Economy practice
1. Expansionary Fiscal Policy
Definition: Uses discretionary government spending or taxes to stabilize the economy.
Types of Government Spending:
Mandatory Spending
Automatic and written into law (e.g., Social Security).
Accounts for 63% of federal budget.
Discretionary Spending
Requires annual review (e.g., Transportation, Education, Science).
Impact on Aggregate Demand:
Increases spending or reduces taxes to correct recessionary gaps.
Example: Government spending rises, moving aggregate demand from AD1 to AD2, leading to a $20 billion recessionary gap.
If MPC = 0.75, a tax cut of $6.67 billion is needed to match a $5 billion spending increase.
Budget Deficits and National Debt:
Can create budget deficits as spending exceeds tax revenues.
Deficits financed through government securities increase national debt.
2. Contractionary Fiscal Policy
Purpose: Reduces inflationary gaps when aggregate demand rises.
Mechanisms:
Involves tax increases and reduced government spending.
Considerations:
Must take into account the ratchet effect; prices may not return to previous levels.
Example: If MPC is 0.75, to reduce consumption by $3 billion, taxes must increase by $4 billion.
The multiplier effect can lead to a total reduction of $12 billion in GDP.
Budget Surplus:
Can create a surplus where tax revenues exceed spending if the government begins with a balanced budget.
Surplus can reduce national debt.
3. Government Perspectives on Policy
Conservatives: Prefer smaller government role; favor tax cuts in recessions and spending cuts in inflation.
Liberals: Prefer larger government role; support spending increases in recessions and tax increases in inflation.
4. Automatic Stabilizers
Definition: Programs that automatically adjust spending/taxes during economic instability.
Key Examples:
Transfer Payments: Increase during recessions as unemployment rises.
Progressive Income Taxes: Higher earners pay a larger percentage, benefiting tax revenue during growth.
Impact on Federal Budget:
Balanced budgets tend to go into deficit during recessions and into surplus during growth.
Automatic stabilizers are often not sufficient to manage significant demand swings, necessitating active government intervention.