CHAPTER 11: Fiscal Policy

Similar documents
Government Budget and Fiscal Policy CHAPTER

1. When the Federal government uses taxation and spending actions to stimulate the economy it is conducting:

FISCAL POLICY. Objectives. Government Budgets. Balancing Acts on Parliament Hill. Government Budgets. Government Budgets CHAPTER

7. Refer to the above graph. It depicts an economy in the: A. Immediate short run B. Short run C. Immediate long run D. Long run

Disposable income (in billions)

3 Macroeconomics SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Fluctuations of Investment Durability Irregularity of Innovation Variability of Profits Variability of Expectations

CHAPTER 13: Monetary Policy

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, November 2016 Quiz, Unit VI, Stabilization Policies

Chapter 13 Fiscal Policy

Macroeconomics Study Sheet

Economics 1012A: Introduction to Macroeconomics FALL 2007 Dr. R. E. Mueller Third Midterm Examination November 15, 2007

The Goods Market and the Aggregate Expenditures Model

Expansionary Fiscal Policy 2. If the economy is experiencing a recession what type of fiscal policy would be in order?

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, October 2016

Use the following to answer question 15: AE0 AE1. Real expenditures. Real income. Page 3

AP Econ Practice Test Unit 5

CHAPTER 10: Economic Fluctuations

ECON 1010 Principles of Macroeconomics Solutions to Exam #3. Section A: Multiple Choice Questions. (30 points; 2 pts each)

Disclaimer: This resource package is for studying purposes only EDUCATION

1. You are right. When a fall in the value of the dollar against other currencies makes U.S. final

4. (Figure: Monetary Policy 1) If the money market is initially at E 2 and the central bank chooses

EXPENDITURE MULTIPLIERS

ECO 2013: Macroeconomics Valencia Community College

Questions and Answers. Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

23/03/2012. Government Budgets

Ryerson University Department of Economics ECN 204 MidtermTwo W12. Name: Student No:

How does the government stabilize the economy?

THE INFLUENCE OF MONETARY AND FISCAL POLICY ON AGGREGATE DEMAND

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand P R I N C I P L E S O F. N. Gregory Mankiw. Introduction

1. STUDENTS WILL BE ABLE TO DEFINE AND EXPLAIN THE CONCEPT OF FISCAL POLICY

EQ: What are the Assumptions of Keynesian Economic Theory?

Shanghai Livingston American School Quarterly / Trimester Plan 2

The fixed money supply is represented by a vertical supply curve.

Assumptions of the Classical Model

Practice Problems 30-32

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

Print last name: Solution Given name: Student number: Section number:

Syllabus item: 113 Weight: 3

CHAPTER 5: AGGREGATE DEMAND AND SUPPLY

Macro CH 29 sample questions

1. The most basic premise of the aggregate expenditures model is that:

UNIT 5: STABILIZATION POLICIES WHAT CAN THE GOVERNMENT AND THE FEDERAL RESERVE DO TO FIX RECESSIONARY AND INFLATIONARY GAPS?

In this chapter, look for the answers to these questions

Dokuz Eylül University Faculty of Business Department of Economics

Archimedean Upper Conservatory Economics, October 2016

Fiscal policy in the AS-AD model. Screen 1

February 03, Chapter 10 AD_AS_Business Cycle.notebook. Chapter 10: Economic Fluctuations Pages ,

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

Chapter 10 AD_AS_Business Cycle.notebook. May 08, Jun 16 9:29 PM. Jun 16 9:38 PM. Jun 16 9:50 PM. Jun 16 9:46 PM

Part2 Multiple Choice Practice Qs

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

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

Parkin/Bade, Economics: Canada in the Global Environment, 8e

Monetary Policy Tools?

Economics: Canada in the Global Environment, 7e (Parkin) Chapter 29 Fiscal Policy Government Budgets

The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand. Lecture

READ CAREFULLY Failure to read has been a problem on the exams

III. 9. IS LM: the basic framework to understand macro policy continued Text, ch 11

Module 4: Applications of Supply and Demand

AD-AS Analysis. Demand Management Polices

Univ. Of Ghana ECON 212: ELEMENTS OF ECONOMICS GDP AND THE PRICE LEVEL IN THE LONG RUN Dr. Priscilla T. Baffour

Macroeconomics Sixth Edition

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Learning Objectives. Chapter 12. Consumption, Real GDP, and the Multiplier

Principle of Macroeconomics, Summer B Practice Exam

Chapter 47: HL extension the Keynesian multiplier (2.3)

Intermediate Macroeconomics. Second Year

Fiscal policy in the goods market. Screen 1

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER ASSIGNMENT 2 INTERMEDIATE MACRO ECONOMICS IMA612S

OVERVIEW. 1. This chapter presents a graphical approach to the determination of income. Two different graphical approaches are provided.

