Government Spending and Taxing

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fiscal Policy Lecture notes 10 Instructor: MELTEM INCE
Advertisements

Fiscal Policy The government helping stabilize the economy through taxing, spending, and borrowing.
1 Chapter 21 Fiscal Policy Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
Fiscal Policy and the Federal Budget
National Debt. What do we owe? April 2015 National Debt has reached $18.2 trillion Average of: $56,728 per person Average of: $154,161 per tax payer.
Fiscal Policy © 2010, TESCCC.
Using Fiscal Policy.   Fiscal Policy is the federal government’s use of taxes and government spending to affect the economy.  There are three primary.
1 Chapter 21 Fiscal Policy Key Concepts Key Concepts Summary Practice Quiz Internet Exercises Internet Exercises ©2002 South-Western College Publishing.
1 Ch. 10: The Federal Budget and Fiscal Policy James R. Russell, Ph.D., Professor of Economics & Management, Oral Roberts University ©2005 Thomson Business.
Chapter 3 Economic Challenges Facing Global and Domestic Business
Fiscal Policy If your family or you made a budget to calculate family expenses than you are practicing a key IDEA that is related to Fiscal Policy = Balancing.
Chapter 12: Fiscal Policy Major function of government is to stabilize the economy Prevent unemployment & Inflation Stabilization can be achieved by manipulating.
Paul Schneiderman, Ph.D., Professor of Finance & Economics, Southern New Hampshire University ©2008 South-Western.
© 2013 Cengage Learning. All rights reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.
FISCAL POLICY 11 C H A P T E R Fiscal Policy One major function of the government is to stabilize the economy (prevent unemployment or inflation). Stabilization.
Fiscal Policy. Fiscal Policy - the use of government spending (expenditures) and revenue collection (taxes) to influence the economy. 1. Congress’s Role.
Fiscal Policy: Fixing an Economy’s Health What is Fiscal Policy? The use of Government policies in order to stabilize the Business Cycle.
In This Lecture…..  Government Spending  Taxes  Deficits, Surpluses, and the Public Debt  Fiscal Policy: General Remarks  Demand-Side Fiscal Policy:
Fiscal policy topics 1  Sources of Federal revenue and expenditures  Expansionary and contractionary fiscal policy  Spending multiplier  Tax multiplier.
Macroeconomics, Part II Government Taxation and Spending, or Why Never to Give a Congressman Your Debit Card.
Fiscal Policy: Fixing an Economy’s Health Points to Remember  Prior to the Great Depression (1930’s) economists believed that the best way to stabilize.
Fiscal Policy Activities 30b by Advanced Placement Economics Teacher Resource Manual. National Council on Economic Education, New York, N.Y.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy - Government effort to control the economy and maintain stable prices, full employment, and economic growth. Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy – changes in government expenditures and taxation to achieve macroeconomic goals. Fiscal policy may affect whether the economy.
Lecture Nine Government budget and Fiscal Policy Cyclically Adjusted Budget Public Debt.
Economics Unit 4: Macroeconomics Vocabulary Review.
Chapter 14 Taxes and Government Spending. Taxes Tax – Financial charges imposed on individuals and businesses by a government Purposes of taxes To provide.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.11-1 Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy and the Public Debt.
MACROECONOMICS BU 204 SeminarSeven. Agenda Course Issues and Questions Course Issues and Questions Chapter Twelve Concepts and Q&A Chapter Twelve Concepts.
UNDERSTANDING TAXES AND GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT AND THE ECONOMY.
The Government & Fiscal Policy
13a – Fiscal Policy This web quiz may appear as two pages on tablets and laptops. I recommend that you view it as one page by clicking on the open book.
Chapter 8 fiscal policy, deficits, and debt
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy Chapter 15.
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Fiscal Policy Economics Mr. Bordelon.
Fiscal Policy UNIT 6 Chapter 15.
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Survey of Economics Irvin B. Tucker
Fiscal Policy How the government uses discretionary fiscal policy to influence the economies performance.
$20 Trillion and Counting
13 FISCAL POLICY Government Spending and Tax Policy Part 1.
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Fiscal Policy.
Taxes, Fiscal Policy, and Macroeconomic Concepts
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Fiscal Policy & Economic Theory
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Fiscal Policy Notes – AP Macroeconomics
SSEMA3-Explain how the government uses fiscal policy
Government Debt vs. Deficit
Fiscal Policy Notes – AP Macroeconomics
13 FISCAL POLICY Government Spending and Tax Policy Part 1.
Chapter 15 Fiscal Policy.
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
11 Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt O 11.1.
Government Spending and Taxing
Unit 5: Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Topic 8:Taxes and Spending
13 FISCAL POLICY. 13 FISCAL POLICY After studying this chapter, you will be able to: Describe the federal budget process and the recent history of.
Sources of Government Revenue
Government Debt vs. Deficit
Unit 5: Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Topic 8:Taxes and Spending
Offsets to Fiscal Policy
Presentation transcript:

