Public Finance 5530 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 25
About This Presentation
Title:

Public Finance 5530

Description:

the field of economics that studies government activities and the alternative ... 'Big City' mayors coalition. Municipal empowerment at the federal level ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:64
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 26
Provided by: wal494
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Public Finance 5530


1
Public Finance 5530
  • Introduction
  • Topic One Market Failure

2
What is Public Finance?
  • the field of economics that studies government
    activities and the alternative means of financing
    government expenditures (Hyman, 1999)
  • the taxing and spending activities of
    government (Rosen et al, 2003)
  • how the revenue raising and expenditure
    decisions of government impact on the
    distribution of income, the pattern of resource
    allocation and both price stability and
    employment (Auld/Miller, 1982)

3
Canadian Governmental System
  • The basis is found (of course) in the
    Constitution
  • It shall be lawful for the Queen, by and with
    the consent of the Senate and House of Commons,
    to make laws for the Peace, Order and Good
    Government of Canada, in relation to all matters
    not coming within the classes of subjects by this
    act assigned exclusively to the Legislatures of
    the Provinces

4
This is the POGG Clause
  • Things were done for the common good
  • Think of how this made us different from
  • m the Americans
  • Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness
  • Individual versus communal
  • Have we changed?

5
Role of the Federal Government
  • Federal Government has specific taxing powers
  • The power to raise money by any system or mode of
    taxation
  • Early taxes focused on imports excise
  • With power to tax went responsibility
  • Defense, navigation, trade, justice, banking,
    currency, and other areas

6
Balancing Responsibilities
  • Even in 1867, the Feds provided statutory
    subsidies to the provinces
  • They were not expected to grow!
  • Corporate (1916) and personal (1917) income tax
    came with WW1
  • Initial personal rate was ½
  • As time went on, the Feds assumed more spending
    control
  • Conditional grants, CPP, EI.

7
Provincial Level
  • Originally restricted to direct taxation
  • A direct tax is one imposed on the individual
    expected to bear the tax
  • Now both levels occupy all major tax fields
  • Major areas of provincial spending are health,
    education and welfare
  • Transfers from the Feds help pay for these

8
Municipal Government
  • Only authority comes from that legislated to them
    by their provincial government
  • Ex City of St. Johns Act
  • Role of counties/regional governments?
  • Currently there is an effort to change this
  • Big City mayors coalition
  • Municipal empowerment at the federal level
  • Dominant source of revenue is property tax

9
Where is the spending?
  • Social welfare
  • Health
  • Education
  • Infrastructure
  • Transportation, communication, sanitation
    services
  • Defense
  • Debt servicing

10
Market Failure
  • Why do Governments need to be involved in the
    economy?

11
Three Economic Questions
  • Every economy must address
  • What should be produced?
  • How should it be produced?
  • Who gets what is produced
  • In our economy, we turn to the competitive market
    model to answer these questions

12
The Joy of Competitive Markets!
  • We can go to the store and get whatever we want,
    even if it comes a great distance!
  • Link is supply and demand goods are available
    at a price the market is willing to pay
  • Market activities are conducted out of self
    interest
  • Not common good!
  • When it works, markets are said to be efficient

13
Efficient Markets
  • In efficient markets, self regulation determines
    prices and quantities
  • the invisible hand
  • Certain assumptions are necessary (P. 4)
  • Usefulness/enjoyment is derived from present and
    future consumption
  • Established and enforceable property rights exist
  • Markets exist for all goods
  • Firms behave competitively (no impact on prices)
  • No transaction costs to market participation
  • Participants have complete information

14
Fundamental Theorems
  • Under the conditions necessary for efficient
    markets, there is no better allocation of
    resources than that generated by competitive
    markets.
  • The government can foster equity by transfers
    from the advantaged to the disadvantaged

15
What does this mean?
  • The first theory refers to something called
    pareto efficiency
  • For every winner, theres a loser (zero-sum game)
  • While this is efficient, its not necessarily
    fair
  • More individual than communal

16
Can it be fair?
  • The second theorem addresses fairness
  • Fairness can be achieved by the redistribution of
    of income and wealth
  • Gee, sounds like From each according to his
    abilities, to each according to his needs.
  • Anyone know who said this?
  • The redistribution of income/wealth is a
    legitimate role of government.

17
When Assumptions are Violated
  • If the assumptions underlying efficient markets
    are violated, we have a condition known as market
    failure.
  • An example of this is what is known as a Public
    Good
  • A good whose consumption benefits more than one
    person or group

18
Public Goods
  • Characteristics
  • Non-rival in consumption providing the good to
    one person allows it to be provided to all at no
    additional cost
  • Lighthouse
  • In some cases, goods may also be non-excludable.
    This means that if they are provided to one
    person, they are automatically provided to all
    people
  • Goods that are both non-rival and non excludable
    are referred to as Pure Public Goods.

19
Public Goods
  • In some cases, public goods are said to be
    congestible, in that the quality of the benefit
    for each person goes down as the number of users
    increases
  • Park bench
  • In these cases, market failure occurs as the
    first assumption (and the second for pure public
    goods) is violated.

20
Who will provide?
  • So who will provide a public good?
  • Competitive firms would not be interested as
    pricing would be impossible
  • Would have to be voluntary
  • Free riders
  • Too much common good here so society (through
    the collective action of their government) must
    provide them

21
Externalities
  • Market failure resulting from the violation of
    assumptions 1 and 2
  • Occurs when anothers utility is affected through
    either consumption or production by another
  • For example, pollution is non-rival property
    rights (ownership) is not enforceable.
  • No market exists for pollution

22
Common Property Resources
  • Lack of ownership (property rights) means there
    is no economic incentive to keep a sustainable
    fishery
  • Government has not created property rights
  • The environment has the same issue who owns the
    environment? If theres no ownership, what
    incentive is there to act on the issue of global
    warming

23
Imperfect Competition
  • Types of imperfect competition
  • Monopolies
  • Some utilities (high entry costs)
  • Companies holding special patents (Microsoft)
  • Oligopolies
  • Oil companies
  • Monopolistic competition
  • Sellers of unique products (sports teams)
  • In all cases, firms can affect price given
    certain conditions

24
Asymmetric Information
  • It is assumed all market participants have
    perfect information
  • Is this realistic what if you bought insurance
    and had the ability to influence the probability
    of the magnitude of a loss.
  • The insurance company wouldnt know
  • This is referred to as a Moral Hazard

25
Role of Government
  • Market failure can be addressed by government
  • Regulation of natural monopolies
  • Anti-trust laws
  • Regulation/protection of common ownership
    resources
  • Laws to regulate the impact of externalities
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com