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Published byEdwin Bradford Modified over 9 years ago
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Vocabulary Monetary Policy- Conducted by the Fed, involved either the increasing or decreasing the amount of money in circulation. Fiscal Policy- Involves the gov’t decisions on how to spend money and tax households Direct Taxes- Taxes paid directly to the gov’t (income taxes). Indirect Taxes- Taxes paid through another agent (sales tax).
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Reserve Requirement- The amount of money banks must keep in the Fed. Discount Rate- The interest rate at which the Fed charges member banks for loans. Open Market Operations- The sale or purchase of US Treasury Bonds.
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Warm Up How does the government get most of its revenue?
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Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy involves how the government chooses to spend money and tax households/businesses.
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1 st Part Taxation Decreased taxes allows producers to spend more money on labor/capital and households have more disposable income. ○ This increases employment, production, and consumer demand ○ This also can lead to inflation To deal with rising prices, governments will raise taxes
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Taxes can either be direct (paid directly to the gov’t…income taxes) or indirect (collected through another agent…gas station) Personal Income Tax ○T○Tax paid on a citizens income Corporate Taxes ○T○Taxes placed on businesses Excise Taxes ○T○Taxes placed on items like alcohol and cigarettes
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Estate taxes ○ Taxes placed on inherited property Tariffs ○ Taxes placed on imports Regressive Taxes ○ % of tax one pays decreases as their income rises ○ Sales Tax Progressive Taxes ○ % of tax increases as their income rises ○ Income tax Proportional Taxes ○ Everyone pays the same %
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2 nd Part Government Spending Money the government takes in is called revenue Deficit Spending ○ Results when the government spend more money than it takes in in taxes
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Monetary Policy The FED Conducts monetary policy and controls the amount of money in circulation It does this in 3 ways…
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1. Reserve Requirement % of money banks must keep in the FED (savings account) What would happen if the FED raises the reserve requirement? Banks would have less to lend thereby putting less money in the economy and decreasing inflation This is called “tight money policy” What would happen if the FED lowers the reserve requirement? Banks would have more money to lend thereby increasing inflation This is called “easy money policy”
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2. Discount Rate The interest rate that banks pay the FED to borrow money The higher the Discount Rate charged by the FED, the higher the interest rate charged by banks What do higher interest rates encourage people to do? ○ Save, therefore decreasing the money supply
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3. Open Market Operations The sale or purchase of U.S. Treasury Bonds FED sells bonds, it lowers the money supply How? Money that is spent on bonds is money that is not spent in the market. FED buys back bonds, it increases the money supply How? People get back their investment with interest and spending increases
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REFLECTION HOW DOED THE GOVERNMENT USE TAXES TO REGULATE THE ECONOMY? SUMMARIZE THE DIFFERENCE B/W REGRESSIVE AND PROGRESSIVE TAXES HOW DOES GOVERNMENT SPENDING AFFECT THE ECONOMY? IN WHAT 3 WAYS DOES THE FED CONDUCT MONETARY POLICY AND CONTROL THE AMOUNT OF MONEY IN CIRCULATION?
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Closing? What may the FED do to combat inflation? Demand banks keep more money in FED (reserve requirement) Raise the interest rate on the money banks borrow from the FED (discount rate) Sell US Treasury Bonds (open market operations)
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