Debt & Deficits April 2009 W&L Econ 102 Smitka. US$11 trillion in national debt.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Copyright © 2004 South-Western Mods 17-21, 30 Macro Analysis Part IV.
Advertisements

Savings Deficits Links between the Domestic and the International Sectors Econ 102 Winter 2001 Mr. Smitka.
Copyright © 2002 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved CHAPTER 14 The Budget Balance, the National Debt, and Investment.
Chapter Fifteen1 A PowerPoint  Tutorial to Accompany macroeconomics, 5th ed. N. Gregory Mankiw Mannig J. Simidian ® CHAPTER FIFTEEN Government Debt.
Chapter Fifteen1 CHAPTER FIFTEEN Government Debt.
A Macroeconomic Theory of the Open Economy
Debt and Deficits in the face of Baby Boom Retirement Winter 2006 Economics 102.
Fiscal Stimulus and the Deficit
Deficits and Debt Chapter 12 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin.
The Debt Crisis. Key things to know What is the national debt? the sum of all federal bills, notes and bonds that have been issued by the Treasury and.
Deficit, Surpluses, and the Public Debt Chapter 18.
America’s National Debt and Long-Term Outlook An Overview of the Challenge and the Implications for Young People March 2009.
AP Economics Mr. Bordelon
The link between domestic savings, foreign savings, and domestic investment
Macroeconomics Unit 12 Deficits, Surpluses, Debt Top Five Concepts.
Copyright © 2006 Pearson Education Canada Fiscal Policy 24 CHAPTER.
22 Aggregate Supply and Aggregate Demand
© 2003 McGraw-Hill Ryerson Limited. International Dimensions of Monetary and Fiscal Policy Chapter 17.
Ch. 14: Fiscal Policy Federal budget process and recent history of outlays, tax revenues, deficits, and debts Supply-Side Economics Controversies on effects.
Chapter 15: Government Debt & Budget Deficit
Chapter Fourteen Economic Interdependence. Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.14 | 2 Countries are not independent of one another;
Fiscal Policy. The Government Budget Constraint The Arithmetic of Deficits and Debt –The budget deficit in year t equals: is the government debt at.
Chapter 11 and 15.  The use of government taxes and spending to manipulate the economy. Chapter 11 2.
Debt Crisis Government Debt and Debt Crisis 6 th September 2011.
 The government generally spends more than it gets in revenue  When expenditures > revenue: budget deficit  If, however, expenditures = revenue, government.
Deficits and Debt Chapter 12 Copyright © 2010 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Principles of Economics: Macroeconomics.
The population structure of an ageing population has more older people than younger people because few people are being born and people are living to be.
11 FISCAL POLICY CHAPTER.
Deficit Spending and Public Debt
Copyright © 2008 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 32 Government Debt and Deficits.
Gov’t Policy Macro Unit 5. Which is… During a given time period, your spending exceeds your earnings debtdeficit surplus During a given time period, your.
The Government Budget What are the sources of government revenue? How does the government allocate its revenue? What is the difference between deficit.
Chapter 13Copyright ©2010 by South-Western, a division of Cengage Learning. All rights reserved ECON Designed by Amy McGuire, B-books, Ltd. McEachern 2010-
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Addison-Wesley. All rights reserved. Chapter 14 Deficit Spending and The Public Debt.
Fiscal Policy and Government Borrowing A2 Economics Presentation 2005.
Facing America’s Long-Term Budget Challenges Brian Riedl Grover M. Hermann Fellow for Federal Budgetary Affairs The Heritage Foundation.
Chapter Saving, Investment, and the Financial System 18.
Growing National Debt Should we be worried?. Federal Deficit Federal Debt Leads to a larger $16.7 Trillion.
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.
The Short Run: Countercyclical Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy In the short run Has demand-side effects on output and employment Countercyclical fiscal policy.
1 Chapter 12 Budget Balance and Government Debt. 2 Budget Terms A Budget Surplus exists when Tax Revenues are greater than expenditures and is the difference.
The IMF Benjamin Graham The IMF Benjamin Graham. Today’s Plan Housekeeping Reading quiz From Last week: How deficits become crises For today: The IMF.
U.S. Government Budget Why can’t we balance it?.
Agenda, Check 30/31 Review LPM & LFM Budget Balance Interest Rates & Monetary Policy Read: 32/33 (Unit 5 guide posted)
POLITICS, DEFICITS, AND DEBT The social security debate It’s the demography stupid!
Objectives After studying this chapter, you will able to  Explain what determines aggregate supply  Explain what determines aggregate demand  Explain.
Module 30 focuses on Fiscal Policy. 1. How does the Government Stabilizes the Economy? The Government has two different tool boxes it can use: 1. Fiscal.
Do the Old Gain at the Expense of the Young? An Economic View of Social Security, Medicare, and the Government Budget Jim Luke Professor of Economics Lansing.
Copyright © 2014 Cengage Learning ECONOMIC POLICY Chapter Sixteen.
CHAPTER 12 AP I. FISCAL POLICY-THE USE OF GOVERNMENT SPENDING AND TAXATION TO MAINTAIN A STABLE ECONOMY. II. FISCAL POLICY AND THE AD/AS MODEL A. DISCRETIONARY.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Chapter 15: Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt Copyright © 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Balance of Payments Benjamin Graham Lecture 13: Balance of Payments Benjamin Graham.
Our National Debt What is our current national debt? How did we get into this situation? What can be done to solve this problem?
7 AGGREGATE DEMAND AND AGGREGATE SUPPLY CHAPTER.
Government Debt – Chapter 19 8 th and 9 th Chapter 16 7th.
Copyright © 2005 Pearson Education Canada Inc.11-1 Chapter 11 Fiscal Policy and the Public Debt.
The National Debt Chapter #20. Introduction There is limit to how large a national debt a country can support ( if too large, econ could be in fragile.
Facing America’s Long-Term Budget Challenges Brian Riedl Grover M. Hermann Fellow for Federal Budgetary Affairs The Heritage Foundation June 19, 2006.
© OnlineTexts.com p. 1 Chapter 13 Budget Deficits and the National Debt.
Review: How does the Government Stabilizes the Economy?
Section 6 Lecture January 2016 Mr. Gammie
Lecture 13: Balance of Payments Benjamin Graham
National Debt and Annual Deficits
Fiscal Policy Notes – AP Macroeconomics
Lecture 13: Balance of Payments Benjamin Graham
Lecture 13: Balance of Payments Benjamin Graham
Fiscal Policy Notes – AP Macroeconomics
Taxes & Government Budget
Deficits and the Public Debt
Chapter 12 – Government and Fiscal Policy
Presentation transcript:

