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Using Policy to Affect the Economy
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Fiscal Policy Government efforts to promote full employment and maintain prices by changing government spending and/or taxes Congress/President is in charge of fiscal policy
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Monetary Policy Central bank (Federal Reserve) efforts to promote full employment, maintain prices, and encourage long-run economic through control of the money supply and interest rates. This is done through: Open market operations Reserve ratio Discount rate
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Expansionary Policy (Easy Money Policy) Used to counteract a recession Expansionary Fiscal Policy: Cut taxes Raise spending Expansionary Monetary Policy Buy bonds Decrease reserve ratio Decrease discount rate
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Contractionary Policy (Tight Money Policy) Used to fight inflation Contractionary Fiscal Policy: Raise taxes Lower government spending Contractionary Monetary Policy sell bonds Increase reserve ratio Increase discount rate
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Using Fiscal Policy to Affect Aggregate Demand Using fiscal policy to increase AD will have 2 effects: Multiplier effect Crowding-out effect
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Multiplier Effect When the government spends more & taxes less, people & businesses have more money, so they spend more too. So, AD increases by MORE than just what the government spends
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Multiplier Effect We can estimate how MUCH AD increases by first determining the “marginal propensity to consume” What fraction of income is spent vs. what fraction is saved (only income that is spent will increase demand MPC of ¾ means that for every dollar, 75 cents is spend
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Multiplier Effect Spending multiplier = 1/(1-MPC) If MPC=3/4, then Spending Multiplier = 4 The higher the MPC, the higher the spending multiplier, the greater increase in AD EX: If the government spends $1,000 and the MPC is ¾, then $1000 will cause an increase of $4,000 in AD (multiplier applies to increases by all components of GDP)
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Crowding-Out Effect Counter-force to multiplier effect Increased spending by the government will cause at least some decrease in AD
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Crowding-Out Effect When government spends money, they increase interest rate in loanable funds graph This increase in interest rates causes a DECREASE in investment spending
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Crowding Out & Multiplier Effects are opposing forces Both happen when the government spends money, the degree of each determines how much AD increases (it usually does).
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Using Monetary Policy to Affect Aggregate Demand Federal Reserve can use three tools of monetary policy to affect the money supply
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Theory of Liquidity Preference When the money supply increases, interest rates decrease (money market graph) When money supply increases, people have lots of money to deposit, so banks decrease interest rates to bring supply & demand in money market into balance
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Using Monetary Policy to Affect Aggregate Demand This causes higher investment spending which causes AD to increase, leading to higher prices & higher output So, Federal Reserve can increase/decrease money supply to affect price levels and output
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Congress/President & Federal Reserve use their tools of fiscal & monetary policy to effect change in the economy.
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