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  1. 1-economic-methodology-and-the-economic-problem
    4 主题
  2. 2-individual-economic-decision-making
    4 主题
  3. 3-price-determination-in-competitive-markets
    10 主题
  4. 4-production-costs-and-revenue
    11 主题
  5. 5-perfect-and-imperfectly-competitive-markets-and-monopolies
    12 主题
  6. 6-the-labour-market
    7 主题
  7. 7-income-and-wealth-distribution
    4 主题
  8. 8-the-market-mechanism-market-failure-and-government-intervention
    16 主题
  9. 9-measuring-macroeconomic-performance
    5 主题
  10. 10-how-the-macroeconomy-works
    6 主题
  11. 11-economic-performance
    8 主题
  12. 12-financial-markets-and-monetary-policy
    6 主题
  13. 13-fiscal-and-supply-side-policies
    5 主题
  14. 14-the-international-economy
    16 主题
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Fiscal Policy

  • Fiscal Policy involves the use of government spending and taxation (revenue) to influence aggregate demand in the economy

  • Fiscal policy can be expansionary in order to generate further economic growth

    • Expansionary policies include reducing taxes or increasing government spending

  • Fiscal policy can be contractionary in order to slow down economic growth or reduce inflation

    • Contractionary policies include increasing taxes or decreasing government spending 

  • Fiscal Policy is usually presented annually by the Government through the Government Budget 

    • A balanced budget means that government revenue = government expenditure

    • A budget deficit means that government revenue < government expenditure

    • A budget surplus means that government revenue > government expenditure

  • A budget deficit has to be financed through public sector borrowing

    • This borrowing gets added to the public debt

Macroeconomic & Microeconomic Impacts of Fiscal Policy

Macroeconomic impacts

  • Fiscal policy is used to help the government achieve their macroeconomic objectives

  • Specifically, the use of fiscal policy aims to

    • Maintain a low and stable rate of inflation

    • Maintain low unemployment

    • Reduce the business cycle fluctuations

    • Create a stable economic environment for long-term economic growth

    • Redistribute income so as to ensure more equity

    • Control the level of exports and imports (net external balance)

  • When a policy decision is made, it creates a ripple effect through the economy, impacting the macroeconomic objectives of the government

  • Changes to fiscal policy can influence several of the components of AD

    • A change to any component of AD helps to achieve at least one of the goals of fiscal policy

Microeconomic impacts

  • Fiscal policy includes making changes to policies such as taxes and subsidies 

    • Income tax cuts can influence labour to be more productive 

    • Tax cuts can encourage firms to increase output or be more entrepreneurial

    • Subsidies can lower costs of production in the industry, leading to higher output

Fiscal Policy and Aggregate Demand

Expansionary fiscal policy

  • Expansionary fiscal policies include reducing taxes or increasing government spending with the aim of increasing AD 

  • AD = household consumption (C) + firms investment (I) + government spending (G) + exports (X) – imports (M)

    • AD = C + I + G + (X – M)

  • Expansionary fiscal policy aims to shift aggregate demand (AD) to the right

Diagram: expansionary fiscal policy

Graph showing shifts in aggregate demand (AD) and short-run aggregate supply (SRAS) curves with long-run aggregate supply (LRAS), price and GDP changes.
Expansionary fiscal policy which increases real GDP (Y1 →Y2) and average price levels (AP1 → AP2) 

Diagram analysis

  • The economy is initially in macroeconomic equilibrium AP1Y1: there is a recessionary gap

  • The Government wants to boost economic growth and lowers the rate of income and corporation taxes

  • Lower taxes cause investment and consumption to increase, which are components of AD

  • Aggregate demand increases from AD→ AD1

  • The economy reaches a new equilibrium at AP2Y2 – a higher average price level and a greater level of national output

