PPL 813 Section 1. Public Finance. A222 Wells phone: Office hours: W 2:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. and by appointment

Similar documents
NYU Wagner School of Public Service UPADM-GP140 The Economics of Public Policy Spring 2017

San José State University Econ 1A, Principles of Macroeconomics, Section 19, Fall 2014

BOSTON COLLEGE Department of Economics. TTh 12:00 391A, Maloney Hall; x Syllabus

BEPP 201/770: Introduction to Business Economics and Public Policy Fall Semester 2013, Tues-Thurs 1:30-2:50, SHDH 109

Trachtenberg School of Public Policy and Public Administration, The George Washington University

If you choose to include discussion in your grade, your grade composition will be as follows:

COURSE SYLLABUS CRN 10234; FIN 6246 MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS SPRING 2012

Delaware State University College of Business Department of Accounting, Economics and Finance Fall 2010 Tentative Course Outline

FYOS : Trading and Risks

Courtney Coile Spring 2010 Economics 310: Public Economics

Shidler College of Business University of Hawai i at Manoa Spring Bus 313 Economic & Financial Environment of Global Business

Finance 461: FINANCIAL INTERMEDIATION

Derivatives (Futures and Options) (MGMT ; CRN: 34067) Spring 2016

COURSE SYLLABUS CRN 10358; FIN 6246 MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS SPRING 2014

Financial Decision-Making Implications for the Consumer and the Professional

UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSSETS DARTMOUTH College of Business Department of Accounting and Finance

COURSE SYLLABUS CRN 10191; FIN 6246 MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS SPRING 2015

Principles of Macroeconomics ECO 2251-THWA Fall 2011 MW 2:00 3:15 pm Bibb Graves 221

STERN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS NEW YORK UNIVERSITY UNDERGRADUATE COLLEGE Fall 2000

HRIR 6503 Employer Sponsored Employee Benefit Plans

POLITICAL SCIENCE 310 Public Bureaucracy in the Policy Process (Hybrid) Michigan State University Summer 2009 Instructor: Phone Office Hours

BUS 172C (Futures and Options), Fall 2017

Business Economics & Public Policy 201/770 Introduction to Business Economics and Public Policy Fall 2015

Finance 3200: Risk & Insurance Fall 2014

The University of Western Ontario Department of Statistical and Actuarial Sciences ACTUARIAL SCIENCE 2053

CALIFORNIA STATE UNIVERSITY, SACRAMENTO DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS

Textbooks (both are available in the UWO bookstore) Mathematics of Finance, NEW 8th Edition, by Brown-Kopp ($91.75) Study note package (about $25)

Economics 205: Public Economics Fall 2006

Tax 6065 Tax Data Bases, Research, & Procedure University of West Florida

BUSINESS FINANCE 3300 INSURANCE AND RISK. Course Syllabus. Spring Semester 2016 MWF 12:40 1:35PM / Schoenbaum 315

COURSE SYLLABUS CRN 11119; FIN 6246 MONEY AND CAPITAL MARKETS SPRING 2017

CALIFORNIA POLYTECHNIC STATE UNIVERSITY ORFALEA COLLEGE OF BUSINESS FIXED INCOME SECURITIES AND MARKETS

ECON 1120: Macroeconomics

RES/FIN 9776 Real Estate Finance Spring 2014 M/W 05:50-7:05pm Room: building 22, 137 East 22nd, Room 203

ECON 012: Macroeconomics

AEM 4260 Fixed Income Securities Fall 2011 TTh 10:10am 11:25am, B108 Comstock

UNIVERSITY OF VIRGINIA. E.O. Olsen Economics 4310 (TR ) Fall 2016 ECONOMICS OF THE PUBLIC SECTOR

ECON 012: Macroeconomics

ECON 012: Macroeconomics

Economics of Health: ECO 330T Unique Number: 34225

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY STERN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS. FOUNDATIONS OF FINANCIAL MARKETS C Spring Professor Yoram Landskroner

MGMT 610 Financial Management I Fall 2008 Module 2 Professors John J. McConnell and Mark D. Walker

FIN : Principles of Risk Management and Insurance

ALTERNATIVE TEXTBOOK:

University of International Business and Economics International Summer Sessions. ECON 105: Macroeconomics

MGT 12: Personal Financial Management Undergraduate, Winter 2014 Tuesday and Thursday 11AM-12:20PM Location : Wells Fargo Hall 1N108

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Stern School of Business

UNIVERSITY OF DELAWARE ACCOUNTING 614 ADVANCED FEDERAL TAXATION FALL 2016

POLITICAL SCIENCE 4333 POLICY, POLITICS, AND THE BUDGET

Finance 330: Capital Budgeting Spring 2011

PSC 713: PUBLIC BUDGETING & FINANCE Summer 2014 Central Michigan University Atlanta, GA Center. Friday, 6:00pm 10:00 pm Saturday, 8:00 am 5:00 pm

Economics 150. Public Finance: Taxation. Fall Term, 2012

Econ 425: Financial Economics UNC at Chapel Hill, Department of Economics Fall 2017

FINANCE 305. Financial Markets, Institutions, and Economic Activity Fall, 2013/2014

Office Hours: Thursday 3-5pm

January Alan Schick, on the state of public budgeting; Everybody does it. They do it every year. And, they never get it right.

