Crowding Out / Fiscal Multiplier Flashcards
What is the crowding out view
That a rapid growth of government spending may cause a transfer of scarce productive resources from the private sector to the public sector where productivity might be lower
Crowding out - what if the government runs a big budget deficit
It will have to sell debt to the private sector and getting individuals and institutions to purchase the debt may require higher interest rates. Rise in interest rates = crowd out private investment and consumption, offsetting the fiscal stimulus
Evaluating the crowding out theory
Unlikely to happen
What is the fiscal multiplier
It measures the short-term impact of discretionary fiscal policy on the level of RNO
What does the fiscal multiplier measure - numerically
The effect of a £1m change in spending or a £1m change in tax revenue on the level of GDP
What did the IMF find
-spending multipliers are larger than revenue multipliers
-fiscal multipliers are generally larger in downturns than in expansions
(Supports Keynesian views)
What determines the size of the fiscal multiplier
- design
- financial stress (uncertainty might make people save tax cuts)
- temporary or permanent fiscal raise
- availability of credit
- openness of the economy
How does the openness of the economy determine the size of the fiscal multiplier
The more open an economy (ie the higher is the ratio of imports and exports to GDP) the greater the extent to which higher government spending or tax cuts will feed into rising demand for imports, lowering the impact on domestic GDP