Examples of the Impact of Expansionary Fiscal Policy

Example 1: The Government decreases corporation tax

Effect on the economy

  • Firms net profits increase → investment by firms increases → AD increases

 Impact on macroeconomic aims

  • Economic growth increases

  • Inflation rises

  • Unemployment may decrease as output is rising which requires more workers

  • Net external demand – unsure – exports may rise due to new investments in the economy, but imports may rise due to higher income generated by the investment

Example 2: The Government increases unemployment benefits

Effect on the economy

Household income increases → consumption increases → AD increases

Impact on macroeconomic aims

  • Economic growth increases

  • Inflation rises

  • Unemployment may decrease as output is rising which requires more workers (although increased unemployment benefits may discourage some people from entering the labour market)

  • Net external demand is unlikely to change as this policy helps the poorest and imports are unlikely to increase

  • Redistribution of income has increased and there is more equity in society

Contractionary fiscal policy

  • Contractionary fiscal policies include increasing taxes or decreasing government spending with the aim of decreasing AD

  • AD= household consumption (C) + firms investment (I) + government spending (G) + exports (X) – imports (M)

    • AD = C + I + G + (X – M)

  • Changes to fiscal policy can influence government spending or consumption or investment

    • Changing taxation can influence household consumption and the investment by firms

  • Contractionary fiscal policies aims to shift aggregate demand (AD) to the left

Diagram: contractionary fiscal policy

Graph showing long-run aggregate supply (LRAS), aggregate demand (AD1, AD2), and average price levels (AP1, AP2) with real GDP (Y1, YFE).
Contractionary fiscal policy aims to decrease real GDP (YFE →Y1) and average price levels (AP1 →AP2)

Diagram analysis

  • The economy is initially in macroeconomic equilibrium AP1YFE – an inflationary output gap is developing

  • The economy is booming and the Government wants to lower inflation towards its target of 2%

  • The Government increases the rate of income tax

  • Higher tax rates cause households to have less discretionary income, causing consumption to decrease

  • Aggregate demand decreases from AD1→ AD2

  • The economy reaches a new equilibrium at AP2Y1 – a lower average price level and a smaller level of national output
     

Examples of the Impact of Contractionary Fiscal Policy

Example 1: The Government increases the rate of income tax

Effect on the economy

  • Households pay more tax → discretionary income reduces → consumption reduces → AD reduces

Impact on macroeconomic aims

  • Economic growth slows down

  • Inflation eases

  • Unemployment may increase as output is falling and fewer workers are required

  • Net external demand Improves (with less income, imports may fall)

Example 2: The Government freezes/reduces public sector workers pay

Effect on the economy

  • Wages stagnate or reduce → Consumer confidence falls → consumption decreases → AD decreases

Impact on macroeconomic aims

  • Economic growth slows down

  • Inflation eases

  • Unemployment may increase as output is falling

  • Net external demand improves (with less income, imports may fall)

Example 3: The Government cuts Government Spending in their Budget

Effect on the economy

  • Less demand for goods/services → less income for firms → output and profits decrease → AD decreases

Impact on macroeconomic aims

  • Economic growth slows down

  • Inflation eases

  • Unemployment may increase as output falls

  • Net external demand may Improve (with less income, imports may fall)

  • Less corporation tax available for redistribution

Fiscal Policy & Aggregate Supply

  • Many fiscal policies have the ability to improve the productive potential (supply-side) of an economy

    • E.g. Education subsidies to help the poorest households constitute an annual expenditure for the government. However, in the long term, they help to improve human capital, which boosts productivity and output

    • The fiscal policy is short-term (annually); however, the supply-side impact occurs in the long term

The Influence of Taxation & Spending on Economic Activity

  • Government spending and taxation influence the level of economic activity

    • Government spending is an injection and increases economic activity

    • Taxation is a withdrawal and decreases economic activity

  • The government budget is usually set once a year

  • This fiscal policy then operates automatically in the background producing a stabilising effect as the economic activity fluctuates

    • Automatic stabilisers are automatic fiscal changes that occur as the economy moves through stages of the business/trade cycle 

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