BA Insurance and Risk Management Spring 2011 MW 9:30-10:45 PM Room: SOM 2.115

Finance 4021: Derivatives Professor Michael Ferguson Lindner Hall 415 phone: office hours: MW 9:00-10:30 a.m.

Economics 2202 (Section 05) Macroeconomic Theory 1. Syllabus Professor Sanjay Chugh Fall 2014

Econ 308: Intermediate Macroeconomics Whitman College Fall 2008

Course Syllabus. [FIN 4533 FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES - (SECTION 16A9)] Fall 2015, Mod 1

SUNY AT STONY BROOK FIN 552 Mergers & Acquisitions Tentative Course Syllabus Spring 2014

P&C Insurance Operations FINA 446 Spring 2017

College of Southern Maryland BUSINESS FINANCE. Course / Instructor Information. Things to Purchase. Course Description.

Economics 2202 (Section 05) Macroeconomic Theory 1. Syllabus Professor Sanjay Chugh Spring 2015

Finance 561: Financial Intermediation, Fall 2010

Economics 4500/6500: Health Economics and Policy

FIN7037 Fixed Income Security Analysis Fall 2017

Accounting Section 3 (DIS 83184) Cost Accounting Course Syllabus Fall 2016

Public Finance Department of Public Finance National Chengchi University

Econ 423: Financial Markets UNC at Chapel Hill, Department of Economics Fall 2016

Economics 325 (Section 020*) Intermediate Macroeconomic Analysis 1. Syllabus Professor Sanjay Chugh Fall 2009

BUSINESS FINANCE 3300 INSURANCE AND RISK. Course Syllabus

Tuesdays 6:30-9:20 PM

COURSE SYLLABUS & OUTLINE Survey of Personal Financial Planning, Spring, 2016

Welcome to Finance 221

POLITICAL SCIENCE 4333 POLICY, POLITICS, AND THE BUDGET

MARYLAND SCHOOL OF PUBLIC POLICY

Syllabus for Economics 30 Public Policy Analysis Fall 2015

Health Economics Policy. ECP3990 (12534), Syllabus, Spring 2017

Syllabus for Economics 30 Public Finance Fall 2014

FIN E Derivatives and Risk Management Spring 2014

FIN3560 Financial Markets & Instruments Spring 2018

Tuesdays and Thursdays 11:00 12:20 PM

Delaware State University College of Business Department of Accounting, Economics and Finance Spring 2013 Course Outline

The Wharton School University of Pennsylvania Finance Department

PUBP 741 US Financial Policy, Processes and Procedures

Business 301: Global Financial Institutions and Markets

[FIN 4533 FINANCIAL DERIVATIVES - ELECTIVE (2 CREDITS)] Fall 2013 Mod 1. Course Syllabus

Course: TA 318.C3 CyberCampus Advanced Federal Income Taxation Fall Michael Vinson

COURSE DESCRIPTION Fiscal and military policy, taxation and the budget process in government.

PEPPERDINE UNIVERSITY THE GEORGE L. GRAZIADIO SCHOOL OF BUSINES AND MANAGEMENT Course Syllabus

UNIVERSITY OF FLORIDA Warrington College of Business Administration

Finance 602 Macroeconomics and the Global Economic Environment Professor Biswajit Banerjee Fall 2010

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY Stern School of Business - Undergraduate Division. C Richard Levich Economics of International Business Fall 1999

University of Utah David Eccles School of Business. Investments and Portfolio Management KDGB 410 Spring 2010 (801)

PROPERTY AND LIABILITY INSURANCE

Fall 2015 Phone: Video: Professor Figlewski introduces the course Office: MEC 9-64 SYLLABUS

BIZ 203 Macroeconomic Foundations for Business Planning

Introduction to Economics

Transcription:

PPL 813 Section 1 Public Finance Spring 2013 Professor L.E. Papke W 3:00-5:50 18 E Marshall-Adams Hall A222 Wells phone: 355-3773 email: papke@msu.edu Office hours: W 2:00 p.m.-3:00 p.m. and by appointment PPL 813 is a course in the economics of public finance, defined to include much of "welfare economics" and the governmental functions of adjusting resource allocation and income distribution through spending and taxation. We will study government spending and taxation primarily from the perspective of microeconomic analysis. While we will devote most of our time to the analysis of Federal issues, we will also cover the major state and local public finance issues with application to Michigan. Readings: The required text for the course is Public Finance and Public Policy by Jonathan Gruber, 4 th edition, 2013. It is ok if you want to use the third edition (2011), but you will want to make sure assigned problems are the same. The textbook has a companion website with some helpful, free student resources (like quizzes) at http://bcs.worthpublishers.com/gruber3e/#t_544924. I will also post other required readings on our Angel course web site; I will let you know what material you are responsible for at the beginning of the previous class and via Angel email. We will be using readings from the following organizations, among others, that post up-to-date analyses of current national policy issues: The Brookings Institution Economic Studies (www.brookings.edu) The Tax Policy Center: www.taxpolicycenter.org We will use these two sources for up-to-date Michigan information: The Citizens Research Council (www.crcmich.org) The Center for Michigan (www.thecenterformichigan.net) 1

