Macroeconomics For Social Negotiators

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Chart 1: General Government Expenditure to GDP, % Source: World Economic Outlook Database, April 2011, International Monetary Fund.
Advertisements

L11200 Introduction to Macroeconomics 2009/10
Fiscal Policy Lecture notes 10 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Fiscal Policy. IMF Fiscal Indicators IMF Fiscal Monitor Crisis spreads to other countries Background Reading.
Instructor: MELTEM INCE
CHAPTERS IN ECONOMIC POLICY Part. II Unit 8 The dynamics of debt to GDP ratio.
Measuring GDP and Economic Growth Chapter 1 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Chapter 5 Policy Makers and the Money Supply © 2011 John Wiley and Sons.
Source: Mankiw (2000) Macroeconomics, Chapter 3 p Determinants of Demand for Goods and Services Examine: how the output from production is used.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2011 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Chapter 15: Saving, Capital Formation, and Financial Markets.
Chapter 7 Savings and Investment Process © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Macroeconomic Framework and Fiscal Policy Sanjeev Gupta, Fiscal Affairs Department IMF.
Macroeconomic Policy and Economic Performance: Chile’s Recent Experience Luis F. Céspedes Ministry of Finance-Chile.
Copyright 2005 © McGraw-Hill Ryerson Ltd.Slide 0.
Mr. Sloan Riverside Brookfield High school.  2 Hours and 10 Minutes Long  Section 1-Multiple Choice ◦ 70 Minutes Long ◦ Worth 2/3 of the Score  Section.
Fiscal policy 1. State Budget 2. Supply Side Economy 3. Government Expenditure Multiplier 4. Tax Multiplier 5. Expansionary Fiscal Policy 6. Crowding.
FISCAL POLICY LEGISLATIVE MANDATES Employment Act of 1946 Council of Economic Advisors (CEA) Joint Economic Committee (JEC)
1 Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial Markets?
Fiscal Policy Chapter 12. Stabilization The United States government has 4 basic goals in terms of economic policy Full employment Price Stability High.
Spending, Income, and Interest Rates Chapter 3 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
The Economic Picture Understanding the global economy Prof. Patrick GOUGEON, ESCP-EAP Understanding the economic system: “The circular flow” Understanding.
Measuring the Economy. The Economy as a Circular Flow Resources FirmsHouseholds Goods and Services Expenditures Income.
FISCAL POLICY Definition of Fiscal Policy a government policy for dealing with the budget (especially with taxation and borrowing)
National Income Accounts and Balance of Payments Accounting.
The Economic Picture Understanding the global economy Prof. Patrick GOUGEON, ESCP-EAP Understanding the economic system: “The circular flow” Understanding.
Government budget Budget deficits and debt 1.  Recall, when we talked about national savings:  T – G is not a budget surplus  Because it is missing.
Econ 102 Fall Fiscal Policy 1.Discretionary fiscal policy- 2. Automatic stabilizers.
High Inflation Hyperinflation: very high inflation Inflation is high usually due to high nominal money growth Nominal money grows usually because of high.
Fiscal Policy (Government Spending) Fiscal Policy and Government Spending.
Chapter 15 Government Spending and Its Financing Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education Canada.
The Government Budget Government Expenditures Less Government Revenues = Budget Surplus or Deficit* * Surplus if positive, deficit if negative +/- Δ in.
Lecture outline Golden rule of public finance Case of the Great Britain Single budgeting vs. double budgeting Seignorage Refinancing.
Saving, Investment, and the Financial System. Human capital Physical Capital The Source of Physical Capital What is the relationship between Savings.
The Government Budget, Foreign Borrowing, and the Twin Deficits
Interest Rates, Saving and Investment Fiscal Policy
The Government and Fiscal Policy
Fiscal Policy Chapter 15.
Budgetary Deficit and Public Debt
The AP Macroeconomics Exam you will take is comprised of two parts, a multiple choice portion, which counts 60 points for 60 questions, or roughly 2/3.
Short-Term Finance and Planning
POLITICS, DEFICITS, AND DEBT
Balance of Payments.
Loanable Fund and Exchange Markets
Macroeconomics ECON 2301 Summer Session 1, 2008
Sponge Quiz #1: In Year 1, the cost of a market basket of goods was $720. In Year 2, the cost of the same basket was $780. What was the consumer price.
13 FISCAL POLICY Government Spending and Tax Policy Part 1.
Savings and investment
Economics Sample Unit 4 Macroeconomics
Budget Balance and Government Debt
Principles of Economics
Government Taxing and Spending
Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy and Monetary Policy : Deficits and the Public Debt Lesson 33 Sections 30, 31.
Economics - Notes for Teachers
12 C H A P T E R FISCAL POLICY.
Saving, Investment, and the Financial System
© 2016 Pearson Education Ltd. All rights reserved.19-1© 2016 Pearson Education Ltd. All rights reserved.19-1 Chapter 1 Why Study Money, Banking, and Financial.
13 FISCAL POLICY Government Spending and Tax Policy Part 1.
The Government and Fiscal Policy
Macroeconomics Review
12 C H A P T E R FISCAL POLICY.
Deficits and the Public Debt
Fiscal Policy Krugman Section 4 Modules 20 and 21.
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy Krugman Section 4 Modules 20 and 21.
Saving, Investment, and the Financial System
The Economics of Money, Banking and Financial Markets
12 C H A P T E R FISCAL POLICY.
Government Revenue and Expenditure
Federal Budget Significance of a Government Budget p. 455
Presentation transcript:

