Fiscal Policy 2009 TESCCC 1 Fiscal Policy defined
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Fiscal Policy © 2009, TESCCC 1
Fiscal Policy defined The government’s (Congress and the President) use of taxing and spending to promote economic growth and stability © 2009, TESCCC 2
History of Fiscal Policy Laissez-faire (classical The Great Depression economics) 1929 -1930 s WWII 1939 -1945 • No need for government interference • Market regulates itself • Adam Smith, David Ricardo, Thomas Malthus are classical economists • To prepare for war, U. S. increased production of war goods. • Government spending increased dramatically which helped the country out of the depression. © 2009, TESCCC • Challenged classical economics • FDR increased government spending on programs to increase employment on public works to help stop the depression 3
History of Fiscal Policy 1960 s 1980 s • JFK proposed tax cuts to personal and business income taxes to increase aggregate demand. • Government spending increased due to Vietnam War. • Reagan passed a bill to reduce taxes by 25% over 3 years to fight stagflation (high unemployment + high inflation). • Demand-side policies would not work, thus supply-side policies were introduced – known as Reaganomics. © 2009, TESCCC 4
Two branches of Fiscal Policy: 1. Demand side 2. Supply side © 2009, TESCCC 5
Demand-Side Economics Inspired by John Maynard Keynes Looks at changing aggregate during the Great Depression and demand which is either is also called Keynesian Fiscal increasing or decreasing Policy © 2009, TESCCC 6
Tools of Fiscal Policy 1. Taxing Policy of Government 2. Spending Policy of Government © 2009, TESCCC 7
Demand Side Fiscal Policy Keynes said that sometimes the market could not correct itself and the government needs to take a more active role in the economy. This increased role of government in the economy was something different from the Classical view. It was considered very radical for the time. © 2009, TESCCC 8
Limitations of Demand-Side Fiscal Policy 1. Not coordinated with monetary policy 2. Surplus budget unpopular and politicians lack the political will to carry it out 3. Time lags - Inside lags and outside lags 4. People are unpredictable - Economics is a social science so we are dealing with human behavior. 5. Doesn’t solve stagflation © 2009, TESCCC 9
Multiplier Effect • The multiplier effect in fiscal policy states that for every one dollar change in taxing or government spending, it will create a greater change in the national income, either increasing or decreasing. © 2009, TESCCC 10
Fiscal Policy- Supply Side © 2009, TESCCC 11
Supply-Side Fiscal Policy • Economic policies designed to stimulate output (GDP) and lower unemployment. To achieve this you increase aggregate supply (AS). • Contemporary Supply - side was implemented in the 1980’s to deal with stagflation and is sometimes called “Reaganomics. ” • Goal is to give incentives to businesses to produce more (AS). © 2009, TESCCC 12
Principles of Supply Side 1. Tax cuts - encourage consumers to save so businesses have money to borrow for capital investment. 2. Government spending cuts especially on transfer payments where nothing is produced 3. Deregulate business Overall Less Government © 2009, TESCCC 13
Supply-Side Economics • Stresses the influence of taxation on the economy. Supply-siders believe that taxes have a strong, negative influence on output • Arthur Laffer came up with a theory concerning tax rates and tax revenues. It was called the Laffer Curve. Laffer said if you lower the tax rate we will see an increase in tax revenue. © 2009, TESCCC 14
Laffer Curve 100% Govt will collect no revenue at 2 tax rates, 0% and 100%. T a x With 100% tax rate, workers lose all incentive to work (no disposable personal income) and at 0% tax rate the government will collect 0 revenue R a t e s 0% Tax Revenues © 2009, TESCCC 15
Laffer Curve 100% T a x R a t e s C Point C is the optimum tax rate. Higher tax rates decrease worker incentives. Below C we decrease the revenue. 0% Tax Revenues © 2009, TESCCC PROBLEM: We don’t know where we are on the curve. 16
Limitations 1. Lack of experience- hasn’t been around long enough. 2. Don’t know where we are on Laffer Curve. 3. Makes Federal Income Tax less progressive and reduces the automatic stabilization and reduces many “safety net” programs. © 2009, TESCCC 17
Taxing & Spending DECIDING FISCAL POLICY © 2009, TESCCC 18
When the U. S. Government decides Fiscal Policy: • They are deciding which goal to address at a given time – economic growth, stability or full employment. • They must decide to tax or spend to address the problems in the economy. © 2009, TESCCC 19
Taxation • Power to Tax – Article 1, Section 8, Clause 1 of the U. S. Constitution • 16 th Amendment • Limitations: – Purpose is for “the common defense and general welfare” – Federal taxes must be the same in every state – Government may not tax exports © 2009, TESCCC 20
Purposes of Taxation • Raise revenue • Regulate the economy (fiscal policy) • Redistribution of income (transfer payments) • Provide positive economic incentives • Provide negative economic incentives © 2009, TESCCC 21
Types of Taxes or Tax Structures • Progressive - takes larger percent of income from higher income groups- as income goes up tax rate increases • example- Federal Income Tax © 2009, TESCCC 22
Types - Regressive • Regressive- takes larger percent of income from the lower income group • Example- sales tax, property tax, Social Security tax © 2009, TESCCC 23
Types - Proportional • Proportional - takes the same per cent of income from all income levels • Examples - some state income taxes & proposed flat tax © 2009, TESCCC 24
Who Bears the Burden of a Tax? To fully evaluate the fairness of a tax, it is important to think about who bears the final burden of the tax or the incidence of a tax. © 2009, TESCCC 25
Principles of Taxation 1. © 2009, TESCCC Benefits received- people who directly benefit or use the good or service should pay • Example- Excise tax on gasoline used to build roads 26
2. Ability- to- pay- people who have more wealth or income should pay more. • Example- Federal Income Tax © 2009, TESCCC 27
Top Federal Taxes • Individual Income Tax • Social Security • Corporate Income Tax © 2009, TESCCC 28
Federal Taxes © 2009, TESCCC 29
FICA • FICA=Social Security + Medicare • FICA Taxable Wage Base or a cap—a maximum income level that can be taxed. All income above that level is not taxed for FICA, tax free. • Employers match employee contributions. © 2009, TESCCC 30
State Taxes • States receive most of their revenue from a Sales Tax. © 2009, TESCCC 31
Local Taxes • Property Tax © 2009, TESCCC 32
- Tesccc
- Well defined and not well defined sets
- Patakarang piskal
- Fiscal policy
- Fiscal policy
- Goals of fiscal policy
- Example fiscal policy
- Instruments of fiscal policy
- Types of fiscal policy
- Unit 3 aggregate demand aggregate supply and fiscal policy
- Unit 5 macroeconomics lesson 2 activity 45 answer key
- Crowding out effect of fiscal policy
- Fiscal policy ib
- Unit 3 aggregate demand aggregate supply and fiscal policy
- Fiscal vs monetary policy
- Tax multiplier formula
- Crowding out
- Instruments of fiscal policy
- Conclusion of monetary policy
- Tax multiplier formula
- Example of expansionary fiscal policy
- Fiscal demand side policy
- Goals of fiscal policy
- Components of fiscal policy
- Demand side fiscal policy definition
- Non-discretionary fiscal policy
- Fiscal policy definition
- Voluntary unemployment
- Cost-push inflation
- Fiscal policy
- Fiscal policy definition
- Fiscal policy
- Crowding out effect of fiscal policy