Government Spending and Taxing 13-1 Fiscal Policy 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt

13-1 Fiscal Policy LO1-1 Explain expansionary and contractionary fiscal policy. LO1-2 Understand the difference between classical and Keynesian economics.

Fiscal Policy 13-1 Two Types of Fiscal Policy fiscal policy expansionary fiscal policy contractionary fiscal policy aggregate demand curve aggregate supply curve macroeconomic equilibrium Classical Versus Keynesian Economics classical economics Keynesian economics Laffer curve

Two Types of Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy is the use of federal government spending and taxes to achieve these economic goals. Expansionary fiscal policy uses an increase in federal government spending or a reduction in taxes to increase real GDP. Contractionary fiscal policy employs a decrease in federal government spending or an increase in taxes to decrease real GDP. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Two Types of Fiscal Policy The aggregate demand curve (AD) shows real gross domestic product that will be purchased at different price levels. The aggregate supply curve (AS) shows real gross domestic product that will be produced at different price levels. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Two Types of Fiscal Policy Macroeconomic equilibrium is the price level where the aggregate demand curve interests the aggregate supply curve. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

What fiscal policy would be used in a recession? Explain the goal. Two Types of Fiscal Policy fiscal policy expansionary fiscal policy contractionary fiscal policy aggregate demand curve aggregate supply curve macroeconomic equilibrium What fiscal policy would be used in a recession? Explain the goal. To fight a recession, expansionary fiscal policy would be used. The goal is to increase the aggregate demand curve by increasing government spending or decreasing taxes. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Two Types of Fiscal Policy expansionary fiscal policy contractionary fiscal policy aggregate demand curve aggregate supply curve macroeconomic equilibrium Assume that the economy has an inflation problem. What fiscal policy would be used? Explain. To combat inflation, contractionary fiscal policy would be used. The objective would be to decrease the aggregate demand curve by decreasing government spending or increasing taxes. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Classical Versus Keynesian Economics Classical economics is the theory that free markets will restore full employment in a recession without government intervention. This theory was introduced by Adam Smith in The Wealth of Nations. His theory was followed by most eighteenth- and nineteenth-century economists. Classical theory assumes that in the long run free markets will bring about full-employment equilibrium. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Classical Versus Keynesian Economics Keynesian economics is the theory that the federal government should increase or decrease aggregate demand to achieve economic goals. Keynesian economics is also called demand-side economics. Keynesian economics can also be used to fight inflation. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Classical Versus Keynesian Economics The Laffer curve, attributed to economist Arthur Laffer, shows the relationship between tax rates and total tax revenues. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Classical Versus Keynesian Economics classical economics Keynesian economics Laffer curve Assume an economy is in recession. Briefly explain the Keynesian versus classical prescription for recovery. Keynesian economics would prescribe that the federal government take an active role. Keynesians would call for expansionary fiscal policy. Classical economics would prescribe a passive role for the federal government. Instead of fiscal policy, the classical solution is to allow free markets to restore the economy to full employment. 13-1 Fiscal Policy

Government Budgets and Types of Taxes 13-2 LO2-1 Identify the categories of government spending and taxing at the national, state, and local levels. LO2-2 Understand progressive, regressive, and proportional types of taxation.

