Macro 11 Flashcards
Demand-side definition
> Influence AD.
>Includes fiscal and monetary policy.
Supply-side definition
> Attempt to increase SRAS or LRAS.
>Can be interventionist or market-based.
Fiscal policy - definition
> Direct changes to AD through government spending and withdrawals from the circular flow through taxation.
Monetary policy - definition
> Changes to the supply of money.
Increasing or decreasing interest rates, printing money (QE), open market operations (buying and selling assets) and exchange rate manipulations.
Interventionist - definition
> Increasing government intervention in the economy (e.g. spending on infrastructure and education).
Market-based - definition
> Reducing the amount of state intervention.
>E.g. tax cuts, decrease welfare provision, deregulation.
Demand and supply side policies
> A supply side policy will have demand side impacts and demand side policy will have supply side impacts.
The key is intention.
Both demand and supply side policies will have short and long run impacts. Analysis should consider both.
Positive output gap policy
> Increase tax rates, reduce spending when there’s a positive output gap to dampen inflation.
Tax revenue can be used to pay off debt or saved for future spending.
Negative output gap policy
> Increase spending and cut tax during a negative output gap.
>Funded through borrowing (issuing bonds).
Automatic stabilisers
> Even without deliberate fiscal interventions, any economy with a tax and welfare system will see naturally occurring ‘corrections’ to the cycle - ‘automatic stabilisers’.
Fiscal policy can reduce the severity of the trade cycle.
Budget and trade deficit
> The budget and trade deficit are different.
Expansionary fiscal policy - definition
> Fiscal policy which aims to increase AD by cutting tax and increasing spending.
This means there’s a budget deficit.
Contractionary fiscal policy - definition
> Fiscal policy which aims to decrease or slow down the growth of AD and avoid overheating.
This means the government is running a budget surplus.
Fiscal policy’s applications
> Fiscal policy has macroeconomic and microeconomic application.
It can be used to influence the ‘quantity’ (AD, AS - macroeconomic) and the ‘pattern’ (individuals, firms - microeconomic) of consumption.
There are microeconomic implications of macroeconomic policy.
Budget deficit - definition
> Total government spending minus total government revenue when spending is higher than revenue.
The value of the deficit is also known as the public sector net cash requirement.
Budget surplus - definition
> Total government revenue minus total government spending when revenue is higher than spending.
The value of the surplus is known as the public sector debt repayment.
National debt - definition
> The amount of money the government owes at any given time.
>This continues to increase whenever the government runs a deficit and reduces when the government runs a surplus.
PSNCR - definition
> Public Sector Net Cash Requirement.
>The sum of money the government must borrow when it spends more than it receives.