fiscal policy Flashcards

1
Q

what is fiscal policy

A

fiscal policy refers to the use of government spending and taxation to influence the economic environment

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2
Q

How much money has Rishi Sunak invested in education.

A

£96 billion has been used for tutoring and catch up lessons for the work missed out in lockdown

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3
Q

What are the two benefits in a fall in income tax?

A
  1. Increased incentive to work
  2. Greater disposable incomes leading to greater consumption.
  3. Trickle down effect- as those high income earner earn more the may chose to invest
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4
Q

Economic activity

A

The activity of making, purchasing and selling of goods and services

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5
Q

reasons for an expansionary fiscal policy

A
  1. boost growth
  2. reduce unemployment
  3. redistribute income
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6
Q

reasons for deflationary fiscal policy

A
  1. reduce inflation
  2. reduce budget deficit
  3. reduced current account deficit
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7
Q

how can a deflationary fiscal policy cause a current account surplus

A

with increase taxes incomes are likely to fall and people are less likely to import as a result

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8
Q

what is a budget deficit

A

the amount the the government has to borrow each year as a result of G spending> G Income

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9
Q

what is national debt

A

the total amount of money that the government owes to private sector and other purchasers of UK gilts.

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10
Q

negatives of running a budget deficit

(crowding out analysis

A

when the government runs a high budget deficit for a long time and needs to borrow money it will issue more government bonds at a higher coupon to attract people to buy them.

The government may finance their debt in the short term

But as banks chose to buy bonds therefore decreasing their supply of money falls meaning less loans can be lent out at a lower interest rate. This may cause interest rates to rise and investment may fall as a result.

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11
Q

draw the crowding out diagram

A

//

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12
Q

when may crowding out be particularly harmful

A

when recovering from a recession such as covid.

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13
Q

when may operating on a budget deficit be ok

A

(structural). the golden rule says the government is able to borrow as long as it funds capital spending such as investment on the HNS or the HS2

as it improves the quality and quantity of the workforce therefore shifting out lras

(cyclical). when avoiding deflation and the real wage unemployment associated with it (hysteresis)

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14
Q

how to calculate the yield on bonds

A

yield= (coupon/market price)X100

Cooper is always on top

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15
Q

why may crowding out be particularly likely in the UK

A

as the bank rate is currently at 0.75% many banks will chose to invest in bonds which have a higher coupon

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16
Q

what the relationship between the market price and the yield of a bond

A

as its an inverse relationship

17
Q

how much money did the furlough scheme cost the government

A

the government spent 70 billion pounds on the furlough scheme

18
Q

what is the UKs national debt as a percentage of GDP

A

84%

19
Q

negatives of running a budget deficit

A
  1. intergenerational inequality
  2. falling credit ratings
  3. crowding out.
20
Q

examples of interventionist market failure

A
  1. hs2
  2. education and vocational training
  3. health care
21
Q

market based supply side policies

A
  1. privatisation- creates profit motive

2. deregulation

22
Q

problems with privatisation

A
  1. may cause mass unemployment as firms seek to make profit gains and cut labour costs
23
Q

labour market policies

A
  1. reduce income tax
  2. reducing welfare benefits
  3. reducing the power of trade unions
  4. removing the NMW
24
Q

what causes the economic cycle

A
  1. fluctuations in ad
  2. external shocks
  3. multiplier
25
Q

conflict of actual growth

demand

A
  1. demand pull inflation if there is no spare capacity
  2. balance of trade deficit (assuming its not export led growth)
  3. high national debt (if fiscal stimulus is being used)
  4. inequality (if tax system isn’t progressive).
26
Q

Problems with removal of trade unions and NMW

A

workers may be exploited without them

27
Q

why is falling credit ratings negative for the UK government

A

Credit ratings have fallen from AAA to AA following the uncertainty caused by Brexit.

This may make government borrowing harder as investors may be less trusting that they will get repaid.

When demand is low for bond the yield increases on existing bonds making new bonds less attractive and government debt more expensive

This may harm economic development and less spending in goods such as education is likely

28
Q

examples of countries that have a credit rating of AAA

A

Germany
Australia
Netherlands
Canada

Investors may instead chose to buy these government bonds and development and economic growth may improve here

29
Q

evaluation of the credit raters

A

These credit raters have imperfect information and a country may be down graded unfairly

30
Q

what does the government need to consider when choosing to run a budget deficit

A
  1. current national debt (94% of GDP which is the highest value since the 1960s)
  2. how big the negative output gap is
  3. how effective monetary policy is
31
Q

cyclical budget deficit

A

a budget deficit that is dictated by the economic cycle

Eg less tax revenue is earned as business make less profits and more unemployment benefits are required

32
Q

why are we not worried about a cyclical budget deficit

A

as it is an automatic stabiliser

as earnings increase as a result of the fiscal stimulus the economy may experience fiscal drag.

Increased earning= increased tax revenue= repaid budget deficit

33
Q

structural budget deficit

A

one that happens at full capacity

34
Q

how can lowered tax improve the supply side of the economy

A
  1. increases incentive to work as workers can keep a larger percentage of their income
  2. encourages workers to get training and education to get the jobs they wanted increasing the quality of the workforce
  3. this increases the supply of labour increasing the competition for jobs
  4. firms could lower wages and produce the same amount at a lower cost
35
Q

Why is cost of borrowing for the government low?

A

Largely because of QE — the Bank of England increased demand for bonds in secondary markets. Market values of bonds went up, which pushed yields down and so new debt could be issued at a lower coupon.

1) availability of credit due to increased liquidity
2) wealth effect - increased asset prices leading to marginal propensity to consume increasing
3) government debt cheap - fiscal stimulus while not worrying about increased national debt

Also, years of low bank rates which increases asset prices which include bonds

36
Q

When do governments undertake QE?

A

Only in a recession