Chapter 4: The US Economy: Private and Public Sectors
Households are suppliers of economic resources + major spenders in the economy
Functional distribution of income - Illustrates how the nation’s income is distributed among wages, rents, interest, and profits
Largest source of income for households is wages/salaries
Personal distribution of income - How the nation’s total income is divided among individual households
Taxes, noncash transfers, and movement of households among categories lessens income inequality
How households dispose of income
Personal taxes
Personal saving - Flows into bank accounts, insurance policies, bonds and stocks, mutual funds, etc.
More income → Usually save more
Personal consumption
Durable goods - Products with expected lives of 3 years or more
Non-durable goods - Products with expected lives of less than 3 years
Services - Work done for consumers by lawyers, barbers, doctors, etc.
Businesses
Plant - Physical establishment that helps with manufacturing and distributing goods and services
Firm - Organization that uses resources to produce goods and services for profit
Industry - Group of firms that produces same, or similar, products
Legal forms of business
Sole proprietorship - Business owned + operated by 1 person
Easy to set up + organize
Partnership - Business owned + operated by 2+ people; share risks, profits, and losses
Corporation - Distinct/separate from individual stockholders that own it; run by hired managers
Pools financial resources of large #s of people
Stock - Share in the ownership of a corporation
Bond - Lends money to corporation; no corporate ownership for purchaser
Organized stock exchanges + bond markets → Simplifies transfer of securities b/w sellers + buyers
Limited liability - Stockholders risk only what they paid for their stock; personal assets not at stake
Corporations benefit from expanding + becoming more efficient
Ownership can easily be transferred
Principal-agent problem - Interests of people managing the corporation (agents) and of the owners (principals) don’t always coincide
The government’s role in the economy
Legal framework + services needed for a market economy to operate effectively
Legal rules that control relationships b/w businesses + consumers
Improves resource allocation (MB = MC)
Maintains competition
Monopoly - Single seller controls an industry
Natural monopoly - Only 1 seller can achieve lowest possible costs
High competition → Efficient production
Redistributes income
Transfer payments - Welfare checks, food stamps, unemployment compensation, etc.
Market intervention - Modifying prices set by market forces
Taxation - Takes larger proportion of income from rich
Reallocates resources
Externality - Some of the costs or benefits of a good “spill over” to 3rd parties that aren’t the buyer or seller
Negative externalities - Production or consumption costs that affect 3rd parties without compensation
Overallocation of resources
Corrected w/ legislation or taxes
Positive externalities - Production or consumption benefits that are enjoyed by 3rd parties
Underallocation of resources
Corrected w/ subsidies or government management of an industry
Private goods - Produced through competitive market system; rivalry + excludability
Public goods - Everyone can simultaneously obtain benefits; one person’s benefit does not reduce benefits available to others
Free-rider problem - People can receive benefits from a public good w/o paying for it
Unprofitable for private firms
Quasi-public goods - Government provides public goods and services that could include exclusion (could be provided by private firms)
Reallocation - Resources shifted from production of private goods to production of public + quasi-public goods
Uses monetary + fiscal policy to fix problems with widespread unemployment or inflation
The government in the circular flow model
Makes purchases in both product + resource markets
Provides public goods + services to both households + businesses
Households + businesses forced to pay taxes
Government finance
Government purchases - Products purchased directly absorb resources + are part of domestic output
Transfer payments - Don’t directly absorb resources or create output; recipients don’t contribute to domestic output in return for them
Federal finance
Federal spending
Pensions + income security
National defense
Health
Interest on the public debt
Federal tax revenues
Personal income tax - Levied on taxable income
Progressive tax - People w/ higher incomes pay a larger percent of their incomes
Marginal tax rate - Rate at which the tax is paid on each additional unit of taxable income
Average tax rate - Total tax paid divided by total taxable income
A progressive tax’s average rate rises as income increases
Payroll taxes - Taxes based on wages + salaries used to finance compulsory federal programs
Corporate income tax - Levied on a corporation’s profit
Sales and excise taxes - Taxes on commodities or purchases
State and local finance
State finances
Primary source of tax revenue for state gov’ts is sales + excise taxes
State personal income taxes
Corporate income taxes + license fees
Local finances
Property taxes - Make up 72% of local governments’ tax revenue
Revenue from intergovernmental grants from federal + state gov’ts
Households are suppliers of economic resources + major spenders in the economy
Functional distribution of income - Illustrates how the nation’s income is distributed among wages, rents, interest, and profits
Largest source of income for households is wages/salaries
Personal distribution of income - How the nation’s total income is divided among individual households
Taxes, noncash transfers, and movement of households among categories lessens income inequality
How households dispose of income
Personal taxes
Personal saving - Flows into bank accounts, insurance policies, bonds and stocks, mutual funds, etc.
