MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question."

Transcription

1 Budget, Bureaucracy, Economic Policy-Making Name: MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Taxing, spending, and borrowing decisions by Congress and the president are known collectively as A) econometrics. B) fiscal policy. C) supply-side economics. D) laissez faire. E) monetary policy. 2. The General Services Administration and the National Aeronautical and Space Administration are examples of A) independent regulatory agencies. B) independent executive agencies. C) presidential administrative agencies. D) Cabinet departments. E) government corporations. 3. When Congress passes regulatory legislation for which it has established goals, it then A) assigns responsibility for administration to regulatory agencies and responsibility for enforcement to the courts. B) grants power to regulatory agencies to develop guidelines and enforce compliance. C) establishes the guidelines that regulatory agencies must implement. D) authorizes the president to use his administrative discretion to implement the legislation. E) grants interest groups the power to develop the rules governing the new policy. 4. Which of the following statements is TRUE about America s political parties and relatively high inflation? A) The Democrats are more willing to accept relatively high inflation than the Republicans. B) Studies have found no correlation between a given political party and its acceptance of high inflation rates. C) The Republicans are more willing to accept relatively high inflation than the Democrats. D) Both the Democrats and the Republicans are willing to accept relatively high inflation. E) Neither the Democrats nor the Republicans are willing to accept relatively high inflation. 5. To limit bureaucratic discretion and make its instructions clearer, Congress can A) deregulate. B) threaten to cut an agency s budget. C) reregulate. D) write new and more detailed legislation. E) hold congressional hearings. 6. Which of the following would be included in a plum book? A) Senate committee chairs B) Cabinet secretaries C) postal carriers D) doctors at a Veteran s Administration hospital E) the phone numbers of a Congress member s sex partners 7. Amtrak and the United States Postal Service are examples of A) executive commercial agencies. B) government corporations. C) independent regulatory agencies. D) independent executive agencies. E) Cabinet departments. 8. Social Security payments are an example of a(n) A) controllable expenditure. B) increment. C) entitlement. D) indexing. E) apportionment. 9. An uncontrollable expenditure in the federal budget is defined as A) expenditures exceeding revenues so as to require borrowing to cover the difference. B) one in which more money must be appropriated to handle a national crises. C) an annual incremental increase in the cost of a program. D) the government s allowance for meeting budget requests. E) an expenditure that is required by current law or a previous government obligation to people automatically eligible for some benefit.

2 10. Which of the following is NOT a method a president can use to control the bureaucracy? A) appoint people to head an agency who share the president s goals and strategies B) tinker with an agency s recommended budget C) request a congressional oversight hearing D) rewrite statutes to make instructions clearer as to how policies are intended E) issue executive orders or more informal requests 11. The principle that the government should not meddle with the economy is known as A) caveat emptor B) laissez faire C) Keynesian economic theory. D) conservatism. E) monetarism. 12. The Keynesian economic theory argues that government s role in an economic depression should be to A) increase supply. B) reduce demand. C) increase the total money supply with lower interest rates. D) lower taxes. E) increase demand. 13. Tax expenditures tend to most benefit A) middle- and upper-income people and corporations. B) lower-income people and the poor. C) lower-middle class people and small businesses. D) the government. E) state and local governments and school districts. 14. As a percentage of the total work force, federal government employment is A) rapidly becoming greater than employment in the private sector. B) declining. C) rising. D) greater than state and local government employment. E) stabilizing. 15. The federal government s budget is A) a line by line accounting of tax expenditures that is required annually by the Constitution. B) a list of the ways in which the government has spent its money. C) a technical document intended to ensure that tax revenues will be sufficient to meet expenditures. D) a policy statement that allocates burdens and benefits by attaching price tags to policy goals. E) an accounting tool that permits the government to keep track of its assets and liabilities. 16. An economic theory called monetarism holds that A) government should stimulate economic growth by injecting large amounts of money into the economy by keeping interest rates low. B) government spending can help the economy weather its normal ups and downs, even if it means running up a debt. C) the supply of money is the key to the nation s health, and having too much cash and credit in circulation stimulates inflation. D) government should not meddle with the economy. E) stimulating supply through lower taxes is the key to economic health. 17. Until the late-nineteenth century, most government employees got their jobs through A) the patronage system. B) hereditary preferences. C) a lottery system. D) the merit principle E) civil service testing. 18. Once a policy decision has been made, such as by passing a legislative act or issuing an executive order, the bureaucracy is responsible for A) its implementation. B) funding it. C) its ratification. D) judging its merits. E) its deregulation. 19. Which of the following is NOT associated with incremental budgeting? A) The budget for any given agency tends to grow a bit every year. B) Agencies often pad their budgets a little bit. C) An agency or program must prove it still merits its very existence every year. D) Most of the budget debate and attention is over an increase in the agency s funding. E) Agencies and programs tend to safely assume they will receive at least what they had last year.

