Transcript Chapter 14
Macroeconomics
ECON 2301
Spring 2009
Marilyn Spencer, Ph.D.
Professor of Economics
Chapter 14
Chapter 14: Deficit Spending and the
Public Debt
Learning Objectives:
Explain how federal government budget deficits occur
Define the public debt and understand alternative measures
of the public debt
Evaluate circumstances under which the public debt could
be a burden to future generations
Discuss why the federal budget deficit might be measured
incorrectly
Analyze the macroeconomic effects of government budget
deficits
Describe possible ways to reduce the government budget
deficit
14-3
Public Deficits and Debts:
Flows versus Stocks
Government Budget Deficit
Exists if the government spends more
than it receives in taxes during a given period
of time
Is financed by the selling of government
securities (bonds)
14-4
Public Deficits and Debts:
Flows versus Stocks (cont'd)
The federal deficit is a flow variable, one
defined for a specific period of time, usually
one year.
If spending equals receipts, the budget is
balanced.
If receipts exceed spending, the government
is running a budget surplus.
14-5
Public Deficits and Debts:
Flows versus Stocks (cont'd)
Balanced Budget
A situation in which the government’s
spending is exactly equal to the total taxes and
revenues it collects during a given period of
time
Government Budget Surplus
An excess of government revenues over
government spending during a given period of
time
14-6
Public Deficits and Debts:
Flows versus Stocks (cont'd)
Public Debt
A stock variable
The total value of all outstanding government
securities
14-7
Government Finance: Spending
More than Tax Collections
Since 1940, the U.S. federal government
has operated with a budget surplus in 13
years.
In all other years, the shortfall of tax
revenues below expenditures has been
financed with borrowing.
14-8
Figure 14-1 Federal Budget Deficits
and Surpluses Since 1940
14-9
Figure 14-2 The Federal Budget Deficit
Expressed as a Percentage of GDP
14-10
Policy Example: Explaining a $109
Billion Deficit Projection Turnaround
Why was the government’s 2005 deficit projection
off by $109 billion?
Federal tax revenues turned out to be more than
15% higher in 2005.
Economic growth caused taxable incomes, hence
revenues, to be much higher than anticipated.
14-11
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt
Gross Public Debt
All federal government debt irrespective of
who owns it
Net Public Debt
Gross public debt minus all government
interagency borrowing
14-12
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
Some government bonds are held by government
agencies.
In this case, the funds are owed from one
branch of the federal government to another.
To arrive at the net public debt, we subtract
interagency borrowings from the gross public
debt.
14-13
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
Tax revenues tend to be stagnant during times of
slow economic growth.
Tax revenues grow more quickly when overall
growth enhances incomes.
As long as spending exceeds revenues, the budget
deficit will persist.
14-14
Table 14-1 The Federal Deficit, Our Public
Debt, and the Interest We Pay on It
14-15
Figure 14-3 Net U.S. Public Debt
as a Percentage of GDP
14-16
Net U.S. Public Debt as a Percentage of GDP
During World War II, the net public debt grew
dramatically.
After the war
It fell until the 1970s
Started rising in the 1980s
Declined once more in the 1990s
And recently has been increasing again
14-17
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
The government must pay interest on the public debt
outstanding.
The level of these payments depends on the market
interest rate.
Interest payments as a percentage of GDP are likely to
rise in the future.
As more of the public debt is held by foreigners, the
amount of interest to be paid outside the United States
increases.
Foreign residents, businesses and governments hold
nearly 50% of the net public debt.
Thus, we do not owe the debt just to ourselves.
14-18
Announcement
We will not hold class this Thursday,
April 9.
Instead, work on your projects:
Macroeconomics in the News, paper
due April 16
Teaching project, paper due April 23
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
If the economy is already at full employment, then
further provision of government goods will crowd out
some private goods.
Deficit spending may raise interest rates, which in turn
will discourage capital formation in the private sector.
Crowding-out may place a burden on future generations.
Increased present consumption may crowd out
investment and reduce the growth of capital goods,
which could reduce a future generation’s wealth.
Taxes may have to be increased, imposing higher
taxes on future generations in order to retire the debt.
14-20
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
Paying off the public debt in the future
If the debt becomes larger, each person’s share would
increase.
Taxes would be levied, and may not be assessed
equally.
A special tax could be levied based on a person’s
ability to pay.
14-21
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
Our debt to foreign residents
We do not owe all the debt to ourselves.
Future U.S. residents will be taxed to repay principal
and interest.
Portions of U.S. incomes will be transferred abroad.
14-22
Evaluating the Rising Public Debt (cont'd)
If deficits lead to slower growth rates future
generations will be poorer.
Both present and future generations will be
economically better off if…
Government expenditures are really investments
The rate of return on such public investments exceeds
the interest rate paid on the bonds
14-23
International Example: Where Are Most
Treasury Securities Held Abroad?