Fiscal Policy. Changes in federal taxes and purchases

Econ 102 Exam 2 Name ID Section Number

Practice Test 2: Multiple Choice

Questions and Answers

Pre-Test Chapter 9 ed17

Macroeconomics Mankiw 6th Edition

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER

6. The Aggregate Demand and Supply Model

Lesson 12 The Influence of Monetary and Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

Practice Problems

What is Macroeconomics?

The influence of Monetary And Fiscal Policy on Aggregate Demand

MONETARY POLICY. 8Topic

Introduction. Learning Objectives. Chapter 13. Fiscal Policy

ECON 209 FINAL EXAM COURSE PACK FALL 2017

Sticky Wages and Prices: Aggregate Expenditure and the Multiplier. 5Topic

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

FINAL EXAM STUDY GUIDE

Exam. Name. E) indeterminable from the information provided.

DEPARTMENT OF ECONOMICS. University of New Hampshire. ECON 401 Principles of Macroeconomics FINAL EXAM. O. Kozlova. Spring 2011

FEEDBACK TUTORIAL LETTER

5 Macroeconomics SAMPLE QUESTIONS

Introduction to Agricultural Economics Agricultural Economics 105 Spring 2015 Third Exam Version 1

Econ 3 Practice Final Exam

2.2 Aggregate demand and aggregate supply

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

Lecture 8: The Aggregate Expenditures Model Reference - Chapter 7

MACROECONOMICS. Section I Time 70 minutes 60 Questions

Transcription:

CHAPTER 11: Fiscal Policy 1a. Unemployment is below its natural rate and inflation is an increasing problem, so that real output must be above its potential level, and the economy faces an inflationary gap. To diminish this gap, the government can reduce its purchases, raise taxes, or pursue both actions simultaneously. Any of these actions results in a leftward shift in the AD curve. b. With declining output and unemployment above its natural rate, real output falls short of its potential level and the economy is experiencing a recessionary gap. This gap can be lessened by increasing government purchases, cutting taxes, or combining these two actions. Each of these actions results in a rightward shift in the AD curve. c. Because unemployment is at or close to its natural rate, equilibrium real output approximates its potential level. Therefore, no fiscal policy is required. 2a. The MPC is 0.35 (= $350 000/$1 000 000), the MPW is 0.65 (= 1-0.35), and the spending multiplier is 1.54 (= 1/0.65). b. The MPC is 0.25 (= -$1 000 000/-$4 000 000), the MPW is 0.75 (= 1-0.25), and the spending multiplier is 1.33 (= 1/.75). c. The MPW is 0.60 (= -$3 000 000/-$5 000 000), the MPC is 0.40 (= 1-0.60), and the spending multiplier is 1.67 (= 1/.60). 3. With a regressive tax system, changes in income cause only a small change in tax revenues. This dampens decreases in net tax revenues during periods of falling incomes and also dampens increases in net tax revenues when incomes are rising. Therefore, automatic stabilizers become less effective and the statement is true. 4a. MPW =.40 +.30(.60) +.05(.60) =.40 +.18 +.03 =.61 b. Because MPW is.61, MPC is.39 (= 1 -.61). This means that 39 cents of each new dollar of income is spent on domestic consumption items. c. The spending multiplier is 1.64 (= 1/.61). Chapter 11 100

5. FIGURE 11A 1 The Effects of a Rise in Government Purchases With MPC equal to 1/3, MPW equals 2/3 (1 - (1/3)). In the first spending round, the full increase in government purchases is spent, giving a $810 rise in real output and no increase in withdrawals. In the second spending round, real output rises by a further $270 (= (1/3) x $810), as sellers of the goods and services that were exchanged in the first round spend one-third of their $810 in new income on domestic consumption items. The remaining $540 (= (2/3) x $810) is used for withdrawals. In the third spending round, real output jumps by a further $90 (= (1/3) x $270), as sellers of the goods and services that were exchanged in the second round spend one-third of their $270 in new income on domestic consumption items. The remaining $180 (= (2/3) x $270) is used for withdrawals. 6a. Given an MPW of 0.65, the spending multiplier is 1.54 (= 1/0.65), so that the AD curve finally shifts to the right by $3.08 billion (= 1.54 x $2 billion). b. With an MPC of 0.45, MPW is.55 (= 1-0.45). The spending multiplier is therefore 1.82 (= 1/.55), so that the AD curve finally shifts to the left by $9.09 billion (= 1.82 x $5 billion). c. Given an MPW of 0.7, the MPC is 0.3 (= 1-0.7), and the spending multiplier is 1.43 (= 1/0.7). The AD curve finally shifts to the left by -$1.3 billion (= -(0.3 x $3 billion) x 1.43). Chapter 11 101