3 20. Medicare A) is the most expensive of all the welfare programs, providing basic medical care for the poor. B) provides both hospital and physician coverage to the elderly. C) is administered separately from the social security system. D) is given only to those who do not have private insurance. E) provides only hospital coverage to the poor. 21. The Congressional Budget and Impoundment Act of 1974 requires that A) Congress develop a budget on the basis of the president s budget, through coordinated efforts of the CBO and OMB. B) Congress agree on a budget according to a fixed schedule, with target figures for the total budget size. C) the presidential impound those moneys appropriated by Congress which exceed federal revenues. D) Congress develop a budget by adding up the requests of all the government agencies. E) Congress impound that portion of the president s budget in excess of government revenues. 22. Which of the following is NOT currently one of the major sources of federal revenue? A) social insurance taxes B) personal income taxes C) excise taxes D) borrowing E) corporate income taxes 23. The nation s unemployment rate is determined by A) monthly reports by the unemployment department of each state. B) monthly changes in income tax withholdings monitored by the Internal Revenue Service. C) monthly reports filed by all employers regarding the number of their employees. D) a monthly random survey of the population. E) randomly selected payroll audits by Federal Reserve Board analysts. 24. Those civil service employees who are in constant contact with the public (often a hostile one) and have considerable discretion are known as A) routinizers. B) General Schedule foot soldiers. C) the Senior Executive Service. D) street-level bureaucrats. E) civil servants. 25. As a whole, the permanent bureaucracy is A) overwhelmingly African American, female, and not so well-paid. B) a reflection of participatory politics, since most government workers are hired through the patronage system. C) better paid than are similar jobs in the private sector. D) more broadly representative of the American people than legislators, judges, or presidential appointees. E) nearly all white, male, and well-paid. 26. The heads of executive agencies send their budget requests to the A) Office of Management and Budget. B) president. C) Congressional Budget Office. D) Congressional tax committees. E) Treasury Department. 27. President Reagan s economic policies emphasized A) supply-side economics in which tax cuts and deregulation are designed to free funds for savings and investment. B) industrial policy which targeted high tech industries for government assistance in helping them develop and compete in international markets. C) first balancing the budget and then cutting taxes. D) the application of Keynesian economic theory to stimulate or slow the economy through lowering or raising taxes. E) balanced budgeting through across-the-board cuts in all categories of government spending. 28. The authority of administrative actors to select among various responses to a given problem is called A) policy implementation. B) administrative discretion. C) the merit principle. D) the definition of alternatives. E) selective management.

4 29. Congress attempts to bind itself to a total expenditure level that should form the bottom line of all federal spending for all programs by passing A) a budget reconciliation. B) a budget resolution. C) an authorization bill. D) an appropriations bill. E) a zero-based binding resolution. 30. A capitalist economic system is one in which A) individuals and corporations own the principal means of production, through which they seek to earn profits. B) all individuals have an equal chance of owning the principal means of production, often in the form of stock ownership. C) individuals and corporations share ownership of the principal means of production, and profits are distributed equally. D) a central government determines production and price levels. E) private individuals act according to market principles and enhance the general welfare, with no government involvement. 31. According to monetarists, making too much money available to borrow my lead to A) economic belt-tightening. B) inflation. C) recession. D) too little credit. E) widespread bankruptcies. 32. Which of the following statements about bureaucracies is FALSE? A) Nothing better illustrates the complexity of modern government than its massive bureaucracies. B) Bureaucracies are scarcely hinted at in the Constitution. C) How to manage and control bureaucracies is a central problem of democratic government. D) Each bureaucratic agency is created by the president. E) Bureaucratic power extends to every corner of American economic and social life. 33. The purpose of antitrust legislation is to A) promote the rights of unions. B) foster industrial growth through such measures as tariffs and quotas to keep out foreign competition. C) ensure competition and prevent monopolies. D) prevent foreign investors from owning majority interests in American companies. E) stop the growth of multinational corporations. 34. From the mid-1960 s to the early 1980 s, the biggest change in government spending was the A) elimination of tax expenditures. B) growth of new budgeting techniques such as zero-based budgeting. C) increase in social service expenditures and decline in defense spending. D) prevent foreign investors from owning majority interests in American companies. E) stop the growth of multinational corporations. 35. According to proponents of supply-side economics, A) cutting taxes leads to more incentive to save, work harder, and create more jobs. B) increasing the supply of goods available for consumption lowers prices and reduces the inflation rate. C) increasing government spending provides an incentive to invest in business expansion. D) borrowing money decreases the risk of unemployment and recession. E) decreasing the supply of money reduces the federal deficit. 36. Right-to-work laws are supported by A) union members, but not necessarily organized unions. B) illegal immigrants. C) business management. D) both organized labor unions and management. E) organized labor unions. 37. The Office of Management and Budget parcels out money to government agencies and is accountable to A) the secretary of the treasury. B) the president. C) Congress. D) the Internal Revenue Service. E) the Congressional Budget Office. 38. Social Security taxes are A) paid for by employees only. B) levied and collected by state governments. C) taxes paid on Social Security benefits. D) paid for by employers only. E) paid for by employees and employers.

5 39. A major problem for presidents and Congress in controlling bureaucracies is the existence of A) the plum book. B) Supreme Court rulings curbing the scope of their oversight. C) standard operating procedures. D) the incentive system. E) iron triangles. 40. The use of government authority to control or change some practice in the private sector is know as A) public administration. B) oversight. C) regulation. D) executive review. E) socialism. 41. Members of the Federal Reserve System s Board of Governors A) merely carry out policy decided by the Treasury Department. B) can be fired by the president at any time. C) are given 14-year terms designed to insulate them from political pressures. D) are career civil-servants, neither appointed nor fired by presidents. E) are subject to replacement by each new president. 42. Hundreds, if not thousands, of studies by political scientists have concluded that voters A) vote against their personal financial interests. B) vote for candidates who promise the most. C) vote for the candidate who will benefit the voter s financial condition the most. D) ignore the economic consequences of government policies. E) vote solely on the basis of partisanship. 43. Compared to most other countries with developed economies, the national, state, and local governments in the United States tax A) at about the same rate. B) about one and half times as much per capita. C) about four times as heavily. D) less. E) about twice as heavily. 44. The consumer price index measures A) the change in income, controlling for periods of unemployment. B) the change what various incomes can buy. C) the change in the prime lending rate. D) the change in the amount of taxes paid by individuals. E) the change in the cost of buying a fixed basket of goods and services. 45. In order of decreasing amounts, the sources of federal revenue include A) social insurance receipts, corporate income tax, individual income tax, and borrowing. B) corporate income taxes, personal income taxes, borrowing and social insurance taxes. C) individual income tax, social insurance receipts, borrowing and corporate income tax. D) individual income tax, excise tax, corporate income tax, and social insurance receipts. E) borrowing, individual income tax, social insurance receipts, and corporate income tax. 46. The income tax is generally progressive, meaning that A) it is a newer form of taxation than excise and sales taxes. B) it increases incrementally on an annual basis. C) it is better than a flat tax. D) those with more income pay higher rates of tax on their income. E) those with more income pay more in taxes than those with less income. 47. Monetary policy is directly regulated by A) the Federal Reserve System. B) Congress and the President. C) the Department of Commerce. D) the United States Mint. E) the Treasury Department. 48. The government borrows money principally by A) maintaining numerous departmental credit card accounts. B) printing more currency. C) selling bonds. D) obtaining loans from foreign governments.