Government Budgets and Types of Taxes 13-2 Government Spending and Taxing Categories sales tax property tax The Art of Taxation tax base progressive tax regressive tax proportional tax

A sales tax is a tax on the value of the sale of a good or service. Government Spending and Taxing Categories A sales tax is a tax on the value of the sale of a good or service. A property tax is a tax on the value of assets. Property taxes are collected on the market value of homes, land, buildings, automobiles, and furniture. 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes

Government Spending and Taxing Categories sales tax property tax What are the transfer or entitlement programs of the major category and second largest category of federal government tax revenues? Transfer payments include Social Security, Medicare, Medicaid, food stamps, welfare, and unemployment compensation 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes

A tax base is the form of wealth that is subject to taxes. The Art of Taxation A tax base is the form of wealth that is subject to taxes. In addition to income, other examples of tax bases include land, buildings, automobiles, or furniture. A progressive tax charges a higher percentage as income rises. This type of tax follows the concept that those who have higher incomes can afford to pay higher tax rates. As the amount of taxable income rises, the tax rate rises. 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes

A regressive tax charges a lower percentage of income as income rises. The Art of Taxation A regressive tax charges a lower percentage of income as income rises. A proportional tax charges the same percentage of income, regardless of the size of income. One way to reform the federal tax system would be to eliminate all deductions, exemptions, and loopholes. Then simply apply the same tax rate, say, 20 percent of income to everyone. 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes

The Art of Taxation tax base progressive tax regressive tax proportional tax Relate percentages of income taxes, excise taxes, sales taxes, property taxes to the overall impact of progressive versus regressive taxation. Federal income taxes are progressive on taxable income. State and local government sales taxes and property taxes are regressive. Therefore, state and local government taxes tend to offset the progressive impact of federal taxation. 13-2 Government Budgets and Types of Taxes

Budget Deficits and the National Debt 13-3 LO1-1 Explain expansionary and contractionary fiscal policy. LO1-2 Understand the difference between classical and Keynesian economics.

Budget Deficits and the National Debt 13-3 The Federal Budget Balancing Act budget deficit budget surplus balanced budget treasury bill (T bill) treasury note treasury bond The National Debt national debt

A budget deficit occurs when government spending exceeds tax revenue. The Federal Budget Balancing Act A budget deficit occurs when government spending exceeds tax revenue. A budget surplus occurs when a tax revenues exceed government spending. A balanced budget is a budget in which government spending equals tax revenues. 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt

The Federal Budget Balancing Act A treasury bill (T bill) is a security that the federal government repays in one year or less. A treasury note is a security that the federal government repays between one to ten years. A treasury bond is a security that the federal government repays between twenty to thirty years. 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt

The Federal Budget Balancing Act budget deficit budget surplus balanced budget treasury bill (T bill) treasury note treasury bond Suppose you are a Keynesian economist. What are positive effects of government deficit spending on the economy? A Keynesian argues that federal government deficit spending stimulates the economy. As a result, aggregate demand increases and real GDP grows. Jobs are created, and the unemployment rate falls. 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt

The National Debt The national debt is the total amount owed by the federal government to owners of government securities. The national debt is the accumulation of federal deficits over time. The national debt crossed $1 trillion in 1982. After 14 years, the debt rose by $4 trillion to reach the $5 trillion mark in 1996. Fourteen years later, the national debt had grown by $8 trillion to over $13 trillion in 2010. 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt

The National Debt national debt What makes the national debt grow? What would reduce or eliminate growth in the national debt? Federal budget deficits are financed with borrowing using U.S. Treasury securities. Reducing deficits, balancing the budget, or budget surpluses would decrease the growth in the national debt. 13-3 Budget Deficits and the National Debt