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Title: The development of the president s budget begins a year


1
Fiscal Policy
2
Government in the Economy
  • Nothing arouses as much controversy as the role
    of government in the economy.
  • Government can affect the macroeconomy in two
    ways
  • Fiscal policy is the manipulation of government
    spending and taxation.
  • Monetary policy refers to the behavior of the
    Federal Reserve regarding the nations money
    supply.

3
What is Fiscal Policy?
  • Fiscal policy is the deliberate manipulation of
    government purchases, transfer payments, taxes,
    and borrowing in order to influence macroeconomic
    variables such as employment, the price level,
    and the level of GDP

4
Government in the Economy
  • Discretionary fiscal policy refers to deliberate
    changes in taxes or spending.
  • The government can not control certain aspects of
    the economy related to fiscal policy. For
    example
  • The government can control tax rates but not tax
    revenue. Tax revenue depends on household income
    and the size of corporate profits.
  • Government spending depends on government
    decisions and the state of the economy.

5
Net Taxes (T), and Disposable Income (Yd)
  • Net taxes are taxes paid by firms and households
    to the government minus transfer payments made to
    households by the government.
  • Disposable, or after-tax, income (Yd ) equals
    total income minus taxes.

6
Adding Net Taxes (T) and Government Purchases (G)
to the Circular Flow of Income
7
Adding Net Taxes (T) and Government Purchases (G)
to the Circular Flow of Income
  • When government enters the picture, the aggregate
    income identity gets cut into three pieces
  • And aggregate expenditure (AE) equals

8
The Budget Deficit
  • A governments budget deficit is the difference
    between what it spends (G) and what it collects
    in taxes (T) in a given period
  • If G exceeds T, the government must borrow from
    the public to finance the deficit. It does so by
    selling Treasury bonds and bills. In this case,
    a part of household saving (S) goes to the
    government.

9
Adding Taxes to theConsumption Function
  • The aggregate consumption function is now a
    function of disposable, or after-tax, income.

10
Equilibrium Output Y C I G
11
Finding EquilibriumOutput/Income Graphically
12
The Government Spending Multiplier
  • The government spending multiplier is the ratio
    of the change in the equilibrium level of output
    to a change in government spending.

13
The Government Spending Multiplier
14
The Effect on GDP of an Increase in Government
Spending

CIG(X-M)
45o
CIG(X-M)
Simple government expenditures multiplier
?GDP/?G 1/(1-MPC)
?G
Real GDP
?GDP
15
The Government Spending Multiplier
16
The Tax Multiplier
  • A tax cut increases disposable income, and leads
    to added consumption spending. Income will
    increase by a multiple of the decrease in taxes.
  • A tax cut has no direct impact on spending. The
    multiplier for a change in taxes is smaller than
    the multiplier for a change in government
    spending.

17
The Tax Multiplier
18
The Effect on GDP of a Decrease in Taxes

CIG(X-M)
45o
CIG(X-M)
Simple tax multiplier ?GDP/?T -MPC/(1-MPC)
Real GDP
?GDP
19
The Balanced-Budget Multiplier
  • The balanced-budget multiplier is the ratio of
    change in the equilibrium level of output to a
    change in government spending where the change in
    government spending is balanced by a change in
    taxes so as not to create any deficit.

20
The Balanced Budget Multiplier
  • A factor that show that identical changes in
    government purchases and net taxes change real
    GDP demanded by that same amount

21
The Balanced-Budget Multiplier
22
Fiscal Policy Multipliers
23
Fiscal Policy in Practice
24
Introduction
  • Before the 1930s, fiscal policy was not
    explicitly used to influence the macroeconomy
  • The classical approach implied that natural
    market forces, by way of flexible prices, wages,
    and interest rates, would move the economy toward
    its potential GDP
  • Thus there appeared to be no need for government
    intervention in the economy
  • Before the onset of the Great Depression, most
    economists believed that active fiscal policy
    would do more harm than good

25
The Great Depression and World War II
  • Three developments bolstered the use of fiscal
    policy
  • The publication of Keynes General Theory
  • War-time demand on production helped pull the
    U.S. out of the Great Depression
  • The Full Employment Act of 1946, which gave the
    federal government responsibility for promoting
    full employment and price stability

26
Automatic Stabilizers
  • Structural features of government spending and
    taxation that smooth fluctuations in disposable
    income over the business cycle
  • Examples include,
  • Our progressive income system with its increasing
    marginal income tax rates
  • Unemployment insurance
  • Welfare spending

27
The Economys Influenceon the Government Budget
  • Fiscal drag is the negative effect on the economy
    that occurs when average tax rates increase
    because taxpayers have moved into higher income
    brackets during an expansion.