6 E) obtaining loans from the Federal Reserve. 49. The parts of the federal bureaucracy with responsibility for different sectors of the economy, and making and enforcing rules designed to protect the public interest, are the A) independent executive agencies. B) Cabinet departments. C) government corporations. D) independent regulatory agencies. E) commercial ministries. 50. Keynesian economic theory argues for A) stimulating the economy through massive tax cuts and reducing the size of the national government. B) government wage and price controls to control inflation. C) stimulating the economy through manipulating the nation s money supply. D) the government keeping its hands off the economy. E) stimulating the economy through government spending programs. 51. Which of the following would be a specific example of an appropriations bill? A) Congress voting to discontinue the federal income tax. B) A bill to continue the space shuttle program for another five years. C) A bill funding the Department of the Interior for the fiscal year. D) A budget resolution passed by both Houses of Congress. E) A bill establishing a national health insurance system. 52. An authorization bill A) authorizes the president to spend specific line-item amounts in the final budget. B) establishes, continues, or changes a discretionary program or an entitlement. C) sets the maximum amount that may be spent for entitlement programs. D) covers only one year at a time. E) provides the funding for discretionary programs. 53. Most of the government is composed of A) elected legislators. B) politicians. C) regulators. D) bureaucrats. E) lawyers. 54. A group of participants in bureaucratic policymaking with technical policy expertise and intellectual and emotional commitment to the issue is called A) an iron triangle. B) a subgovernment. C) a vested cohort. D) a government corporation. 55. A mixed political economy is one in which A) the government controls some, but not all, sectors of the economy. B) both agricultural and manufacturing sectors are active. C) the government consults with corporate directors on the nature and magnitude of government regulations. D) the government, while not commanding the economy, is still deeply involved in economic decisions. E) inflation and unemployment are uncorrelated. 56. One proposed solution to the problem of the proliferation of regulatory agencies and policies has been A) budget cuts. B) the incentive system. C) deproliferation. D) deregulation. E) standard operating procedures. 57. The rationale for the civil service rests on the A) need to separate military institutions from civilian institutions to prevent undue military influence. B) goal of centralizing government employment at the federal level. C) need for job replacements when a new party comes to power. D) desire to create a nonpartisan government service and promotion on the basis of merit. E) General Schedule rating system for patronage appointees.

7 58. The biggest slice of the federal budget pie belongs to A) education aid. B) health expenditures. C) national defense. D) law enforcement. E) social insurance programs. 59. Constitutional power over taxing and spending is given to A) the courts. B) the president. C) the bureaucracy. D) Congress. E) the Treasury Department. 60. Federal benefits that must be funded by Congress and must be paid to all citizens who meet eligibility criteria are called A) discretionary appropriations. B) continuing appropriations. C) tax expenditures. D) distributed benefits. E) individual entitlements.

Budget, Bureaucracy, Economic Policy-Making

Budget, Bureaucracy, Economic Policy-Making Budget, Bureaucracy, Economic Policy-Making MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Taxing, spending, and borrowing decisions by Congress

More information

INTRODUCTION THE GOVERNMENT S SOURCES OF REVENUE

INTRODUCTION THE GOVERNMENT S SOURCES OF REVENUE C HAPTER OVERVIEW INTRODUCTION The central political issue for many years has been how to pay for policies that most people support. A budget is a policy document allocating burdens (taxes) and benefits

More information

CHAPTER 15 THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER OUTLINE

CHAPTER 15 THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER 15 THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER OUTLINE I. Introduction (pp. 493-496) A. A budget is a policy document allocating burdens and benefits.

More information

Exam ch 16 PRACTICE 2014

Exam ch 16 PRACTICE 2014 Exam ch 16 PRACTICE 2014 1. The most important tool the government has for directing the economy is a. its control over trade racy. b. its control over government subsidies. c. its control over labor laws.

More information

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Thirteenth Edition, and Texas Edition Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry Chapter 14 The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and

More information

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending National Debt, Budget Deficits and Surpluses How much money the government owes. http://zfacts.com/p/461.html Deficit: expenditures

More information

Copyright 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman

Copyright 2011 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Longman Chapter 14: Congress, The President, and the Budget The Politics of Taxing and Spending Federal Revenue and Borrowing Federal Expenditures The Budgetary Process Understanding Budgeting Summary Chapter

More information

Economic Policymaking. Chapter 17

Economic Policymaking. Chapter 17 Economic Policymaking Chapter 17 Economic Systems Market Economy: An economic system in which individuals and corporations, not the government, own the principle means of production, and wages and prices

More information

Economic Policy. Jacob Dean, Alan Avilez

Economic Policy. Jacob Dean, Alan Avilez Economic Policy Jacob Dean, Alan Avilez Basics - Economy is complex - Economic Theories - Market Economy - Supply / Demand - Capitalist economy ~ Market economy Laissez-Faire Economics - Absence of government

More information

THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER 14, Government in America

THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER 14, Government in America THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING CHAPTER 14, Government in America APUSGovPol Page 1 of 9 I. INTRODUCTION A. The president and Congress have been caught in

