3. Fiscal Policy Flashcards
Counteract activity of fluctuations in a economic cycle
- Expansionary vs. Restrictive Policy
- Too fast or too slow
- Fiscal Tools: gov spend and taxes
Countercyclical Fiscal Policy
Useful when economic output is too slow and unemployment is low
What to do? Decrease taxes and increase government spending in order to increase Agg. Demand
Goal? Increase economic growth and move back to full employment
- Basically putting more money into people’s hands to spend more
Leads to increase in budget deficit (-)
Expansionary Fiscal Policy
Useful when economic output is too fast and inflation is high
What to do? Increase taxes and decrease government spending to decrease Agg. Demand
Goal? Slowing down economy buying reducing prices and inflation
- Basically put money in people’s hands to spend less
Leads to decrease in budget deficit (+)
Restrictive Fiscal Policy
MPC = △consumption/△income
△ = subtract the 2 numbers
Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC)
MPS = △saving/△income
△ = subtract 2 numbers
Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS)
ME = 1/(1-MPC)
- However much gov spends is ME (#) that amount
- Initial gov spending (G) x ME# = Y (income)
- Keynes because gov spending impacts the economy a lot
1 = MPC + MPS
Expenditure Multiplier
People look at their income in the long run, not short run
- Unnecessary vs. necessary rather than effective vs. ineffective
- Classical because people are not animal spirits, they are calm
Permanent Income Hypothesis
Classical view point
Trying to move economy back to stable but…
- Dec taxes, inc gov spending
- Inc demand for loanable funds
- Inc interest rates
- Dec Agg. Demand (-)
Crowding Out
“Save the deficit” (Classical)
Ricardian Equivalence
Time needed for policy makers to recognize issues
- Can be bad because some times these lags are not needed and makes the economy worse when it is already fixing itself
Recognition Lag
Time needed for policy makers to change policy
- Can be bad because some times these lags are not needed and makes the economy worse when it is already fixing itself
Administrative Lag
Time needed for the changed policy to impact economy
- Can be bad because some times these lags are not needed and makes the economy worse when it is already fixing itself
Impact Lag
Fluctuations in economic activity without direct intervention by policymakers
- No laws or policies needed
- We have gov spending benefits (unemployment plans, etc.)
- No discretionary
Automatic Stablizers