Macroeconomics For Social Negotiators

Public Deficit and Debt Gustavo Rinaldi Ph.D.

Government Surplus or Deficit Government Surplus or Deficit General Government Net Lending (+) or Net Borrowing (-) Deficitt = i Bt-1 + Gt – Tt

Budget Deficit . i = interest rate Bt-1 = debt on december 31st of the ______previous year

General government net lending/borrowing

General government net lending/borrowing

1 + i = 1 + r 1 + p Real interest rate p Is the inflation rate i Is the nominal interest rate

Inflation Adjusted Budget Deficit . r = real interest rate Bt-1 = debt inherited from the previous year

Inflation Adjusted Budget Deficit Deficit = r Bt-1 + Gt – Tt Deficitt = interests + primary deficit

interests on the debt r Bt-1 real interest payments i Bt-1 nominal expenditure

i Bt-1 /GDP

Primary Budget Deficit Gt – Tt Gt it does not include monetary transfers (pensions, benefits, subsidies to firms, etc.). T includes taxes and transfers (T = net taxes)

General government primary net lending/borrowing

General government primary net lending/borrowing

Sources of government funding Taxes Sales of public assets Dividends from state owned firms Borrowing Printing money

Sources of government funding Taxes Sales of public assets Dividends from state owned firms Borrowing Printing money

Government sells bonds To the CB : Monetary Finance To private: Debt Creation We assume that only creates debt.

Deficits create and increase Debts Bt - Bt-1 = r Bt-1 + Gt – Tt

Deficit creates and increases Debt Bt - Bt-1 = r Bt-1 + Gt – Tt Bt = r Bt-1 + Bt-1 + Gt – Tt Bt = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt

In general B1 = (1+r) B0 + G1 – T1 If B1 = B0 B0 = (1+r) B0 + G1 – T1 Stabilization In general B1 = (1+r) B0 + G1 – T1 If B1 = B0 B0 = (1+r) B0 + G1 – T1

interests = primary surplus Stabilization in this case B0 = B0+B0r + G1 – T1 0 = B0r + G1 – T1 B0r = T1 – G1 interests = primary surplus

Which resources we use to serve the il debt? GDP mainly

B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt Debt / GDP B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt

(gross) Debt / GDP

B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt Debt / GDP B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt Multiply by Yt-1/ Yt-1 = 1

B t = Yt-1(1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt-1 Yt Debt / GDP B t = Yt-1(1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt Yt-1 Yt

Debt / GDP Yt-1 = 1 Yt 1 + gy gy = GDP growt rate

B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt (1+gy) Yt-1 Yt Debt / GDP B t = (1+r) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt (1+gy) Yt-1 Yt

B t = (1+i) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt (1+) (1+gy)Yt-1 Yt Debt / GDP B t = (1+i) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt (1+) (1+gy)Yt-1 Yt

B t = (1+r-gy) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt-1 Yt Debt / GDP B t = (1+r-gy) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt-1 Yt approximation

B t - Bt-1 = (r-gy) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt-1 Yt-1 Yt Debt / GDP = B t - Bt-1 = (r-gy) Bt-1 + Gt – Tt_ Yt Yt-1 Yt-1 Yt

Growth adjusted real interests on debt (r-gy) Bt-1 = Growth adjusted real interests Yt-1 on debt r and g have opposite effects on Bt/Yt

Debt / GDP If g > r with G=T Debt/GDP decrease Se g < r with G=T Debt/GDP increases GDP growth is a way to reduce Debt/GDP

Debt/GDP in Italy 1861-2007

Debt/GDP in Italy 46-14

Primary Surplus 1988-2014

Public Finance Strategies Balanced Budget. Balanced Budget over the Business Cycle. Surplus in growth years, deficit in recessions. Balance in growth years, deficit in recessions. EU Fiscal Compact Sales of Public Assets (privatizations) Monetary Finance. Financial Repression (capital controls and portfolio constraints) Nominal GDP growth > Debt Growth (national money).

Fiscal Compact Maximum deficit 0,5% of GDP Every year: Bt/Yt – Bt-1/Yt-1 = ( Bt-1/Yt-1 – 60 ) / 20

Recommended Reading http://www.imf.org/external/pubs/ft/weo/2012/02/pdf/c3.pdf