4.5.1 Flashcards
(9 cards)
1
Q
Capital government expenditure
A
- Spending on long-term investments and assets - provide benefits over many years
- E.g. infrastructure projects, investments in education or healthcare
- Contributes to economic growth and productivity - enhance physical and human capital
2
Q
Current expenditure
A
- Day-to-day spending on recurring items
- E.g. salaries, providing public services, running government agencies, pensions
- Maintains existing level of public services - does not contribute to LT economic growth
3
Q
Transfer payments
A
- Made to individuals or groups without any expectation of goods or services in return
- e.g. social welfare payments, subsidies, grants to local governments
- Redistributive nature - provide support to those in need
4
Q
Reasons for the Changing Size and Composition of Public Expenditure in a Global Context:
A
- Changing demographics - aging population - increased spending on healthcare and pensions
- Political ideologies - some govs favor social welfare programs - other emphasize defense or infrastructure
- In response to economic crisis - increase spending to stimulate growth/ bail outs - or reduce spending to control deficits (austerity policies )
- Income of the country - lower income govs receive lower tax revs - higher incomes receive higher tax revs and demand more services
5
Q
Impacts of spending on productivity and growth
A
- Enjoy economies of scale when providing goods - improved productivity
- Provide infrastructure - efficient running of economy - trading
- Education - human capital - skills - MRP
- Healthcare - prevent illness - healthy workforce
- Multiplier effect through spending - focus on areas with high unemployment
- Free market economists disagree - wasteful spending and causes inefficiencies
6
Q
Impacts of spending on living standards
A
- Correct market failure
- Provide public goods - improve social welfare
- Reduce absolute poverty - provide benefits
- Political system allows society to have a say in gov decisions
- Inefficiencies - disincentivise work - reduced overall output and living standards
- Principal-agent problem - gov vs individual preferences - loss in welfare - fall in living standards
7
Q
Impacts of spending on crowding out
A
- To spend above tax revenues - gov must borrow from individuals/ businesses - compete with private sector for finance - higher interest rates - discourage investment
- Limited resources in economy - less available for private sector - no real increase in AD
- Free market - investment more efficient by private sector - targeted correctly - less wasteful
- Effect felt most at full employment
- Transfer payment spending does not affect output - no crowding out - redistributive
- Levels of unemployment are high - crowding in - encourage investment - multiplier
8
Q
Impacts of spending on level of taxation
A
- When levels of spending are high, levels of tax must be high - for sustainable spending
- High levels of tax may have disincentive effect
- Oil-rich countries use rev from oil to finance most of gov spending
9
Q
Impacts of spending on equality
A
- Spending should increase equality - redistribution - provide minimum standard of living
- Access to basic goods - fair start