More information

Chapter Eight: Government Budgeting

Chapter Eight: Government Budgeting Chapter Eight: Government Budgeting Foundations of Modern Government Budgeting Pre-Civil War, budgeting informal Federal budget under $1 billion Budgetary process fragmented After 1870s, national economy

More information

ECONOMIC POLICY AND THE CHALLENGE OF DEMOCRACY

ECONOMIC POLICY AND THE CHALLENGE OF DEMOCRACY CHAPTER 18 Economic Policy LEARNING OBJECTIVES After reading this chapter you should be able to Define the key terms at the end of the chapter. Compare and contrast laissez-faire, Keynesian, monetarist,

More information

20. President embraced supply-side economics.

20. President embraced supply-side economics. 1. A good method of evaluating a countryís amount of national debt, according to the authors, is a. looking at the raw amount of debt, without any fancy statistics. b. looking at the amount of debt controlling

More information

Chapters Test Review

Chapters Test Review Name Date Period Chapters 16-18 Test Review Ch 16 - Economic & Social Welfare Policymaking 1. is best understood as the rate at which prices for goods and services increase. 2. is best understood as the

More information

Federal Income Taxes: Who Pays and How Much. By Peter Ferrara August 14, 2008

Federal Income Taxes: Who Pays and How Much. By Peter Ferrara August 14, 2008 Federal Income Taxes: Who Pays and How Much By Peter Ferrara August 14, 2008 The Internal Revenue Service recently released official data on the payment of income taxes by different income groups, compiled

More information

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Thirteenth Edition Chapter 14 The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending Introduction

More information

What Are Taxes? Chapter 14 Section Main Menu

What Are Taxes? Chapter 14 Section Main Menu What Are Taxes? How are taxes used to fund government programs? What are three types of tax structures? What are the characteristics of a good tax? Who bears the burden of a tax? Funding Government Programs

More information

Chapter Fourteen: Domestic and Economic Policy

Chapter Fourteen: Domestic and Economic Policy Chapter Fourteen: Domestic and Economic Policy Learning Outcomes 1. Describe the five steps of the policymaking process, using the healthcare reform legislation as an example. 2. Explain why illegal immigration

More information

AP Gov Chapter 17 Outline

AP Gov Chapter 17 Outline A major economic policy issue is how to maintain stable economic growth without falling into either excessive unemployment or inflation (rising prices). Key concept: Inflation, a sustained rise in the

More information

Fiscal Policy. Fiscal Policy

Fiscal Policy. Fiscal Policy Fiscal Policy Fiscal policy was introduced earlier with the calculation of multipliers. AE multipliers imply fiscal policy is effective o because price is held constant along AE o SRAS s slope = 0 Aggregate

More information

Domestic Policy and Policymaking

Domestic Policy and Policymaking CHAPTER 14 Domestic Policy and Policymaking CHAPTER OUTLINE I. Making Public Policy A. Stages in the Policymaking Process II. B. Models of Decision-Making Education Policy A. Access to Education B. Funding

More information

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 13. Fiscal Policy

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 13. Fiscal Policy Chapter 13 Fiscal Policy Introduction Government expenditures on health care services have grown significantly since federal and state government began covering payments for various types of health-related

More information

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 13. Fiscal Policy

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 13. Fiscal Policy Copyright 2011 by Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 13 Fiscal Policy All rights reserved. Introduction Government expenditures on health care services have grown significantly since federal and state government

More information

Reading Essentials and Study Guide

Reading Essentials and Study Guide Lesson 2 Federal Government Finances ESSENTIAL QUESTION How does the government collect revenue, and on what is that revenue spent? Reading HELPDESK Academic Vocabulary coincide to happen or exist at the

More information

Chapter 25 Fiscal Policy Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin, et al.)

Chapter 25 Fiscal Policy Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter 25 Fiscal Policy Principles of Economics in Context (Goodwin, et al.) Chapter Overview This chapter introduces you to a formal analysis of fiscal policy, and puts it in context with real-world

More information

Objectives for Class 26: Fiscal Policy

Objectives for Class 26: Fiscal Policy 1 Objectives for Class 26: Fiscal Policy At the end of Class 26, you will be able to answer the following: 1. How is the government purchases multiplier calculated? (Review) How is the taxation multiplier

More information

What Is Fiscal Policy?

What Is Fiscal Policy? Fiscal Policy What Is Fiscal Policy? Fiscal policy is the federal government s use of taxing and spending to keep the economy stable. The tremendous flow of cash into and out of the economy due to government

More information

1 of 15 12/1/2013 1:28 PM

1 of 15 12/1/2013 1:28 PM 1 of 15 12/1/2013 1:28 PM Policy tools include Population growth, spending behavior, and invention. Wars, natural disasters, and trade disruptions. Tax policy, government spending, and the availability

More information

Analysis of Congressional Budget Office s August 2012 Updateof the Budget and Economic Outlook

Analysis of Congressional Budget Office s August 2012 Updateof the Budget and Economic Outlook Analysis of Congressional Budget Office s August 2012 Updateof the Budget and Economic Outlook Aug 24, 2012 The nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has released a mid-year update to its projections

More information

INTRODUCTION THE PUBLIC SECTOR MARKET FAILURE INTRODUCTION MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURE

INTRODUCTION THE PUBLIC SECTOR MARKET FAILURE INTRODUCTION MARKET FAILURE MARKET FAILURE Chapter 4 THE PUBLIC SECTOR INTRODUCTION The market can determine WHAT goods to produce, HOW, and for WHOM. Market outcomes may not necessarily be most desirable by policy makers. Government intervention

More information

10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget

10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget 10. Fiscal Policy and the Government Budget 1 The Government Budget The government s budget is affected by: Government spending (outlay) Tax revenue (income) 2 Government Spending Major components of government

More information

The Economic Consequences of Falling Off the Fiscal Cliff If Oil Prices Decline

The Economic Consequences of Falling Off the Fiscal Cliff If Oil Prices Decline The Economic Consequences of Falling Off the Fiscal Cliff If Oil Prices Decline Philip K. Verleger, Jr. President, PKVerleger LLC December 5, 2012 The fiscal cliff encompasses a set of budgetary measures

More information

CH 31 sample questions

CH 31 sample questions Class: Date: CH 31 sample questions Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The federal budget is defined as a. a monthly statement of expenditure

More information

Policy, Politics & Portfolios

Policy, Politics & Portfolios Policy, Politics & Portfolios ELECTION POST-MORTEM November 27, 2018 Craig Holke Investment Strategy Analyst Midterm elections 2 The elections are over. Democrats retook control of the House of Representatives,

More information

Most non-farm jobs in Texas are in the general area of a. manufacturing.

