Government Spending
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Transcript Government Spending
Spending, taxing, &
borrowing policies
Government collects
taxes to pay programs
(Roads, education,
National Defense)
Taxes used to
influence behavior of
individuals (tobacco,
etc.)
Tax Rates – the
percentage of a person’s
income that goes toward
taxes.
Proportional Taxes –
“flat rate tax”
Takes same
percentage of income
from individuals at all
income levels.
Has greater impact
on people with
lower incomes.
Progressive Taxes –
takes larger percentage
of income from a highincome person than
lower income person
2000, $26,250 or less
= 15%
$288,350 = 39.6%
(highest tax
bracket)
Effected those with
the higher incomes
more than those with
lower incomes.
Regressive Taxes –
takes larger percentage
of income from people
with low incomes than
from people with high
incomes.
Falls more heavily on
people in lowerincome groups than on
people who earn high
incomes
Individual Income Taxes – progressive
(sometimes proportional) tax on a person’s
income.
Collected by Federal government & most state
governments
1996, provided 38% of federal revenue & 14%
of state revenues.
U.S. government
taxes corporate
profits.
Many corporations
pay at a reduced
rate
1996, made up 10%
of federal tax
revenues & 3% of
state tax revenues
Money withdrawn from
workers paychecks to fund
(OASDI) Old-Age, Survivors,
& Disability Insurance &
Medicare – provides health
care to older Americans
regardless of income.
Both proportional &
regressive
Second largest source of
revenue for federal
government (1999 = 33.5%)
Does not take a
persons income into
account.
1% of state revenues
(25% of local
governments revenue)
Regressive tax
assigned to certain
goods and services
by state & local
governments
1996, 5% of federal
revenues & 21% of
state revenues.
Excise tax – tax on manufacture, sale or consumption
of a particular good or service (gas, tobacco, firearms,
alcohol, telephone services, tires, & gambling)
Estate tax – tax placed on the assets of a person who
has died
Gift tax – placed on the transfer of certain gifts of
value (exceeds $10,000 annually)
Customs duty – tax on goods brought into the U.S.
Supply-Side Economics – focuses on
achieving economic stability & growth
by increasing the supply of goods &
services throughout the economy
Governments role to provide firms
with incentives to increase
production (tax cuts & less
spending)
Leading supporter Jean-Baptiste Say
– “Supply creates its own demand”
Producers provide enough goods
& services to meet their own
needs – produce more in exchange
to meet their wants
1.
2.
Assumption that
economist can predict
the economic behaviors
of people
Tax cuts unfair
Spending cuts fell
most heavily on social
programs for the poor,
unemployed, & other
disadvantaged groups.
Focuses on achieving economic growth through governments
influence on aggregate demand.
John Maynard Keynes – “Father” of demand-side
economics
Published “The General Theory of Employment, Interest
and Money” – marketplace forces alone were not enough
to increase aggregate demand during economic
downturns. (government needed)
Employment Act of 1946 – pledged to promote
“maximum employment, production, and purchasing
power”
Tax Rates – used to regulate aggregate
demand in privately owned businesses
Congress reduces taxes to help
unemployment
Congress raises taxes to limit inflation
Tax Incentives – special tax break the
government extends to businesses to
encourage investments in new capital
Investment tax credit – permits firms
to deduct from their corporate income
taxes a percentage of money spent on
new capital
Government Spending
Decrease of government spending results in lower
aggregate demand & slower business activity
Increase results in higher spending, aggregate demand &
employment opportunities
Public Transfer Payments
Redistribution of tax dollars to nonproductive (goods or
services that are not created in exchange for government
payments) actors in the economy. “Unemployment
compensation”
Progressive Income Taxes
Period of prosperity leads higher incomes into higher tax
brackets
Periods of recession – taxed at lower rates
Timing Problems
Political Pressures
Restrictive fiscal policy – increases taxes & reduces
government spending
Expansionary fiscal policy – decreased taxes & increased
government spending to stimulate business activity
Unpredictable economic behaviors
Lack of coordination among government policies
Federal Budget –
federal governments
plan for the use of
government revenues
Summary of the
ways in which the
government uses
fiscal policies.
Wartime spending –
causes dramatic
increases in the level of
government
expenditures
Increased corruption
Progressive Reform
Movement
New Budget Process
1921, Budget and Accounting Act – created the Bureau of
the Budget
Empowered the president to formulate an annual budget
OMB (Office of Management & Budget) replaced BOTB
Budget Process today
President develops it & consults with the OMB,
Council of Economic Advisers, The Dept. of the
Treasury
Focuses on the next fiscal year – 12-month finical
period that typically does not duplicate the dates of
the calendar year
Budget deficit – government spends more than it
collects
Budget surplus – government revenues exceed
government expenditures
Deficit spending – spending more money for its
programs than it’s able to cover with it’s revenues.
National Debt – total amount of money the federal
government has borrowed (includes all deficits
from previous years)
Growth of the National Debt
1790 = $75 million
Civil War = $1 billion
WW1 = $3 billion (two years later $25 billion “Roaring 20’s)
1982 = $1 trillion
2000 = $5.6 trillion
Debt Ceilings – legislates a limit on the size of the national
debt
Increased each time it was set…
Impact of the National Debt
Spending on social programs = improves quality of life
$362 billion on interest alone in 2000
Increasing Revenues
Taxation?
1993, Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act – raised
individual income tax rates for highest tax bracket & raised
taxes on gasoline
Decreasing Expenditures
Closing of military bases
Reducing defense spending
Legislating a Balanced Budget
Balanced Budget & Deficit Reduction Act (1985) “GRH”
Program set-up to balance budget in 5-years
Cuts to nearly every government program