Wasn't Texas supposed to be thriving even as the rest of America suffered? Didn't its governor declare, during his re-election campaign, that we have

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Transcription:

Wasn't Texas supposed to be thriving even as the rest of America suffered? Didn't its governor declare, during his re-election campaign, that we have billions in surplus? But reality has now intruded and that reality has implications for the nation as a whole. For Texas is where the modern conservative theory of budgeting the belief that you should never raise taxes under any circumstances, that you can always balance the budget by cutting wasteful spending has been implemented most completely. If the theory can't make it there, it can't make it anywhere. Paul Krugman

Keynesian theory highlights the potential of fiscal policy to solve macro problems. Fiscal Policy is the use of government taxes and spending to alter macroeconomic outcomes.

Deficit spending is the use of borrowed funds to finance government expenditures that exceed tax revenues.

A budget deficit is the amount by which government spending exceeds government revenue in a given time period. a budget deficit = government spending tax revenues > 0

If the government spends less than its tax revenues, a budget surplus is created. A budget surplus is an excess of government revenues over government expenditures in a given time period.

Budget Totals (in billions of dollars) Fiscal Year 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 Receipts $2,163 $2,304 $2,450 $2,775 $3,021 Outlays -3,457-3,603-3,537-3,455-3,506 Surplus (Deficit) (1,294) (1,300) (1,087) (680) (485)

Budget deficits and surpluses are a routine feature of counter-cyclical fiscal policy. The goal of macro policy is not to balance the budget but to balance the economy at full-employment.

At the beginning of each year, the President and Congress put together a budget blueprint for the next fiscal year. The fiscal year (FY) is the twelve-month period used for accounting purposes. It begins on October 1 for the federal government.

To a large extent, current revenues and expenditures are the result of decisions made in prior years. Discretionary fiscal spending are those elements of the federal budget not determined by past legislative or executive commitments.

This chart by Mercatus Center Senior Research Fellow Veronique de Rugy shows the long-term path of federal spending, isolating three of its largest components: Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, and interest on the debt... none of which is discretionary spending.

Since most of the budget is uncontrollable, fiscal restraint or fiscal stimulus are less effective. Fiscal restraint tax hikes or spending cuts intended to reduce (shift) aggregate demand Fiscal stimulus tax cuts or spending hikes intended to increase (shift) aggregate demand

Most of the uncontrollable line items in the federal budget change with economic conditions. Outlays for unemployment compensation and welfare benefits increase when the economy goes into a recession.

Income transfers are payments to individuals for which no current goods or services are exchanged, such as social security, welfare, unemployment benefits.

Automatic stabilizers are federal expenditures or revenue items that automatically respond countercyclically to changes in national income.

Automatic stabilizers also exist on the revenue side of the budget. Income taxes move up and down with the value of spending and output. Being progressive, personal taxes siphon off increasing proportions of purchasing power as incomes rise.

The size of the federal deficit or surplus is sensitive to the expansion and contraction of the macro economy. Budget deficits and surpluses may be due to economic conditions as much as policy decisions.

The cyclical deficit is that portion of the budget deficit attributable to unemployment or inflation. The cyclical deficit widens when GDP growth slows or inflation decreases. The cyclical deficit shrinks when GDP growth accelerates or inflation increases.

To isolate the effects of fiscal policy, the deficit is broken down into cyclical and structural components. total budget deficit cyclical = + deficit structural deficit

The structural deficit is federal revenues at fullemployment minus expenditures at full employment under prevailing fiscal policy.

Part of the deficit comes from cyclical changes in the economy. The rest is the result of discretionary fiscal policy. Only changes in the structural deficit measure the thrust of fiscal policy.

Fiscal policy is categorized as follows: Fiscal stimulus is measured by the increase in the structural deficit (or shrinkage in the structural surplus). Fiscal restraint is gauged by the decrease in the structural deficit (or increase in the structural surplus).

There are a number of consequences of budget deficits: crowding out opportunity cost interest-rate movements

Crowding-out is the reduction in private-sector borrowing (and spending) caused by increased government borrowing. Crowding out implies less private-sector output.

Public-sector output (quantity per year) g 2 g 1 Increase in government spending... c b a Crowds out private spending h 2 h 1 Private-sector output (quantity per year)

Crowding out reminds us that there is an opportunity cost to government spending. Opportunity cost is the most desired goods or services that are forgone in order to obtain something else.

Rising interest rates are both a symptom and a cause of crowding out.

The economic effects of budget surpluses are the mirror image of those for deficits.

There are four potential uses for a budget surplus: Cut taxes. Increase income transfers. Spend it on goods and services. Pay off old debt ( save it ).

Crowding in is the increase in private sector borrowing (and spending) caused by decreased government borrowing.

Crowding in depends on the state of the economy. In a recession, a decline in interest rates is not likely to stimulate much spending if consumer and investor confidence is low.

The United States has accumulated a large national debt. The national debt is the accumulated debt of the federal government.

When the Treasury borrows funds it issues treasury bonds. Treasury bonds are promissory notes (IOUs) issued by the US Treasury. The national debt is a stock of IOUs created by annual deficit flows.

By 1783, the United States had borrowed over $8 million from France and $250,000 from Spain to finance the Revolutionary War.

During the period 1790-1812 the US often incurred debt but typically repaid it quickly. The War of 1812 caused a massive increase in national debt and, by 1816, the national debt was over $129 million.

1835-36: Debt Free! The US was completely out of debt by 1835. The Mexican-American War (1846-48) caused a fourfold increase in the debt.

By the end of the Civil War (1861-65), the North owed over $2.6 billion, nearly half of its national income. After the South lost, Confederate currency and bonds had no value.

The Spanish-American War (1898) also increased the national debt. World War I raised the debt from 3% to 41% of the national income.

National debt declined during the 1920 s but rose again during the Great Depression.

The greatest increase in national debt occurred during World War II. Rather than raise taxes, the government rationed consumer goods. US War Bond purchases raised the debt from 45% of GDP to over 125% of GDP by 1946.