28
The Golden Age of Keynesian Fiscal Policy to
Stagflation
  • The Early 1960s provided support for Keynesian
    theories
  • In particular, President Kennedys 1964 income
    tax cut did much to boost the economy and reduce
    unemployment
  • However, the 1970s were marked by significant
    supply-side shocks (increases in oil prices in
    addition to crop failures)
  • The economic ills brought about by these
    supply-side shocks to the economy could not be
    remedied by demand-side Keynesian economic
    theories

29
Lags in Fiscal Policy
  • The time required to approve and implement fiscal
    legislation may hamper its effectiveness and
    weaken fiscal policy as a tool of economic
    stabilization
  • In the case of an oncoming recession, it may take
    time to
  • Recognize the coming recession
  • Implement the policy
  • Let the policy have its impact

30
Discretionary Policy and Permanent Income
  • Permanent income is income that individuals
    expect to receive on average over the long run
  • To the extent that consumers base spending
    decisions on their permanent income, attempts to
    fine-tune the economy through discretionary
    fiscal policy will be less effective

31
Budgets, Deficits,and Public Policy
32
The Government Budget
  • A plan for government expenditures and revenues
    for a specified period, usually a year

33
The Federal Budget
  • The federal budget is the budget of the federal
    government.
  • The difference between the federal governments
    receipts and its expenditures is the federal
    surplus () or deficit (-).

34
The Federal Budget
35
Composition of Federal Expenditures Fiscal Year
1995
36
The Presidential Role in the Budget Process
  • Early in this century, the president had very
    little involvement in the development of the
    federal budget
  • By the mid-1970s the president had been given the
    resources to translate policy into a budget
    proposal to be presented to Congress
  • Office of Management and Budget (1921)
  • Employment Act of 1946 (Council of Economic
    Advisers)

37
The Presidential Role in the Budget Process
(continued)
  • The development of the presidents budget begins
    a year before it is submitted to Congress
  • The presidents proposed budget (The Budget of the
    United States Government) is supported by the
    Economic Report of the President
  • The budget is submitted in January for the
    upcoming fiscal year October 1-September 30

38
The Congressional Role in the Budget Process
  • House and Senate budget committees review the
    presidents budget proposal
  • An overall budget outline is approved by Congress
    (budget resolution) and given to the various
    congressional committees and subcommittees which
    authorize federal spending

39
Budget Deficits and Surpluses
  • When budgeted expenditures exceed projected tax
    revenues, the budget is projected to be in
    deficit
  • When projected tax revenues exceed budgeted
    expenditures, the budget is projected to be in
    surplus

40
(No Transcript)
41
The Federal Government Surplus () or Deficit
(-) as a Percentage of GDP, 1970 I-2003 II
42
Problems with the Budget Process
  • Continuing resolutions
  • A continuing resolution is a budget agreement
    that allows agencies, in the absence of an
    approved budget, to spend at the rate of the
    previous years budget
  • Continuing resolutions are implemented due to
    delays in the budget process or problems with
    content of the budget
  • Overlapping committee authority
  • Length of the budget process
  • Uncontrollable budget items
  • Overly detailed budget

43
Entitlement Programs
  • Guaranteed benefits for those who qualify under
    government transfer programs such as Social
    Security and Aid to Families with Dependent
    Children
  • These programs represent a major fixed element
    of the budget, unless laws are passed to change
    eligibility requirements

44
Suggestions for Budget Reform
  • Biennial budget
  • The elimination of line item details before
    Congress
  • Congress would consider only the overall budget
    for a given agency, rather that detailed line
    items

45
Rationale for Budget Deficits
  • Large capital projects (highways, etc.)
  • The benefits from these project will benefit more
    than current taxpayers, so deficit financing is
    appropriate
  • Major Wars
  • Keynesian economics points to the use of deficits
    to stimulate the economy during periods of
    economic slowdown
  • Automatic stabilizers tend to increase deficits,
    since during times of recession, taxes are
    reduced while unemployment insurance and welfare
    payments are increased

46
Budget Philosophies
  • Annually balanced budgetBudget philosophy prior
    to the Great Depression aimed at equating
    revenues with expenditures, except during times
    of war
  • Cyclically balanced budgetBudget philosophy
    calling for budget deficits during recessions to
    be financed by budget surpluses during expansions
  • Functional FinanceA budget philosophy aiming
    fiscal policy at achieving potential GDP rather
    than balancing budgets either annually or over
    the business cycle

47
Crowding Out and Crowding In
  • Crowding out--When the government undertakes
    expansionary fiscal policy, interest rates
    increase due to competition for borrowed funds
    and increased transactions demand for money
  • As a result, private investment is crowded out
    due to increases in public investment
  • Crowding inIf expansionary fiscal policy raises
    the general level of prosperity in the economy,
    private investors may expect greater
    investment-related profits, causing private
    investment to increase

48
Deficits and Interest Rates
  • Financing Deficits
  • Taxes
  • Bonds (borrowing)
  • Printing Money
  • Ricardian Equivalence

49
The Federal Deficit Versus the National Debt
  • The federal deficit is a flow variable measuring
    the amount by which expenditures exceed revenues
    in a particular year
  • The national debt is a stock variable measuring
    the accumulation of past deficits
  • In the U.S., it took 200 years for the national
    debt to reach 1 trillion
  • After the debt reached this level, it took only
    15 years for the debt to reach the 5 trillion
    level

50
The Debt and Problems
  • http//www.brillig.com/debt_clock/
  • Arguments about the Debt
  • We have to pay it back
  • We owe it to ourselves (much less so than years
    ago).