Most non-farm jobs in Texas are in the general area of a. manufacturing. Government decisions regarding revenues, expenditures, and borrowing are referred to as a. monetary policy. b. foreign policy. c. banking policy. *d. fiscal policy. Texas has generally resisted using all

More information

Defining the problem: the difference between current deficit and long-term deficits

Defining the problem: the difference between current deficit and long-term deficits KEY POINTS FOR FEDERAL DEFICIT DISCUSSIONS Overview: Unless our budget policies are changed, the imbalance between spending and revenues will eventually become unsustainable rapidly rising debt will threaten

More information

REPUBLICAN PROPOSAL TO PAY FOR PAYROLL TAX EXTENSION WOULD INCREASE ALREADY SEVERE CUTS IN DISCRETIONARY PROGRAMS by James R.

REPUBLICAN PROPOSAL TO PAY FOR PAYROLL TAX EXTENSION WOULD INCREASE ALREADY SEVERE CUTS IN DISCRETIONARY PROGRAMS by James R. 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org December 2, 2011 REPUBLICAN PROPOSAL TO PAY FOR PAYROLL TAX EXTENSION WOULD INCREASE

More information

Impact of Permanent Legislation on Budgeting and Budget Oversight

Impact of Permanent Legislation on Budgeting and Budget Oversight Congressional Budget Office Impact of Permanent Legislation on Budgeting and Budget Oversight Fifth Annual Meeting OECD Parliamentary Budget Officials and Independent Fiscal Institutions Robert A. Sunshine

More information

Chapter 14: The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

Chapter 14: The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending Chapter 14: The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending 1. In the 2000 presidential election, the candidate who argued that the budget surplus should be used for a

More information

FAQ: Money and Banking

FAQ: Money and Banking Question 1: What is the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) and why is it important? Answer 1: The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) is a federal agency that protects bank deposits

More information

Setting the Annual Budget

Setting the Annual Budget 14 Fiscal Policy Introduction The 2000s have been a decade of fiscal policy: The Economic Stimulus Act of 2008 cost $152 billion. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 was a $789 billion package

More information

AN ANALYSIS OF THE RECENT DETERIORATION IN THE FISCAL CONDITION OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT

AN ANALYSIS OF THE RECENT DETERIORATION IN THE FISCAL CONDITION OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT September 2004 AN ANALYSIS OF THE RECENT DETERIORATION IN THE FISCAL CONDITION OF THE U.S. GOVERNMENT Per Capita Net Federal Debt 1998 to 2004* (Actual Debt Compared to CBO January 2001 Forecast) $16,000

More information

Chapter 10. Fiscal Policy. Macroeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools NINTH EDITION

Chapter 10. Fiscal Policy. Macroeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools NINTH EDITION Macroeconomics: Principles, Applications, and Tools NINTH EDITION Chapter 10 Fiscal Policy Learning Objectives 10.1 Explain how fiscal policy works using aggregate demand and aggregate supply. 10.2 Identify

More information

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Katelin P. Isaacs Analyst in Income Security September 27, 2012 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress

More information

A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET

A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET BUDGET OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Fiscal Year 1996 Table of Contents Page Introduction.................................. 1 Origins of Today s Budget.......................

More information

Understanding the Federal Budget 1

Understanding the Federal Budget 1 Understanding the Federal Budget 1 "For in the end, a budget is more than simply numbers on a page. It is a measure of how well we are living up to our obligations to ourselves and one another." --From

More information

NAME DATE CLASS. Financing the Government Lesson 1: The Federal Budget: Revenues and Expenditures

NAME DATE CLASS. Financing the Government Lesson 1: The Federal Budget: Revenues and Expenditures NAME DATE CLASS Lesson 1: The Federal Budget: Revenues and Expenditures ESSENTIAL QUESTION How does government influence the economy and economic institutions? GUIDING QUESTIONS 1. How does the federal

More information

Chapter 10 GOVERNMENT SPENDING

Chapter 10 GOVERNMENT SPENDING Chapter 10 GOVERNMENT SPENDING SECTION I THE ECONOMICS OF GOVERNMENT SPENDING Total Government Spending in 2003 was $ 3,000,000,000,000 For every man, woman, and child (per capita) $ 10,300 Spending in

More information

Mandatory Spending Since 1962

Mandatory Spending Since 1962 D. Andrew Austin Analyst in Economic Policy Mindy R. Levit Analyst in Public Finance February 16, 2010 Congressional Research Service CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress

More information

U.S. Fiscal Policy in the 1990s

U.S. Fiscal Policy in the 1990s 1 17.ppt U.S. Fiscal Policy in the 1990s Lecture 18 FEDERAL BUDGET HISTORY 2 17.ppt Taxes have trended up largely to pay for greater entitlements (transfers) Taxes less transfers were reduced in the 1970s

More information

A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET

A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET BUDGET OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT Fiscal Year 1998 Table of Contents A Note to the Reader.... iii 1. What Is the Budget?... 1 2. Where the Money Comes From

