Chapter 10 Flashcards
1
Q
Public finance =
A
Funds raised by the government through taxation; it represents the government’s budget
2
Q
Public spending and taxation =
A
An injection and a withdrawal
3
Q
Fiscal policy =
A
It’s the management of the economy using government spending and taxation
4
Q
3 uses of tax:
A
- To allocate resources
- not smoking campaign (de-merit good)
- invest in healthcare (merit good)
- education (public good) - Manage the economy, by taking money out of the or adding into the flow
- To distribute income more evenly (social security payments and unemployment benefits)
5
Q
2 types of tax
A
- Direct tax:
- taxes on income
- tax on capital gains - Indirect taxation
- is imposed on companies, but the burden lies with another party
- Ad Valorem taxes (VAT)
- unit tax
- excise duties (alcohol, tobacco, vehicles)
- property tax, linked to the sale or rental of property
- wealth tax: is a % on an individual’s wealth on an annual basis
6
Q
3 effects of taxation:
A
- progressive:
High income earners pay more tax than low income earners - regressive
Low income earners pay in % more of their income than high earners - proportionate
High and low income earners pay the same % of their income.
7
Q
3 fiscal policy positions:
A
- Deficit
When government spending is higher than taxation revenue (net public borrowing) - Balanced budget:
When the government spending is equal to taxation revenue. - Surplus:
When the taxation revenue is larger than government spending
Benefit: slows growth, if inflation is high for example
Downside: result can be increased unemployment and increased personal debt.
It could mean reduced public expenditure
8
Q
2 types of budget deficit:
A
- Cyclical, linked to the trade cycle. Not a problem, as there is no deficit when the economic grows.
- Structural, a permanent imbalance. Usually long term.
- ageing population: less tax collection, more public expenditure required
- resistance to tax rises
- difficulty to reduce public spending
- development of the economy
9
Q
What are supply-side policies:
A
Increase aggregate supply by making the economy more efficient
10
Q
Examples of supply side policies:
A
- government spending: increase spending on education and healthcare, making people work more efficiently. Or on infrastructure.
- increase competition: leads to suppliers needing to be more efficient as prices fall. Through privatisation or deregulation.
- encourage investment: decrease business taxes, leads to more investment
- improving the effectiveness of labour: increase skills through training or give trade unions more power, increase incentive to hire, decrease benefits, or increase incentive to work, increase minimum wage
- other:
- encourage R&D
- reduce bureaucracy
- introduce regional help where needed
11
Q
Advantages of supply-side policies:
A
- makes businesses more competitive
- less government influence
- less-likely to cause inflation
- aggregate supply increases, prices fall
- less or no impact on national debt; they often don’t require government spending
12
Q
Disadvantages supply side policies:
A
- focus on the longer term
- some policies may be unpopular
(Pe: privatisation) - can increase uncertainty (decrease social benefits)
13
Q
3 approaches to the government managing the economy:
A
- monetary policy
- fiscal policy
- supply side policy
14
Q
What issues can affect the effectiveness of government policy:
A
- the quality and availability of information
- it’s membership of an organisation (EU)
- external events (recession 2007/2008)
- the time it takes for a policy to take effect
- political outcome