d. A $4 billion tax cut causes spending to rise initially by $1.5 billion, MPC is.375 ($1.5 billion/$4 billion), which means MPW is.625 (= 1 -.375). The spending multiplier is therefore 1.6 (= 1/.625), so that the AD curve finally shifts to the right by $2.4 billion (= 1.6 x $1.5 billion). 7a. MPW is.55 (= $4.4 billion/$8 billion) and MPC is.45 (= 1 -.55). The multiplier is therefore 1.818 (= 1/.55). b. The AD curve shifts to the left by $14.5 billion (= 1.818 x $8 billion). c. FIGURE 11-A2 Contractionary Fiscal Policy Price Level (GDP deflator, 2002 = 100) Because a contractionary policy is being applied, the economy s initial equilibrium real output must be above potential output. This means that the AS curve is steep, so that the decrease in the equilibrium price level (for example, from 130 to 120, as shown in the graph) is proportionally greater than the drop in equilibrium real output (for example, from $650 billion to $645 billion as shown in the graph). Because of price-level changes, the fall in equilibrium real output is less than the $14.5 billion leftward shift in the AD curve. 8a. Higher tax rates lead to a rise in tax revenues, causing a leftward shift Chapter 11 102

in the AD curve, and pushing down the equilibrium real output and price level. b. Higher tax rates cause a rise in the marginal propensity to withdraw. This means that more funds are withdrawn in every spending round, which reduces the size of the spending multiplier. c. Higher tax rates mean that changes in income lead to larger changes in net tax revenues. Because tax revenues decrease more during periods of falling incomes and increase more when incomes are rising, automatic stabilizers become more effective. 9. When viewing a provincial economy as a separate entity, items from outside the province are treated as imports (and therefore as withdrawals) in the same way as products from outside Canada. This means that the MPW within a provincial economy is greater than the MPW within the entire Canadian economy. The result is a lower spending multiplier for provincial fiscal policy. 10. FIGURE 11A 3 Effects of Annually Balanced Budgets Price Level (GDP deflator, 2002 = 100) Price Level (GDP deflator, 1997 = 100) When the economy faces a recessionary gap (graph a), net tax revenues are reduced because of low incomes and high unemployment. The requirement of an annually balanced budget means that either government purchases must be reduced or tax revenues raised. In either case, aggregate demand decreases from AD 0 to AD 1. The result is a higher recessionary gap and a more severe downturn in the economy. In contrast, an inflationary gap (as shown in graph b), leads to an expansion of tax revenues due to high incomes and low unemployment. Given the requirement of an annually balanced budget, either Chapter 11 103

government purchases must be raised or taxes reduced. Either action causes an increase in aggregate demand from AD 2 to AD 3, increasing the size of the inflationary gap and heightening inflationary pressures in the economy. 11. A series of federal budget surpluses causes the reverse of the deficitdebt spiral. As budget surpluses reduce the size of the outstanding public debt, debt charges decrease, raising budget surpluses even further. This cycle accelerates the decline in public debt. 12. FIGURE 11A 4 Effects of Differing Estimates of Potential Output Price Level (GDP deflator, 2002 = 100) Price Level (GDP deflator, 2002 = 100) When the economy faces a recessionary gap (graph a) the apparent gap is enlarged if the estimate of potential output rises from PO 1 to PO 2. In contrast, when the economy faces an inflationary gap (graph b) the apparent gap is reduced if the estimated potential output rises from PO 1 to PO 2. Therefore, changes in the estimated potential output have a direct effect on the apparent size of any recessionary gap and an inverse effect on the apparent size of any inflationary gap. Chapter 11 104