Debt & Deficits April 2009 W&L Econ 102 Smitka

US$11 trillion in national debt

State / local debt modest in macro terms Remember, they’re not allowed to run big deficits!

History shows current debt level doesn’t represent a short-run “crisis”

Huge structural deficits [blue] even corrected for cyclical (recession-driven) component

Even when adjusted to real (share of GDP) level

And lots of debt held by non-residents

Because private savings low Remember (S-I) + (T-G) = (X-M) and with low S and low T...

No help this time around! Remember C has fallen savings rate has risen And while historically monetary policy eventually shifts savings a bit....

Sum of Effects Deficits exceed savings (net of investment) – Hence tend to drive up i And lower I and increase the trade deficit (X-M) In other words, (modest) crowding out = lower LR growth Deficits financed by non-residents – We owe some of our taxes to the Chinese & Saudis – But we owe in US dollars So no Mexico-style foreign exchange crisis is possible But in the future we will have to tighten our belts ( cut some combination of C, I, G ) to export more and import less

How repay? We can’t – and (fortunately!) we don’t have to! – We simply roll over our [$11 trillion and growing...] debt When $10 bil comes due, we mail out $10 bil in checks – And institutional investors buy $10 bil in newly issued debt – But interest costs matter If debt-to-GDP ratio is high, interest costs can explode – But much debt is long-term so stable if high i temporary – Nevertheless.... We cannot allow debt-to-GDP to rise forever

Stability Stability requires covering the cost of debt i Net of growth At a zero deficit, D’ = D (1 + i) debt growth Y’ = Y (1 + g) economic growth – So need budget surplus of D/Y * (i – g) to stabilize If i = 4%, g = 2% and 100% debt to GDP – We need a surplus of 2% of GDP And 200% requires 4% of GDP, still manageable Of course at present we have a deficit, so the swing in tax rates must be larger

Long run issues Baby boomers will (are starting to!) retire – Those born in 1948 qualify for Medicare in 2013 – Social security is roughly balanced We might need to raise taxes by 2% of GDP, easy to manage – Medicare is NOT stable We need to raise taxes by 4% (under the optimistic scenario) – And by more with (a) greater longevity and (b) higher healthcare expenses, both looking likely... and don’t you want (a) longevity?! From a LR budgetary perspective healthcare is the top priority, by a large measure

Addendum All retirement is Pay-Go – We cannot save as a society for retirement Fallacy of composition between individual and macro – Small countries have wiggle room: they can accumulate foreign assets to finance eventual trade deficits. But not the U.S. – The services and goods you consume at age 65 in retirement in 2054 have to be produced in 2052 For you to consume those working can’t – In past history children only briefly cared for parents Life cycle transfers were (a) within the family (b) from old to young Now they’ll be (a) outside the family (b) from young to old

Addendum, continued So will saving be voluntarily or compulsory? Voluntary = private savings to buy assets of retirees Involuntary = govt financed transfers – Social security, medicare » Public education and child care are conceptually similar! – Voluntarism isn’t reliable People cashing their 401-K’s this year face poverty No guarantee the young will buy when you need to sell – But since the young don’t vote, and the increasingly numerous elderly do, won’t politics push us towards tax-funded systems?

Don’t rue this! Our society is fortunate that people live long enough to retire! – Plus we are beginning this process – With really low tax rates, unlike the EU But in a steep recession so we can’t start yet – And high debt-to-GDP levels will raise the cost, modestly How can your generation avoid this? – Have lots and lots of children!! You’d have to fund childcare – But your parents will still want to retire, so it really doesn’t help you – So don’t retire until age and then retire to Mexico? How will the politics of this social compact evolve? A good senior thesis topic!