More than $2 trillion in U.S. Treasury securities
of the $5 trillion in net outstanding debt is held
outside the United States.
Japan accounts for more than one-third of all
foreign holdings of the U.S. net public debt.
14-24
Figure 14-4 The Distribution of Foreign
Holdings of U.S. Treasury Securities
14-25
International Example: Where Are Most
Treasury Securities Held Abroad? (cont'd)
For critical analysis:
Why might the fact that market interest rates
in Japan have hovered very close to 0%
during the 2000s help explain relatively
large holdings of U.S. Treasury securities by
residents of that country?
14-26
Federal Budget Deficits
in an Open Economy
Question: Is there a connection between the
U.S. trade deficit and the federal government
budget deficit?
A trade deficit exists when the value of imports
exceeds the value of exports.
Some say it appears that there is a relationship
between trade and budget deficits; at least there
is a statistical correlation between the two.
14-27
Figure 14-5 The Related U.S. Deficits
14-28
Federal Budget Deficits in an
Open Economy (cont'd)
If foreigners are using the dollars they hold to
buy U.S. government bonds, then they will have
fewer dollars to spend on U.S. exports.
This means that a U.S. budget deficit can
contribute to a trade deficit.
14-29
Growing U.S. Government Deficits:
Implications for U.S. Economic Performance
Which government deficit is the true deficit?
The government may report distorted measures
of its own budget.
• Government has not adopted a business-like
approach to tracking its expenditures and receipts.
• Official government “measures” yield lowest
possible deficits and highest reported surpluses.
14-30
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
An operating budget includes current outlays
for on-going expenses, such as salaries and
interest payments.
A capital budget, includes expenditures on
investment items, such as machines, buildings,
roads and dams.
14-31
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
Question
How do higher deficits affect the economy in the
short run?
Answers:
If the economy is below full-employment, the deficit
can close the recessionary gap.
If the economy is already at full-employment, the
deficit can create an inflationary gap.
14-32
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
In the long run, higher government budget
deficits have no effect on equilibrium real GDP.
Ultimately, spending in excess of receipts
redistributes a larger share of real GDP to
government-provided goods and services.
14-33
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
Thus, if the government operates with higher
deficits over an extended period:
The ultimate result is a shrinkage in the share
of privately produced goods and services
By continually spending more than it collects,
the government takes up a larger portion of
economic activity.
14-34
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
How could the government reduce all its red ink?
Increasing taxes for everyone
Taxing only the rich
Reducing expenditures
Whittling away at entitlements
14-35
Policy Example: How Rich Taxpayers Avoid Part
of a Tax-Rate Increase
Some estimates show increasing the top bracket from
35% to 39.6% would reduce total taxable income by at
least 4%.
Such projections show this increase as giving the
highest income taxpayers a greater incentive to
incorporate and pay lower corporate-profit tax rates.
Thus, raising the income tax rate by 4.6% would result
in less than a 4.6% increase in government tax
collections – but an increase, not a decrease, as some
suggest.
14-36
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
In considering how expenditures might be
reduced, it is important to look at
entitlements, the federal government
payments that are legislated obligations and
cannot be reduced or eliminated.
What are some of these entitlements?
14-37
Figure 14-6 Components of Federal Expenditures
as Percentages of Total Federal Spending
14-38
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
Entitlements are the largest component of the
U.S. federal budget.
To make a significant cut in expenditures,
entitlement programs would have to be revised.
14-39
Growing U.S. Government Deficits: Implications for
U.S. Economic Performance (cont'd)
Question
What are the political costs of reducing
entitlement payments for Social Security,
Medicare, and Medicaid???
14-40
Summary of Learning Objectives
Federal government budget deficits
Whenever the flow of government expenditures
exceeds the flow of government revenues a budget
deficit occurs.
The public debt
Total value of all government bonds outstanding
The federal budget deficit is a flow, whereas
accumulated deficits are a stock, called the
public debt.
14-41
Summary of Learning Objectives(cont'd)
How the public debt might prove a burden to
future generations
Higher taxes will reduce private consumption.
Crowding out might reduce economic growth.
Why the federal budget deficit might be
incorrectly measured
No distinction between capital expenses and operating
expenses
Each estimate is based on a set of assumptions.
14-42
Summary of Learning Objectives (cont'd)
The macroeconomic effects of government
budget deficits
Because higher government deficits are caused by
increased government spending or tax cuts, they
contribute to a short-run rise in total planned
expenditures and aggregate demand.
In the long run, increased deficits only redistribute
resources from the private sector to the public sector.
14-43
Summary of Learning Objectives (cont'd)
Possible ways to reduce the government
budget deficit:
Increase taxes
Reduce expenditures by revising the terms
of entitlement programs
14-44
Assignment to be completed
before class April 14:
Read Chapter 15 & also read the
end-of-chapter Problems: 15-2,
15-4, 15-6, 15-8, 15-13, 15-14 &
15-15, on pp. 389-391.