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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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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
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Contracting the Economy
14
12
Inflation
10
Unemploymen
t
8
6
4
2
0 1960
65
1970
75
1980
85
1990
95
2000
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