More information

PROGRAM CUTS UNDER A BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT: HOW SEVERE MIGHT THEY BE? By Richard Kogan

PROGRAM CUTS UNDER A BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT: HOW SEVERE MIGHT THEY BE? By Richard Kogan 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org November 15, 2011 PROGRAM CUTS UNDER A BALANCED BUDGET AMENDMENT: HOW SEVERE MIGHT THEY

More information

The Government and Fiscal Policy

The Government and Fiscal Policy The and Fiscal Policy 9 Nothing in macroeconomics or microeconomics arouses as much controversy as the role of government in the economy. In microeconomics, the active presence of government in regulating

More information

Tax Reform National Survey

Tax Reform National Survey Tax Reform National Survey Key findings of a survey of 1,000 likely voters nationally, conducted October 19-22, 2017. Glen Bolger glen@pos.org Project #17420 Public Opinion Strategies is pleased to present

More information

Brief: Potential Impacts of the FY House Budget on Federal R&D

Brief: Potential Impacts of the FY House Budget on Federal R&D Brief: Potential Impacts of the FY 2013 By Matt Hourihan Director, R&D Budget and Policy Program House Budget on Federal R&D KEY FINDINGS: Under some simple assumptions, the House budget could reduce total

More information

The Future of Social Security

The Future of Social Security Statement of Douglas Holtz-Eakin Director The Future of Social Security before the Special Committee on Aging United States Senate February 3, 2005 This statement is embargoed until 2 p.m. (EST) on Thursday,

More information

THE TAX POLICY. BRIEFING BOOK A Citizens' Guide for the 2008 Election and Beyond

THE TAX POLICY. BRIEFING BOOK A Citizens' Guide for the 2008 Election and Beyond BACKGROUND: THE NUMBERS I-1-1 THE TAX POLICY BRIEFING BOOK A Citizens' Guide for the 2008 Election and Beyond THE NUMBERS What are the federal government s sources of revenue?... I-1-1 How does the federal

More information

March 31, In fact, the Tax Foundation s calculation

March 31, In fact, the Tax Foundation s calculation 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org March 31, 2009 TAX FOUNDATION FIGURES DO NOT REPRESENT TYPICAL HOUSEHOLDS TAX BURDENS

More information

Fiscal Cliff Part II The Debt Ceiling Looms

Fiscal Cliff Part II The Debt Ceiling Looms Market Insights January 2013 Fiscal Cliff Part II The Debt Ceiling Looms The first fiscal cliff to be avoided was sealed at the last minute at the end of 2012. Tax rates for 99% of households will remain

More information

Chapter 7. Fiscal Policy. These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook

Chapter 7. Fiscal Policy. These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook Chapter 7 Fiscal Policy These slides supplement the textbook, but should not replace reading the textbook Who were the classical economists? A group of the 18 th and 19 th centuries, including Adam Smith

More information

National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare PAC 2018 CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE

National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare PAC 2018 CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE National Committee to Preserve Social Security and Medicare PAC 2018 CONGRESSIONAL CANDIDATE QUESTIONNAIRE Candidate Name: State: District: Affordable Care Act The Affordable Care Act (ACA) is a highly

More information

Chapter 9 Sources of Government Revenue

Chapter 9 Sources of Government Revenue Chapter 9 Sources of Government Revenue Did You Know? To help the ailing yacht industry, which suffered great losses after the 1991 luxury tax was imposed, Representative Patrick J. Kennedy introduced

More information

Deficit Day to Bankruptcy Day

Deficit Day to Bankruptcy Day Deficit Day to Bankruptcy Day April 2014 copies of this presentation can be found at Jan 1 Dec 31 Deficit Day! How much government spending do people fund with their tax dollars? Top 1% 56 days 2% to 5%

More information

Taxes and Spending. Mostly Agree

Taxes and Spending. Mostly Agree Taxes and Spending ESSENTIAL QUESTION: Who and what should be taxed? Mark the box that reflects your opinion about each statement. Completely Agree Mostly Agree Mostly Disagree Completely Disagree Businesses

More information

15 th. edition Gwartney Stroup Sobel Macpherson. First page. edition Gwartney Stroup Sobel Macpherson

15 th. edition Gwartney Stroup Sobel Macpherson. First page. edition Gwartney Stroup Sobel Macpherson Alternative Views of Fiscal Policy An Overview GWARTNEY STROUP SOBEL MACPHERSON Fiscal Policy, Incentives, and Secondary Effects Full Length Text Part: 3 Macro Only Text Part: 3 Chapter: 12 Chapter: 12

More information

working paper President Obama s First Budget By Veronique de Rugy No March 2009

working paper President Obama s First Budget By Veronique de Rugy No March 2009 No. 09-05 March 2009 working paper President Obama s First Budget By Veronique de Rugy The ideas presented in this research are the author s and do not represent official positions of the Mercatus Center

More information

All levels of government federal, state and local have budgets that show

All levels of government federal, state and local have budgets that show Government Budgets and Fiscal Policy All levels of government federal, state and local have budgets that show how much money the government expects to have available to spend and how the government plans

More information

ECONOMIC POLICY. and PUBLIC POLICY

ECONOMIC POLICY. and PUBLIC POLICY ECONOMIC POLICY and PUBLIC POLICY The Roots of Government Participation in the Economy For the first 100 years of our nation, most economic issues were controlled by the states not the national government.

