Transcript Chapter 16

Chapter 16
Macroeconomic
Policies
© 2001 South-Western College Publishing
Expansionary Policies
Automatic Stabilizers
– Forces within the economy that naturally tend
to counteract recessions and inflation; ex., the
Social Security system
– Fiscal drag - slowing effect on the economy
resulting from a budget surplus
– Fiscal stimulus - activating effect on on the
economy resulting from a budget deficit
2
Expansionary Policies (cont.)
Monetary policy
Discretionary fiscal policy
– Tax financing
– Debt financing
– Financing by creating money
3
Expansionary Policies (cont.)
Methods of increasing government
spending
– Increase government spending and hold taxes
– Hold government spending and decrease taxes
(tax rebate plan)
– Increase government spending and increase
taxes proportionally
4
Expansionary Policies (cont.)
 Discretionary government spending
– Transfer payments
– Public works
 Problems with discretionary spending
– Difficult to end a government spending
program
– Problems balancing when the program is
needed and when it can begin
5
Expanding the Economy
 The Great Depression
 The New Deal
 Expansionary Policies of the 1960s
 Expansionary Policies of the 1970s-1990s
– Recession of 1974-75
– Recessions of 1980 and 1982
– Recession of 1990-91
6
Contractionary Policies
 Inflation
– persistent increase in the level of prices
 Deflation
– persistent decrease in the level of prices
 Disinflation
– a slowdown in the rate of inflation
7
Types of Inflation
 Demand-Pull Inflation:
– occurs when the total demand for goods and
services exceeds the available supply of goods
and services in the short run
 Cost-Push Inflation:
– characterized by a spiral of wage and benefit
cost increases and price increases
 Stagflation:
– inflation and high unemployment occurring
at the same time
8
Measures to Reduce Total Spending
 Automatic Stabilizers
 Monetary Policy
 Other Measures
 Government Surplus
– Hold taxes and decrease spending
– Increase taxes and hold or decrease spending
– Decrease taxes and decrease spending
 Borrowing
9
Trade-Off Between
Unemployment and Inflation
 Phillips curve - a curve showing the
relationship between unemployment and
inflation
 Hyperinflation - inflation that feeds on
itself to go out of control, creating severe
distortions in an economy and rendering
its currency almost worthless
10
Contracting the Economy
14
12
Inflation
10
Unemploymen
t
8
6
4
2
0 1960
65
1970
75
1980
85
1990
95
2000
11