51
Reducing the Deficit
  • Line-item veto (signed into law in April 1996
    struck by the Supreme Court in 1998)
  • A provision to allow the president to reject
    particular portions of the budget rather than
    simply accept or reject the entire budget
  • Balanced budget amendment
  • Proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution
    requiring a balanced federal budget

52
Size of Government
53
The Debt
  • The federal debt is the total amount owed by the
    federal government. The debt is the sum of all
    accumulated deficits minus surpluses over time.
  • Some of the federal debt is held by the U.S.
    government itself and some by private
    individuals. The privately held federal debt is
    the private (non-government-owned) portion of the
    federal debt.

54
The Federal Government Debt as a Percentage of
GDP, 1970 I-2003 II
  • The percentage began to fall in the mid 1990s.

55
The Economys Influenceon the Government Budget
  • The full-employment budget is what the federal
    budget would be if the economy were producing at
    a full-employment level of output.

56
The Economys Influenceon the Government Budget
  • The cyclical deficit is the deficit that occurs
    because of a downturn in the business cycle.
  • The structural deficit is the deficit that
    remains at full employment.

57
Review Terms and Concepts
  • automatic stabilizers
  • balanced-budget multiplier
  • budget deficit
  • cyclical deficit
  • discretionary fiscal policy
  • disposable, or after-tax, income
  • federal budget
  • federal debt
  • federal surplus () or deficit (-)
  • fiscal drag
  • fiscal policy
  • full-employment budget
  • government spending multiplier
  • monetary policy
  • net taxes
  • privately held federal debt
  • structural deficit
  • tax multiplier

58
The Economys Influenceon the Government Budget
  • Automatic stabilizers are revenue and expenditure
    items in the federal budget that automatically
    change with the state of the economy in such a
    way as to stabilize GDP.

59
The Budget Deficits of the 1980s and 1990s
  • The tax cuts of the early 1980s together with
    large increases government spending caused the
    annual government deficit and the national debt
    to grow significantly
  • Although both fiscal policy measures stimulated
    the economy, the resulting tax revenues were not
    sufficient to manage the large government deficits

60
Fiscal Policy and the Natural Rate of Unemployment
  • If there is a natural rate of unemployment,
    fiscal policy that increases aggregate demand
    will appear to succeed in the short run because
    output and employment will both expand
  • But stimulating aggregate demand will, in the
    long run, result only in a higher price level,
    while the level of output will fall back to the
    economys potential

61
Feedback Effects of Fiscal Policy on Aggregate
Supply
  • Both automatic stabilizers and discretionary
    fiscal policy may affect individual incentives to
    work spend, save, and invest, though these
    effects are usually unintended

62
Appendix The Government Expenditures and Tax
Multipliers
63
Appendix The Government Multiplier with Income
Taxes
64
Appendix The Multiplier with Income Taxes and
Variable Imports
65
Appendix ADeriving the Fiscal Policy
Multipliers
  • The government spending and tax multipliers
    algebraically

66
Appendix ADeriving the Fiscal Policy Multipliers
  • The balanced-budget multiplier is found by
    combining the effects of government spending and
    taxes
  • The balanced-budget multiplier equals one. An
    increase in G and T by one dollar each causes a
    one-dollar increase in Y.

67
Appendix B The Case In WhichTax Revenues
Depend on Income
68
Appendix B The Case In WhichTax Revenues
Depend on Income
69
Appendix B The Case In WhichTax Revenues
Depend on Income
  • The Government Spending and Tax Multipliers
    Algebraically

70
Appendix B The Case In WhichTax Revenues
Depend on Income
  • The government spending and tax multipliers when
    taxes are a function of income are derived as
    follows

71
A Contractionary Gap Can be Closed by
Expansionary Fiscal Policy
Potential output
Price Level
SRAS
AD
AD
Real GDP
contractionary gap
72
An Expansionary Gap Can be Closed by
Contractionary Fiscal Policy
Potential output
Price Level
SRAS
AD
AD
Real GDP
expansionary gap
73
The Leakages/Injections Approach
  • Taxes (T) are a leakage from the flow of income.
    Saving (S) is also a leakage.
  • In equilibrium, aggregate output (income) (Y)
    equals planned aggregate expenditure (AE), and
    leakages (S T) must equal planned injections (I
    G). Algebraically,
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