More information

Mandatory Spending Since 1962

Mandatory Spending Since 1962 D. Andrew Austin Analyst in Economic Policy Mindy R. Levit Analyst in Public Finance June 15, 2011 Congressional Research Service CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress

More information

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Katelin P. Isaacs Analyst in Income Security June 13, 2013 CRS Report for Congress Prepared for Members and Committees of Congress Congressional

More information

Chapter 1 Introduction to Federal Taxation and Understanding the Federal Tax Law

Chapter 1 Introduction to Federal Taxation and Understanding the Federal Tax Law 1 Introduction to Federal Taxation and Understanding the Federal Tax Law SUMMARY OF CHAPTER This chapter presents information on the magnitude of federal taxes collected and on taxpayer obligations. Also,

More information

We are a Nonpartisan Organization Working to: RAISE PUBLIC AWARENESS CONVENE LEADERS AND STAKEHOLDERS DRIVE GROUNDBREAKING RESEARCH

We are a Nonpartisan Organization Working to: RAISE PUBLIC AWARENESS CONVENE LEADERS AND STAKEHOLDERS DRIVE GROUNDBREAKING RESEARCH MEDIA KIT We are a Nonpartisan Organization Working to: RAISE PUBLIC AWARENESS about fiscal challenges threatening America s economy CONVENE LEADERS AND STAKEHOLDERS from across the political and ideological

More information

Economics Unit 3. The Last Unit!!

Economics Unit 3. The Last Unit!! Economics Unit 3 The Last Unit!! Objective 3.01: Identify phases of the business cycle and the economic indicators used to measure economic activities and trends. Measuring the Economy GDP Gross Domestic

More information

CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE CBO. The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012 to 2022

CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE CBO. The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012 to 2022 CONGRESS OF THE UNITED STATES CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE The Budget and Economic Outlook: Fiscal Years 2012 to 2022 4 2 0-2 -4-6 -8-10 Actual Deficits or Surpluses (Percentage of GDP) s Baseline Projection

More information

Chapter 9 Test. Name: Class: Date: True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false.

Chapter 9 Test. Name: Class: Date: True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. Name: Class: Date: ID: A Chapter 9 Test True/False Indicate whether the statement is true or false. 1. Supply and demand are used to predict the incidence of a tax. 2. The two principles of taxation are

More information

TH E FED ERA L GOVERNMENT S LABOR AND MANPOWER PROGRAMS

TH E FED ERA L GOVERNMENT S LABOR AND MANPOWER PROGRAMS TH E FED ERA L GOVERNMENT S LABOR AND MANPOWER PROGRAMS D epartm ent of L abor Statement submitted by James P. Mitchell, Secretary of Labor The enclosed material is submitted in response to the subcommittee

More information

Hutchins Center Roundtable discussion, presentation by Richard Kogan, May 26, 2015

Hutchins Center Roundtable discussion, presentation by Richard Kogan, May 26, 2015 Page 1 of 5 Hutchins Center Roundtable discussion, presentation by Richard Kogan, May 26, 2015 1. Default Risk vs. Market Risk: This debate is not about loan defaults FCRA (existing law) is the Federal

More information

Economic Theories & Debt Driven Realities

Economic Theories & Debt Driven Realities Economic Theories & Debt Driven Realities March 11, 2019 by Lance Roberts of Real Investment Advice One of the most highly debated topics over the past few months has been the rise of Modern Monetary Theory

More information

The legislature is considering a bill to raise the minimum wage in California from $6.75 an hour to $7.25 in 2005 and $7.75 in 2006.

The legislature is considering a bill to raise the minimum wage in California from $6.75 an hour to $7.25 in 2005 and $7.75 in 2006. INSTITUTE OF REGIONAL AND URBAN STUDIES 610 UNIVERSITY AVENUE PALO ALTO CALIFORNIA 94301 TELEPHONE: (650) 326-5770 FAX: (650) 321-5451 www.ccsce.com DATE: June 30, 2004 TO: FROM: SUBJECT: Budget Project

More information

MORE THAN HALF OF BLACK AND HISPANIC FAMILIES WOULD NOT BENEFIT FROM BUSH TAX PLAN. by Isaac Shapiro, Allen Dupree and James Sly

MORE THAN HALF OF BLACK AND HISPANIC FAMILIES WOULD NOT BENEFIT FROM BUSH TAX PLAN. by Isaac Shapiro, Allen Dupree and James Sly 820 First Street, NE, Suite 510, Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org http://www.cbpp.org February 15, 2001 MORE THAN HALF OF BLACK AND HISPANIC FAMILIES WOULD NOT BENEFIT

More information

BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT PREVIEW REPORT

BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT PREVIEW REPORT 280-000 0-91-1 (PART 5) XIV. BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT PREVIEW REPORT Part Five-1 XIV. BUDGET ENFORCEMENT ACT PREVIEW REPORT The Budget Enforcement Act of 1990 (BEA), which was enacted into law as part of

More information

Essential Questions Fiscal Policy

Essential Questions Fiscal Policy Essential Questions Fiscal Policy -What is the role of Government in the Macro Economy? -What are the basic causes of Business Fluctuations? -What is fiscal policy and how does gov t use fiscal tools to

More information

Just Facts' 2017 Survey of Voter Knowledge on Public Policy Issues November 1-9, 2016 n=700 Margin of Error +/- 3.78%

Just Facts' 2017 Survey of Voter Knowledge on Public Policy Issues November 1-9, 2016 n=700 Margin of Error +/- 3.78% Which of the following best describes how you participate in elections: I vote everytime there is an opportunity I try to vote in most elections, but sometimes I miss one Frequency 529 75.6 75.6 75.6 171

More information

Tax Foundation s Average Far More Than What Most Americans Pay in Federal Taxes FIGURE 1: April 2, 2012

Tax Foundation s Average Far More Than What Most Americans Pay in Federal Taxes FIGURE 1: April 2, 2012 820 First Street NE, Suite 510 Washington, DC 20002 Tel: 202-408-1080 Fax: 202-408-1056 center@cbpp.org www.cbpp.org April 2, 2012 TAX FOUNDATION FIGURES DO NOT REPRESENT TYPICAL HOUSEHOLDS TAX BURDENS

