.

36 Section 3 Surpluses and Deficits (cont.) Surplus—the government budgets more than it spendsSurplus The Deficits and the Debt

37 Section 3 Deficit—government spends more than plannedDeficit –Issue bonds to raise extra fundsbonds –Outstanding bonds are government’s debt debt –Federal debt about $4.9 trillion in October 2006 Surpluses and Deficits (cont.) The Deficits and the Debt

38 Section 3 Balanced budget—spending equals revenuesBalanced budget –Not required of federal government –Required of many state and local governments –Must cut spending if revenues drop Surpluses and Deficits (cont.) The Deficits and the Debt

39 Section 3 Effects of national debt: –Taxpayers must pay interest rather than funding services –Higher consumer interest rates Surpluses and Deficits (cont.) The Deficits and the Debt

40 Section 3 Fiscal Policy The tool of fiscal policy can help governments control the economy.

41 Section 3 Fiscal Policy (cont.) Fiscal policy is the government using taxes and spending to help the economy grow. –Theory: to increase spending, cut taxes in recession; to reduce spending, increase taxes in boom. –Practice: hard to raise taxes or cut services

42 Section 3 Many oppose spending increases, while others oppose tax cuts on ideological grounds, or on principle Politics hamper quick action Fiscal Policy (cont.)

43 Section 3 Automatic stabilizers always in placeAutomatic stabilizers –Unemployment and welfare –Progressive income tax Fiscal Policy (cont.)

44 Section 3-End

45 VS 1

46 VS-End

47 Figure 1

48 Figure 2a

49 Figure 2b

50 Figure 3a

51 Figure 3b

52 TIME Trans

53 DFS Trans 1

54 DFS Trans 2

55 DFS Trans 3

56 Vocab1 budget a plan for making and spending money

57 Vocab2 mandatory spending federal spending required by law that continues without the need for annual approvals by Congress

58 Vocab3 discretionary spending spending for federal programs that must receive annual approval

59 Vocab4 appropriations bill legislation earmarking funds for certain purposes

60 Vocab5 Social Security federal program that provides monthly payments to people who are retired or unable to work

61 Vocab6 Medicare government program that provides some health care to the elderly

62 Vocab7 enormous very large

63 Vocab8 intergovernmental revenue funds one level of government receives from another level of government

64 Vocab9 sales tax tax levied on a product at the time of sale

65 Vocab10 property tax tax on land and property

66 Vocab11 entitlement program a program using eligibility requirements to provide health, nutrition, or income supplements to individuals

67 Vocab12 subsidize to aid or promote with money

68 Vocab13 revenue the income that a government collects for public use

69 Vocab14 utilize to make use of

70 Vocab15 resource the money, people, and materials available to accomplish a community’s goals; wealth

71 Vocab16 surplus situation in which quantity supplied is greater than quantity demanded; situation in which government spends less than it collects in revenues

72 Vocab17 deficit situation in which government spends more than it collects in revenues

73 Vocab18 bond contract to repay borrowed money with interest at a specific time in the future

74 Vocab19 debt money borrowed and not yet paid back

75 Vocab20 balanced budget annual budget in which expenditures equal revenues

76 Vocab21 automatic stabilizer program that automatically provides benefits to offset a change in people’s incomes

77 Vocab22 precise to be exact

78 Vocab23 ideological a body of opinions

79 Help Click the Forward button to go to the next slide. Click the Previous button to return to the previous slide. Click the Home button to return to the Chapter Menu. Click the Transparency button from the Chapter Menu or Chapter Introduction slides to access the TIME Transparency that is relevant to this chapter. From within a section, click on this button to access the relevant Daily Focus Skills Transparency. Click the Return button in a feature to return to the main presentation. Click the Economics Online button to access online textbook features. Click the Reference Atlas button to access the Interactive Reference Atlas. Click the Exit button or press the Escape key [Esc] to end the chapter slide show. Click the Help button to access this screen. Links to Presentation Plus! features such as Graphs in Motion, Charts in Motion, and figures from your textbook are located at the bottom of relevant screens. To use this Presentation Plus! product:

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