Fiscal Policy Jeopardy Federal Budget Spending Tools Aggregate Demand Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Fiscal Policy.
Advertisements

Fiscal Policy The government helping stabilize the economy through taxing, spending, and borrowing.
Today’s Schedule – 11/21 Government Spending PPT Presidential Budget Analysis HW – Read 15.1/15.2.
Fiscal Policy MT 3 LT 2. Question The economy is not growing, people are losing jobs, and people are not spending money. Should the government attempt.
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.
Aggregate Demand The quantity of real GDP demanded, Y, is the total amount of final goods and services produced in the United States that households (C),
Chapter 10: Fiscal Policy
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.
Chapter 14.  The Government’s Authority to Tax  Purpose of Taxation  The Power to Tax ▪ 1 st Power given to Congress  Limits on the Power to Tax ▪
Fiscal Policy.  Fiscal policy refers to government policies, like taxes, government purchases, and laws. –Taxation policies –Government purchasing (buying.
ECONOMIC POLICY A BRIEF OVERVIEW HONORS GOVERNMENT.
Taxes & Gov’t Spending Fiscal Policy Monetary Policy Potpourri Federal Reserve & More Monetary Policy
UNIT 3 MACROECONOMICS Government taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, debts.
Fiscal Policy Taxes and Spending. Agenda Whiteboards (10 minutes) Notes (20 minutes) Video (5-10 minutes)
What are Taxes? Why have Taxes? Funding Government Programs Allow governments to provide services and operate Taxes & the Constitution This is the first.
Warm-up 5/10/12  Yesterday we talked about welfare programs to help people in need. How does the government pay for these programs?  What limits how.
National Debt v. Budget Deficit. Government Spending Vocab terms related to National Debt & Budget Deficit Revenue = money collected by the government.
The Tools of Fiscal Policy. When is the Fiscal Year? October 1 to September 30. FY2014 will begin this coming Oct. 1.
© 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.
FED Monetary Policy Monetary Policy Fiscal Policy Vocab ?
FISCAL POLICY What government can do for the economy.
ECON chapter 9 1. __________ affect the factors of production & therefore, resource allocation.
Chapter 15.  Setting Fiscal Policy: The Federal Budget  Fiscal year  Agencies write proposals (OMB)  Executive Branch creates a budget  Congress.
Fiscal Policy Use of government spending and revenue collection to influence the economy.
Fiscal Policy- the use of gov’t spending and taxing to influence the economy Chapter 15, Sections 1 & 3.
Chapter 15SectionMain Menu Fiscal Policy and the Federal Budget The federal budget is a written document indicating the amount of money the government.
Congress The President BUDGET TaxesSpending Fiscal Policy.
Ch. 25 Section 3 Managing the Economy. Surpluses and Deficits Budgets are built on forecasts or predictions of the future Budgets are built on forecasts.
Fiscal Policy. Fiscal Policy - the use of government spending (expenditures) and revenue collection (taxes) to influence the economy. 1. Congress’s Role.
Fiscal Policy How the government collects and spends money to meet broad economic goals.
STARTER How can government use taxation and spending to smooth out 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.
Today’s Schedule – 11/20 PPT – Federal Spending – Fiscal Policy Filing Taxes HW – Read 15.1/15.2.
Transparency 16-1 What Are the Major Federal Taxes? Personal income tax Corporate income tax Social security tax.
TEST REVIEW MACRO UNIT-3.
Macroeconomics, Part II Government Taxation and Spending, or Why Never to Give a Congressman Your Debit Card.
Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s Modified from a game Developed by Presentation © All rights Reserved
Jeopardy Terms Steady as you go Policies Who’s Who? Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Schools of thought.
Chapter 14 Taxes and Government Spending. Section 1: What are Taxes? Tax: required payment to a local, state, or national government What is tax money.
Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy - Government effort to control the economy and maintain stable prices, full employment, and economic growth. Fiscal Policy.
{ Topic 8:Taxes and Spending.  Governments collect taxes to pay for programs, but taxes can have powerful effects on the general economy  The federal.
What is a budget surplus and a budget deficit? A budget surplus is when extra money is left over in a budget after expenses are paid. A budget deficit.
FISCAL POLICY AND THE FEDERAL BUDGET. Key Concept: Government influences the economy by: Collecting Spending and Borrowing money.
Fiscal Policy and Taxes Test Review Ch. 14 and 15.
Economics Unit 4: Macroeconomics Vocabulary Review.
Ch Taxes & Govt. Spending Sect. 1 - What are Taxes Tax - Payments to the govt. that allow the govt. to operate The Power to Tax - Article 1, Section.
Chapter 14 Taxes and Government Spending. Taxes Tax – Financial charges imposed on individuals and businesses by a government Purposes of taxes To provide.
Short-Run Economic Fluctuations Business Cycle Expansion Peak Contraction Trough.
UNDERSTANDING TAXES AND GOVERNMENT SPENDING GOVERNMENT AND THE ECONOMY.
What is a sin tax? What is its purpose and function as a government restriction on the use of individual property? A sin tax is a relatively high tax.
Government Revenue and Spending
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy.
Fiscal Policy UNIT 6 Chapter 15.
Chapter 11 Fiscal policy Economics, 8th Edition Boyes/Melvin.
FISCAL POLICY.
Week 7 Vocabulary Review
The Tools of Fiscal Policy
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Government Spending and Taxing
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
Taxes, spending, fiscal policy, deficits, surpluses, national debt
Government Spending and Taxing
Unit 5: Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Fiscal Policy: Spending & Taxing
Topic 8:Taxes and Spending
Unit 5: Fiscal and Monetary Policy
Topic 8:Taxes and Spending
Presentation transcript:

Fiscal Policy Jeopardy Federal Budget Spending Tools Aggregate Demand Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy Taxes

$100 Question from Taxes A required payment to a local, state, or national government

$100 Answer from Taxes What is a tax

$200 Question from Taxes Income received by the government from tax collection

$200 Answer from Taxes What is revenue

$300 Question from Taxes The three types of tax structures

$300 Answer from Taxes What are proportional, progressive, and regressive

$400 Question from Taxes This funds Social Security and Medicare

$400 Answer from Taxes What is FICA (Federal Income Contributions Act)

$500 Question from Taxes The four characteristics of a good tax

$500 Answer from Taxes What are simplicity, efficiency, certainty, and equity

$100 Question from Federal Budget A written document indicating the amount of money the government expects to receive and how they will spend it

$100 Answer from Federal Budget What is a federal budget

$200 Question from Federal Budget During this step Congress makes changes to the budget and sends the amended budget to the President

$200 Answer from Federal Budget What is Step 3

$300 Question from Federal Budget Occurs then the government spends more than it takes in

$300 Answer from Federal Budget What is budget deficit

$400 Question from Federal Budget The total amount of money the federal government owes to bondholders

$400 Answer from Federal Budget What is the national debt

$500 Question from Federal Budget A type of loan with a promise to repay with interest

$500 Answer from Federal Budget What is a bond

$100 Question from Spending Programs that lawmakers are required by existing laws to spend money on

$100 Answer from Spending What is mandatory spending

$200 Question from Spending Spending that government can adjust; increase or decrease

$200 Answer from Spending What is discretionary spending

$300 Question from Spending Social welfare programs that people are entitled to if they meet certain requirements

$300 Answer from Spending What are entitlements

$400 Question from Spending Largest category of federal spending

$400 Answer from Spending What is Social Security

$500 Question from Spending Pays the salaries of people in the army, navy, air force, marines and civilian employees. Largest portion of discretionary spending.

$500 Answer from Spending What is defense spending

$100 Question from Tools Fiscal policy like higher spending and tax cuts that encourage growth

$100 Answer from Tools What is expansionary fiscal policy

$200 Question from Tools Fiscal policy like lower spending and higher taxes that reduce economic growth

$200 Answer from Tools What is contractionary fiscal policy

$300 Question from Tools The policy used to decrease unemployment

$300 Answer from Tools What is expansionary

$400 Question from Tools The policy used to decrease inflation

$400 Answer from Tools What is contractionary

$500 Question from Tools This policy reduces the budget deficit

$500 Answer from Tools What is contractionary

$100 Question from Aggregate Demand The sum of all supply and demand in an economy

$100 Answer from Aggregate Demand What is Aggregate

$200 Question from Aggregate Demand The four components of Aggregate Demand

$200 Answer from Aggregate Demand What are C + I + G + NX

$300 Question from Aggregate Demand Reasons why Aggregate Demand Curve is downward sloping

$300 Answer from Aggregate Demand What are wealth effect, interest rate effect, exchange rate effect

$400 Question from Aggregate Demand Government spending increases

$400 Answer from Aggregate Demand What is shifts to the right

$500 Question from Aggregate Demand Government implements contrationary fiscal policies

$500 Answer from Aggregate Demand What is shifts to the left

Final Jeopardy ScenarioExpansion/ Contraction Effect on Federal Budget Objective for AD Action on Taxes Action on Gov’t spending Effect on the National Debt The government decreases defense spending and takes more money from individual incomes.

Final Jeopardy Answer ScenarioExpansion/ Contraction Effect on Federal Budget Objective for AD Action on Taxes Action on Gov’t spending Effect on the National Debt The government decreases defense spending and takes more money from individual incomes. ContractionMove toward surplus