More information

CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal

CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal CHAPTER 12 SECTION 1 The First New Deal Roosevelt s Rise to Power Big Ideas: Franklin Roosevelt, former Secretary of the Navy and Governor of New York, campaigned on a promise of a new deal between Americans

More information

An Assessment of the President s Proposal to Stimulate the Economy and Create Jobs. John B. Taylor *

An Assessment of the President s Proposal to Stimulate the Economy and Create Jobs. John B. Taylor * An Assessment of the President s Proposal to Stimulate the Economy and Create Jobs John B. Taylor * Testimony Before the Committee on Oversight and Government Reform Subcommittee on Regulatory Affairs,

More information

The Proposed UNPAN Classified Keywords 1 August 2001

The Proposed UNPAN Classified Keywords 1 August 2001 The Proposed UNPAN Classified Keywords 1 August 2001 Accounting Adjustment policy Adjustment programmes Administration of justice Administrative aspects Administrative autonomy Administrative development

More information

Tools of Budget Analysis (Chapter 4 in Gruber s textbook) 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley

Tools of Budget Analysis (Chapter 4 in Gruber s textbook) 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley Tools of Budget Analysis (Chapter 4 in Gruber s textbook) 131 Undergraduate Public Economics Emmanuel Saez UC Berkeley 1 GOVERNMENT BUDGETING Debt: The amount borrowed by government through bonds to individuals,

More information

RESEARCH REPORTS. AMERICAN INSTITUTE for ECONOMIC RESEARCH. Do Tax Cuts Mean Bigger Deficits? Published by. Great Barrington, Massachusetts 01230

RESEARCH REPORTS. AMERICAN INSTITUTE for ECONOMIC RESEARCH. Do Tax Cuts Mean Bigger Deficits? Published by. Great Barrington, Massachusetts 01230 Published by AMERICAN INSTITUTE for ECONOMIC RESEARCH Great Barrington, Massachusetts 01230 RESEARCH REPORTS Vol. LXIII No. 16 August 26, 1996 Do Tax Cuts Mean Bigger Deficits? Tax cuts that increase what

More information

Myth: This is going to cost a fortune. How will we pay for it?

Myth: This is going to cost a fortune. How will we pay for it? Myths About SB 810 & Responses I. AFFORDABILITY Myth: This is going to cost a fortune. How will we pay for it? Response: The current health care finance system wastes nearly 50% of each health care dollar

More information

Vanderbilt University Poll December Survey Results

Vanderbilt University Poll December Survey Results Vanderbilt University Poll December 2012 Survey Results Vanderbilt University Poll December 2012 Toplines for REGISTERED VOTERS N = 829; Margin of Error +/- 4.3% SEX. Record Respondent s sex Male 48% Female

More information

Fiscal Policy: Government Spending &Taxation

Fiscal Policy: Government Spending &Taxation Lecture Notes for Chapter 1 of Macroeconomics: An Introduction Fiscal Policy: Government Spending &Taxation Copyright 1999-28 by Charles R. Nelson 2/28/8 In this chapter we will discuss - What is Fiscal

More information

Number 2: The UK Spending Deficit What is it and must it be eliminated now?

Number 2: The UK Spending Deficit What is it and must it be eliminated now? Economics: the plain truth A series of plain briefings for Reps and Activists Number 2: The UK Spending Deficit What is it and must it be eliminated now? By squeezing families and businesses too hard,

More information

Texans For Fiscal Responsibility

Texans For Fiscal Responsibility Texans For Fiscal Responsibility 2016 Texas Senate Questionnaire For Endorsement Consideration FIRST NAME Senate District #: LAST NAME E-Mail: Phone: ( ) Campaign Manager: Consultant: INTRODUCTION Texans

More information

o. "n August 5, the U.S. Senate cleared

o. n August 5, the U.S. Senate cleared economig COMMeNTORY Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland October 15, 1993 The Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993: A Summary Report by David Altig and Jagadeesh Gokhale o. "n August 5, the U.S. Senate cleared

More information

IVY TECH STATE COLLEGE REGION 14-BLOOMINGTON ECN 101 ECONOMICS FUNDAMENTALS Fall 2006 Final Examination

IVY TECH STATE COLLEGE REGION 14-BLOOMINGTON ECN 101 ECONOMICS FUNDAMENTALS Fall 2006 Final Examination IVY TECH STATE COLLEGE REGION 14-BLOOMINGTON ECN 101 ECONOMICS FUNDAMENTALS Fall 2006 Final Examination Name MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the

More information

Table of Contents MISSION STATEMENT... 2 DEPARTMENT HISTORY... 2

Table of Contents MISSION STATEMENT... 2 DEPARTMENT HISTORY... 2 Careers Alabama Department of An introduction for prospective employees to the career opportunities available with the Alabama Department of. Revised March 2005 Careers 1 Table of Contents MISSION STATEMENT...

More information

1 of 24. Modern Macroeconomics: From the Short Run to the Long Run. 2 of 24. They could not have differed more sharply on economic theory and policy.

1 of 24. Modern Macroeconomics: From the Short Run to the Long Run. 2 of 24. They could not have differed more sharply on economic theory and policy. 1 of 24 2 of 24 the Long Run They could not have differed more sharply on economic theory and policy. P R E P A R E D B Y FERNANDO QUIJANO, YVONN QUIJANO, AND XIAO XUAN XU 3 of 24 1 A P P L Y I N G T H

More information

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each)

UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) DUE DATE: NAME: UNITS 12-13: FIXING AN ECONOMY: FISCAL & MONETARY POLICY WORKSHEET USE THE LECTURE NOTES TO ANSWER THE FOLLOWING QUESTIONS (10 pts each) 1. John Keynes suggested that government should

More information

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues

Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Cornell University ILR School DigitalCommons@ILR Federal Publications Key Workplace Documents 9-27-2012 Federal Employees Retirement System: Budget and Trust Fund Issues Katelin P. Isaacs Congressional

More information