Chapter 12 Flashcards
Fiscal Policy, Incentives, and Secondary Effects
crowding-out effect
a reduction in private spending as a result of higher interest rates generated by budget deficits that are financed by borrowing in the private loanable funds market
four economic approaches?
- Keynesian
- crowding-out
- new classical
- supply side
K: discretionary fiscal policy
we should spend more and tax less during recessions (run deficits) and spend less and tax more during booms (run surpluses)
Keynes and economic instability
believe that market economies have a tendency to fluctuate between economic booms driven by excessive demand and recessions resulting from insufficient demand
C-O: when the government borrows to finance spending…
- interest rates increase (thereby reducing business investment)
- interest rates increase (thereby increasing saving and reducing consumption spending)
- interest rates increase thereby increasing net foreign capital inflows - this increases the value of the dollar and reduces net exports
C-O: expansionary fiscal policy
will have little or no impact on aggregate demand
C-O effect…
- weaken or reduces the expansionary effect of deficit spending
- results in less private spending and can reduce capital accumulation
NC: government deficits
since government deficits imply future taxes, they would have no net impact
people would anticipate future taxes so they would reduce consumption to offset the increased spending from government spending
modern consensus view on stabilization policy
- proper timing makes it difficult to run fiscal policy
- automatic stabilizers help reduce fluctuations
- fiscal policy is weaker than early Keynesians thought
- each of the three demand-side views is sometimes correct
supply-side effects
tax cuts can affect both AD and LRAS curves
why do high taxes decrease output?
- high marginal tax rates discourage work effort
- high tax rates reduce capital accumulation
- high tax rates encourage substitution of deductible goods for non-deductible goods
supply side tax cuts
reduce marginal tax rates, reduce the tax progressivity; high tax rates do not necessarily produce high tax collections
Keynesian tax cuts
view rate cuts as a less effective way to increase spending, aimed at increasing spending
the three crowding-out effects
- interest rates increase thereby reducing business investment
- interest rates increase thereby increasing saving & reducing consumption spending
- interest rates increase thereby increasing net foreign capital inflows this increases the value of the dollar and reduces net exports