More income → Usually save more
Personal consumption
Durable goods - Products with expected lives of 3 years or more
Non-durable goods - Products with expected lives of less than 3 years
Services - Work done for consumers by lawyers, barbers, doctors, etc.
Businesses
Plant - Physical establishment that helps with manufacturing and distributing goods and services
Firm - Organization that uses resources to produce goods and services for profit
Industry - Group of firms that produces same, or similar, products
Legal forms of business
Sole proprietorship - Business owned + operated by 1 person
Easy to set up + organize
Partnership - Business owned + operated by 2+ people; share risks, profits, and losses
Corporation - Distinct/separate from individual stockholders that own it; run by hired managers
Pools financial resources of large #s of people
Stock - Share in the ownership of a corporation
Bond - Lends money to corporation; no corporate ownership for purchaser
Organized stock exchanges + bond markets → Simplifies transfer of securities b/w sellers + buyers
Limited liability - Stockholders risk only what they paid for their stock; personal assets not at stake
Corporations benefit from expanding + becoming more efficient
Ownership can easily be transferred
Principal-agent problem - Interests of people managing the corporation (agents) and of the owners (principals) don’t always coincide
The government’s role in the economy
Legal framework + services needed for a market economy to operate effectively
Legal rules that control relationships b/w businesses + consumers
Improves resource allocation (MB = MC)
Maintains competition
Monopoly - Single seller controls an industry
Natural monopoly - Only 1 seller can achieve lowest possible costs
High competition → Efficient production
Redistributes income
Transfer payments - Welfare checks, food stamps, unemployment compensation, etc.
Market intervention - Modifying prices set by market forces
Taxation - Takes larger proportion of income from rich
Reallocates resources
Externality - Some of the costs or benefits of a good “spill over” to 3rd parties that aren’t the buyer or seller
Negative externalities - Production or consumption costs that affect 3rd parties without compensation
Overallocation of resources
Corrected w/ legislation or taxes
Positive externalities - Production or consumption benefits that are enjoyed by 3rd parties
Underallocation of resources
Corrected w/ subsidies or government management of an industry
Private goods - Produced through competitive market system; rivalry + excludability
Public goods - Everyone can simultaneously obtain benefits; one person’s benefit does not reduce benefits available to others
Free-rider problem - People can receive benefits from a public good w/o paying for it
Unprofitable for private firms
Quasi-public goods - Government provides public goods and services that could include exclusion (could be provided by private firms)
Reallocation - Resources shifted from production of private goods to production of public + quasi-public goods
Uses monetary + fiscal policy to fix problems with widespread unemployment or inflation
The government in the circular flow model
Makes purchases in both product + resource markets
Provides public goods + services to both households + businesses
Households + businesses forced to pay taxes
Government finance
Government purchases - Products purchased directly absorb resources + are part of domestic output
Transfer payments - Don’t directly absorb resources or create output; recipients don’t contribute to domestic output in return for them
Federal finance
Federal spending
Pensions + income security
National defense
Health
Interest on the public debt
Federal tax revenues
Personal income tax - Levied on taxable income
Progressive tax - People w/ higher incomes pay a larger percent of their incomes
Marginal tax rate - Rate at which the tax is paid on each additional unit of taxable income
Average tax rate - Total tax paid divided by total taxable income
A progressive tax’s average rate rises as income increases
Payroll taxes - Taxes based on wages + salaries used to finance compulsory federal programs
Corporate income tax - Levied on a corporation’s profit
Sales and excise taxes - Taxes on commodities or purchases
State and local finance
State finances
Primary source of tax revenue for state gov’ts is sales + excise taxes
State personal income taxes
Corporate income taxes + license fees
Local finances
Property taxes - Make up 72% of local governments’ tax revenue
Revenue from intergovernmental grants from federal + state gov’ts