This is an exciting time to study public finance as the stagnant recovery continues to challenge a second Obama administration and the Federal Reserve. There is still disagreement about whether the U.S. stimulus package was big enough, but recently the IMF admitted it did not do enough. What will be involved in the debt ceiling negotiations? States have contracted heavily they are facing pension liabilities that are much larger than they have planned for. I encourage you to read a daily newspaper in addition to The State News, like the New York Times or Wall Street Journal. We will begin most classes with a short discussion of current events. Requirements: While we have a lot of material to cover, at this level we can also learn a lot from in-class discussion. Consequently, 10 percent of your grade will be class participation. This can be earned through assigned problem presentation and through informal class discussion. Please make sure you fill out your id card so I can learn your names and become familiar with your background and interests. Since we meet once a week, it is important that you review past material and read ahead to take advantage of our class time together. Each week I will post readings on Angel for the next class. There will be a quick 10 minute quiz each class (except the first class and the day of the midterm) to provide ongoing feedback on your understanding of the material. These quizzes will cover past material and current assigned reading. There will be a total of 13 quizzes I will drop the lowest quiz score. These quizzes will constitute 20 percent of your final grade. The midterm will be in class on February 27 th. It will be closed book and constitute 30 percent of your final grade. The final is Wednesday, May 1 st from 3-5 and constitutes 40 percent of your final grade. To recap: Class participation 10% Quick quizzes 20% Midterm 30% Final 40% There will be no make-up quizzes. You must have a valid excuse to reschedule the midterm. You must contact me before the event, and provide written documentation of the problem. If you have a valid excuse for a midterm, you may take the midterm early, or your remaining exams may be re-weighted I will not give make-up midterms after the exam. Without a valid excuse, a zero will be recorded for the missed exam. If you have a special need that you would like accommodated either in class or during exams, please see me as soon as possible with your documentation from the Resource Center for Persons with Disabilities so we can make a plan. 2

1. Introduction: Government and the Economy Current topic: What is public economics? Why study public finance now? Readings: Gruber Chapter 1. Steuerle, Who Does What? The Changing Shape of U.S. Federalism, Appendix in The Government We Deserve, Urban Institute Press, 1998. Video: Dead Men Ruling: The Decline of Fiscal Democracy in America, January 4, 2013. http://www.urban.org/publications/500291.html. 2. Theoretical Tools of Public Finance Current topics: Elasticity, demand and supply curves, budget constraints, percents, percentiles, percentage points. Readings: Gruber Chapter 2 and Appendix. 3. Budget Analysis and Finance Gruber Chapter 4 Gale: Fiscal cliff avoided, but at what cost? http://www.brookings.edu/events/2011/0817_deficit_committee 4. Externalities and Government Policy Gruber Chapters 5 and 6 Current topics: Pollution, traffic congestion, alcohol abuse, obesity. Tax Policy Center Tax Topics: Quick Facts on Cap-and-Trade Policies to Reduce Carbon Emissions http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxtopics/quickfacts_cap-and-trade.cfm. 3

Tax Policy Center: Tax Policy Briefing book, Taxes and the Environment http://www.taxpolicycenter.org/briefing-book/key-elements/environment/index.cfm On the Merits of a Carbon Tax, Ted Gayer, U.S. Senate Testimony 12/2/09 Soda taxes: Who would be affected by soda taxes?; The Battle over Taxing Soda, NYT Leonard; Failure of state soda tax reflects power of anti-tax message, NYT 5. Public Goods Should local governments pay for professional sports facilities? Gruber Chapter 7 6. Cost-Benefit Analysis Valuing time and lives saved. How much do you value sea life in the Gulf of Mexico? Present discounted value. Gruber Chapter 8 7. Social Insurance and Social Security Current topic: What can you expect to receive from Social Security? (See the www.ssa.gov pension calculator.) Gruber Chapters 12 and 13 8. Health Insurance Gruber Chapters 15 and 16 9. Income Redistribution and Expenditure Programs for the Poor and Not-so-poor Gruber Chapter 17 Current topic: Subsidies for college education; agriculture subsidies 10. Principles of Tax Analysis Gruber Chapters 18, 19, and 20 (20.1 and 20.2) 4

Current topic: the deadweight loss of subsidies; Farm subsidies data base: www.ewg.org/farm/ Tax Facts: www.taxpolicycenter.org/taxfacts/ 11. The U.S. Revenue System: Taxes on Labor Supply, Savings, and Wealth Gruber Chapters 21, 22, and 23 12. Public Finance in a Federal System Gruber Chapters 10 and 11 Current topic: Michigan s Fiscal Future; Funding Michigan K-12 Education Papke Conference Notes, CRC publications. www.thecenterformichigan.net 13. Tax Reform (time permitting) Gruber Chapter 25 Current topics: The case for a Flat Tax; Internet Sales Taxation; Taxation of services 5