Tommy, Coral, Sean, Michael
4B
Module 30: Long-run Implications of Fiscal Policy: Deficits and the Public Debt
OBJECTIVES:
- Determine why governments calculate the cyclically adjusted budget balance.
- Determine why a large public debt may be a cause for concern.
- Determine why implicit liabilities of the government are also a cause for concern.
- Look at the long-term effects of fiscal policy, including budget balance, debt, and liabilities.
NOTES:
- How does the government stabilize the economy?
The government can stabilize the economy through two different methods.
- Fiscal Policy – actions taken by Congress to stabilize the economy
- Monetary Policy – actions taken by the Federal Reserve Bank to stabilize the economy
- What is the budget balance?
The budget balance is the difference between the government’s tax revenue and its spending, both on goods and services and on government transfers, in a given year. This is defined by an equation:
WhereS represents the total savings by the governmentin year, T represents the value of tax revenues, G is government purchases of goods and services, and TR is the value of government transfers.
Example
- In 2004, the total government savings was $6 billion dollars. If the government purchased $3 billion in goods and services and $2 billion on government transfers, how much money did the annual tax revenues consist of?
$11 billion
SGovernment = $6 billion, G = $3 billion, TR = $2 billion
$6 = T - $3 - $2
T = $11 billion in tax revenues in 2004
A budget surplus is a positive budget balance, and a budget deficit is a negative budget balance.
Expansionary fiscal policies make a budget surplus smaller or a budget deficit bigger. This can be done through cutting taxes, increasing transfers, and increasing government spending. The opposite processes are done for contractionary fiscal policies.
- What is a deficit?
A deficit is the amount by which annual government spending exceeds tax revenues.
- What is a surplus?
A surplus is the amount by which annual tax revenues exceed government expenditures.
- The Budget Balance
A graph illustrating fluctuations in the budget deficit of a given country, which tends to be higher during recessions (indicated by the shaded areas below) and fall during expansions.
- What is the cyclically adjusted budget balance?
The cyclically adjusted budget balance is an estimate of what the budget balance would be if real GDP were exactly equal to potential output.
- What is a fiscal year?
The fiscal year is the budget totals for a country running from October 1st to September 30th and labeled according to the calendar year in which it ends.
- What is the public debt?
The public debt is the total accumulation of all past yearly deficits and surpluses, held by individuals and institutions outside the government.
- Why should we be concerned by a persistent deficit?
Crowding out investment
Rising debt may lead to government default, resulting in economic and financial turmoil. This can lead to interest on debt.
- What is the purpose of the Debt-GDP Ratio?
Assesses the ability of a government to pay their debt.
If the government debt rises slower than GDP, the burden of paying is falling compared to the government’s potential tax revenue.
- What are implicit liabilities?
Spending promises made by the government that are not included in debt.
Examples include social security, Medicare, and Medicaid, which is about 40% of federal spending
- Problems with Fiscal Policy
- Problems of timing
Recognition lag: Congress must react to economic indicators before it is too late
Administrative lag: Congress takes time to pass legislation
Operational lag: Spending/planning takes time to organize and execute (changing taxing is quicker)
- Politically motivated policies
Politicians may use economically inappropriate policies to get reelected. An example might be a president promising more public works programs when there is already an inflationary gap.
- Crowding-out effect
Government spending might cause unintended effects that weaken the impact of the policy
- Example: We have a recessionary gap, the government creates a new public library (AD increases) but consumers spend less on books (AD decreases)
- Net export effect
International trade reduces the effectiveness of fiscal policies
- Example: We have a recessionary gap so the government spends to increase AD, the increase in AD causes an increase in price level/interest rates, U.S. goods are now more expensive and the U.S. dollar appreciates, foreign countries buy less and net exports fall, decreasing AD.