Internet Application Questions 1a. Answers are found in the link to 'Budget Info'. b. Answers are found in the same link as in part a. 2a. Answer found in links to 'Data', 'Gross Domestic Product', and '9014' (Canada Gross Domestic Product, Expenditure-Based). Click on 'Ann 1981-00-00 D24193 Gross Domestic Product at Market Prices' and then press down the control key and click on 'Ann 1981-00-00 D24166 Govt Current Expenditure on Goods and Services'. Then click on 'Go' and 'Go'. Under 'Output Format' click on '2D Line Graph', and under 'Display Option' click on '% of D24166 - Gross Domestic Product at Market Prices'. Then press 'Go'. You can print out the resulting graph. b. Fiscal policy was particularly expansionary between 1981 and 1983 and then again between 1990 and 1994. It was particularly contractionary between 1987 and 1989 and then again after 1995. 3a. - b. - ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT END OF 'ECONOMIST EXTRAORDINAIRE' 1a. According to neoclassical economists, a fall in wages does not lead to permanent underspending in the economy since, based on Say s Law, supply creates its demand -- regardless of whether the demand originates with workers or other resource-providers in the economy. As workers incomes are reduced, other incomes will rise, so that all of the economy s production can be purchased. In contrast, in the Keynesian view, a fall in spending by workers may not be counteracted by spending increases by other economic participants, which means that underspending and an economic downturn are possible. b. According to neoclassical economists, an increase in injections will cause interest rates to change until expenditures and withdrawals are made equal at a single equilibrium level of output. On the other hand, in the Keynesian view, a rise in injections causes an increase in equilibrium output, which is needed to eradicate the discrepancy between injections and withdrawals. 2a. According to neoclassical economists, periods of low output and high unemployment are self-correcting without government intervention. Given flexible labour markets, high unemployment is eliminated by changes in real wages. Also, a temporary lack of spending causes an adjustment in interest rates. This adjustment balances injections and withdrawals and therefore eradicates the initial underspending. b. Keynes disagreed for two reasons. First, in his view labour markets do not necessarily reach equilibrium through changes in real wages. Second, interest rates do not necessarily adjust to counteract a temporary lack of spending. It is only through government intervention, said Keynes, that the elimination of low output and high unemployment can be assured. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT END OF 'THE AGGREGATE EXPENDITURES MODEL AND GOVERNMENT' (at the Online Learning Centre) 1a. In this case, with the government purchases and aggregate expenditures schedules rising by $50 billion, the equilibrium level of GDP using the Chapter 11 105

spending-output approach would increase to $1400 billion. Using the injections-withdrawals approach, the I+G+X schedule would rise by $50 billion, and the equilibrium level of GDP would increase by the same amount to $1400 billion. b. Yes, the government would be running a $50 billion deficit, given that government purchases exceed taxes by this amount. 2a. When saving increases, total withdrawals (the S+M line) shift upwards, causing the intersection with total injections (the I+X line) to occur at a lower real output than before. b. No. Though an increase in saving can have a short-run contractionary effect on real output, in the long run high savings promote economic growth, since saving is essential for investment in new capital goods to take place. ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT THE END OF 'MOUNTAIN OR MIRAGE' (at the Online Learning Centre) 1a. With a $500 billion public debt, the budget deficit is $10 billion [= $180 billion + (.06 x $500 billion) - $200 billion]. In contrast, a $600 billion public debt means the budget deficit is $16 billion [= $180 billion + (.06 x $600 billion) - $200 billion]. Therefore, budget deficits and the size of the public debt are directly related, since a higher public debt means greater public debt charges, which cause a higher budget deficit. b. With a $500 billion public debt, the budget deficit is $5 billion [= $180 billion + (.05 x $500 billion) - $200 billion], and with a $600 billion public debt, the budget deficit is $10 billion [= $180 billion + (.05 x $600 billion) - $200 billion]. Therefore budget deficits and interest rates are directly related, since higher interest rates mean greater public debt charges, which cause a higher budget deficit. 2. This statement refers to the reversal of the crowding out effect. A decline in public debt means that government borrowing is reduced, which decreases the demand for borrowed funds. As a result, interest rates fall, raising the amount of investment spending carried out by businesses. 3a. - b. - c. - ANSWERS TO QUESTIONS AT THE END OF 'RISE AND FALL' (at the Online Learning Centre) 1. According to Khaldun, a dynasty s rulers become increasingly accustomed to ostentatious spending, which means that tax rites must keep on rising to fund these outlays. 2. Those in favour of tax cuts based on supply-side principles argue that the peak of the Laffer curve in Figure A is to the left of the current US tax rate. Thus a reduction in tax rates will lead to an increase in total tax revenues. Those opposed to tax cuts argue that the peak of the Laffer curve, if it does exist, is to the right of the current tax rate. For these Chapter 11 106

commentators, tax cuts will reduce total tax revenues. Chapter 11 107