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Chapter 17 Economic Policymaking. Capitalism Private individuals own the principal means of production Prices and wages determined by Supply and Demand.

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Presentation on theme: "Chapter 17 Economic Policymaking. Capitalism Private individuals own the principal means of production Prices and wages determined by Supply and Demand."— Presentation transcript:

1 Chapter 17 Economic Policymaking

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4 Capitalism Private individuals own the principal means of production Prices and wages determined by Supply and Demand “Free Market” = no government intervention of economy

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7 “It’s the economy, Stupid.” Economic conditions drive voting behavior Democrats = priority is to decrease unemployment Republicans = priority is to decrease inflation

8 Unemployment Those people seeking work but unable to find it Compiled by Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) via monthly surveys of 60,000 households New jobs must be ~125,000/month just to keep pace with new workers “Discouraged workers” = given up job hunt or taken part-time jobs

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10 Underemployment Rate Unemployment Rate + Discouraged workers rate

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13 Inflation Increase in prices for goods and services BLS complies Consumer Price Index (CPI) by measuring the change in a fixed basket of goods and services (80,000)

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18 History 1789-1929: Laissez-faire 1929-present: regulatory and activist 2 Tools to influence economy: Monetary Policy and Fiscal Policy

19 Monetary Policy Control over money supply held in private hands Federal Reserve Board – Prime % rate – Sells Bonds – Sets deposit reserve levels These can influence expansion/contraction of the money supply

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21 Fiscal Policy Federal Budget to influence economy Taxing, Spending, Borrowing Keynesian Economic Theory vs. Supply-Side Economics

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23 Keynesian Theory Government spending stimulates the economy by creating demand for goods and services “Pump-Priming” (New Deal/FDR) Favored by Democrats Considers deficit spending allowable, even necessary at times.

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25 Supply-Side Economics Key task of policy is to stimulate supply, not demand First adopted under Reagan, favored by Republicans Lowering tax rates, de-regulating businesses, and decreasing government spending

26 Regardless of strategy … The concept of a free market economy / passive government re: economy is now virtually gone … Government’s responsibility to use fiscal policy to control/influence the economy

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28 Then why is it so hard to control the economy? Policies are slow to enact “Uncontrollable expenditures” limit fiscal options Free Enterprise system / philosophy limits government actions Government spending / influence relatively small compared to billions of economic decisions made by consumers and business

29 Arenas of Economic Policymaking

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31 Business Policy Protectionism Anti-Trust Policy – Preserve competition

32 Consumer Policy FDA CPSC FTC – To prevent harm to consumers

33 Labor Policy NLRB – To protect workers


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