Lec 8 - Fiscal Policy (continued) Flashcards

1
Q

Government budget definition

A

An annual statement of projected outlays and receipts during the next year together with the laws and regulations that support those outlays and revenues.

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2
Q

Fiscal policy definition

A

the use of the government’s budget to achieve macroeconomic objectives, such as full employment, sustained economic growth and price level stability.

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3
Q

Outcomes of government budget

A

If receipts exceed outlays, the government has a budget surplus.
If outlays exceed receipts, the government has a budget deficit.
If receipts equal outlays, the government has a balanced budget.

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4
Q

Types of government receipts

What are the main five?

A
Taxes on income and wealth
Taxes on business
Taxes on expenditure
National Insurance contributions
Other receipts and royalties
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5
Q

Types of government outlays

What are the main three types?

A

Debt interest
Transfer payments
Expenditure on goods and services

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6
Q

Government debt definition

A

The total amount borrowed by the government.
The sum of past deficits minus the sum of past surpluses plus payments to buy assets minus receipts from the sale of assets.

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7
Q

Fiscal stimulus effect on recessionary gap

what effect does an increase in govt expenditure have on aggregate expenditure?

A

An increase in government expenditure or a tax cut increases aggregate expenditure (curve shifts outward).

The multiplier process increases aggregate demand (curve shifts outward again).

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8
Q

Supply side effects of fiscal policy - labour market

A

Potential GDP depends on the full-employment quantity of labour, which in turn is influenced by taxes.

The income tax decreases the supply of labour because it decreases the after-tax wage rate.
The before-tax wage rate rises, the after-tax wage rate falls and employment decreases.

The gap is the tax wedge.

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9
Q

Supply side effects of fiscal policy - Taxes on expenditure and the tax wedge

A

Taxes on consumption expenditure add to the tax wedge.
The reason is that a tax on consumption raises the prices paid for consumption goods and services: it is equivalent to a cut in the real wage rate.

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10
Q

Supply side effects of fiscal policy - Tax on capital income

A

A tax decreases the supply of loanable funds.
The interest rate rises, but the after-tax interest rate falls.
Investment and saving decrease.

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11
Q

Supply side effects of fiscal policy - Tax cut

A

Taxes drive a wedge between the cost of labour and the take-home pay and between the cost of borrowing and the return on lending.

Taxes decrease employment, saving and investment and decrease real GDP and its growth rate.

A tax cut decreases these negative effects and increases real GDP and its growth rate.

The supply-side effects of a tax cut probably dominate the demand-side effects and make the multiplier larger than the government expenditure multiplier.

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12
Q

The Laffer Curve definition & purpose

A

The relationship between the tax rate and the amount of tax revenue collected is called the Laffer curve.

Purpose of Laffer curve is to show what the optimal tax rate is for maximising tax revenue.

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13
Q

Generational accounting definition

A

An accounting system that measures the lifetime tax burden and benefits of each generation.

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14
Q

Generation accounting - present value

A

Taxes are paid by people with jobs.
State pensions are paid to people after they retire.
Healthcare benefits are also provided on a larger scale to older people.

The concept of present value is used to compare the value of an amount of money at one date (working years) with that at a later date (retirement/older years).

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15
Q

Fiscal imbalance definition & purpose

A

The present value of the government’s commitments to pay benefits minus the present value of its tax revenues.

Purpose of fiscal imbalance is to assess the government’s obligations.

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16
Q

Methods of coping with fiscal imbalances

A

1 Raise income taxes
2 Raise National Insurance contributions
3 Cut government discretionary spending
4 Cut unemployment and other welfare state benefits
5 Raise the state pension age

None of these measures is painless or free from political controversy.
By combining the five measures, the pain from each could be lessened, but it would still be severe.

17
Q

Generational imbalance definition

A

The division of the fiscal imbalance between the current and future generations, assuming that the current generation will enjoy the existing levels of taxes and benefits.

18
Q

Economic old age dependency ratio

A

Economic old age dependency ratio: the number of inactive population aged 65+ divided by the number of employed persons aged 20-64.

19
Q

Fiscal stimulus definition

A

The use of fiscal policy to increase production and employment.

20
Q

Types of fiscal stimulus

A

Automatic

Discretionary

21
Q

Automatic fiscal stimulus definition

A

A fiscal policy action triggered by the state of the economy with no government action.

22
Q

Discretionary fiscal stimulus definition

A

A policy action that is initiated by the government.

23
Q

Automatic fiscal stimulus in practice - tax revenues

A

Tax revenues change automatically with the state of the economy.

Parliament sets the tax rates, but the tax revenue collected depends on tax rates and people’s incomes:
when the real GDP increases in an expansion, incomes increase and tax revenues increase;
when real GDP decreases in a recession, incomes decrease and tax revenues decrease.

24
Q

Automatic fiscal policy - means-tested spending

A

The government creates programmes that pay benefits to qualified people and businesses which depend on the economic state of the economy: when the economy is in an expansion, unemployment falls, so needs-tested spending decreases; when the economy is in a recession, unemployment rises, so needs-tested spending increases.

25
Q

Automatic fiscal stimulus - recessionary gap & inflationary gap

A

In a recession, receipts decrease and outlays increase.
So the budget provides an automatic stimulus that helps shrink the recessionary gap.

In a boom, receipts increase and outlays decrease.
So the budget provides automatic restraint that helps shrink the inflationary gap.