Parkin Econ SM CH30 Ge
Parkin Econ SM CH30 Ge
Parkin Econ SM CH30 Ge
*
* This is Chapter 13 in Economics.
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
208 CHAPTER 13
a structural deficit.
15. Do Tax Cuts Ever Increase Government Revenues?
Republican politicians insist that tax cuts “pay for themselves,”
increasing receipts by goosing economic growth. Democrats and
virtually all economists say they're wrong.
Source: Slate, June 24, 2011
a. Explain what is meant by tax cuts paying for themselves. What
does this statement imply about the tax multiplier?
The idea of “tax cuts paying for themselves” refers to the Laffer
curve. If the tax rate is on the “wrong side” of the Laffer curve, a
reduction in the tax rate raises the total tax revenue collected so
that, instead of lowering total tax revenue, the tax cut “pays for
itself” by raising total tax revenue. When a tax cut pays for itself,
each dollar of the tax cut generates more than a dollar increase in
aggregate demand, so the multiplier is greater than 1.
b. Why would tax cuts not pay for themselves?
The evidence strongly suggests that the United States is not on the
“wrong side” of the Laffer curve, that is, to the right of the
maximum point. In the United States a cut in the tax rate decreases
the government’s total tax revenue. This outcome occurs if the tax
cut leads to only a moderate rather than a huge increase in
potential GDP.
Use the following news clip to work Problems 16 and 17.
Summers Calls for Infrastructure Spending
Larry Summers, the outgoing director of the White House National
Economic Council, said the United States must ramp up spending on
domestic infrastructure to drive the economic recovery. He said that
a combination of low borrowing costs, cheap building costs and high
unemployment in the construction industry make this the ideal time to
rebuild roads, bridges, and airports.
Source: Ft.com, October 7, 2010
16. Is this infrastructure spending a fiscal stimulus? Would such
spending be a discretionary or an automatic fiscal policy?
This spending is a fiscal stimulus because it, like any other
government expenditure on goods and services, increases aggregate
demand and thereby increases real GDP. The spending is discretionary
because new spending laws would be required to implement it.
17. Explain how the rebuilding of roads, bridges, and airports would
drive the economic recovery.
The rebuilding of roads, bridges, and airports would initially add
to aggregate demand. This increase in aggregate demand would raise
real GDP. After these infrastructure projects are completed, they
will increase potential GDP and aggregate supply. This effect, too,
would increase real GDP.
Use the following news clip and fact to work Problems 18 to 20.
Senate Approves Obama Tax Cut Plan
The U.S. Senate has passed legislation extending Bush-era tax cuts
for middle-class Americans earning up to $250,000 per year.
Source: Financial Times, July 26, 2012
Fact: Middle and low-income earners spend almost all their disposable
incomes. High-income earners save a significant part of their
disposable incomes.
18. a. Explain the intended effect
of extending tax cuts for
middle-class Americans but not
for high-income families. Draw
a graph to illustrate the
intended effect.
The goal of extending the tax
cuts for middle-class Americans
has an intended effect of
increasing consumption
expenditure, which increases
aggregate demand. Figure 13.4
shows the intended effect of this
policy where, including the
multiplier effect, the aggregate
demand curve shifts rightward
from AD0 to AD1. As a result real
GDP increases, in the figure from
$12.7 trillion to $12.9 trillion.
In the figure real GDP remains below potential GDP but the
recessionary gap becomes smaller.
b. Explain why the effect of tax cuts depends on who receives them.
The effect of this fiscal policy depends on the size of the impact
on aggregate demand. The more of the tax cut that is spent (which
means the less that is saved) the larger the magnitude of the effect
on aggregate demand. If the tax rebates go to people who spend more
of the rebate, that is, middle and low-income earners, the effect of
this fiscal policy is larger.
19. What would have a larger effect on aggregate demand: extending
the Bush-era tax cuts to everyone; extending them for middle-
class only; or extending them for high-income earners only? How
would each alternative compare with no tax cuts but an equivalent
increase in government expenditure?
Extending the income tax cuts to everyone will have the largest
effect on aggregate demand. Middle-income tax payers will spend most
of the tax cut and high-income tax payers, while spending only a
small fraction of their income, still spend some. In general, tax
cuts have a larger effect on real GDP than do increases in
government expenditure because the tax cuts have stronger supply-
side effects. So whichever tax cut policy—extending the tax cuts to
everyone, to only middle-class taxpayers, or to only high-income tax
payers—has the largest supply-side effect also has the largest
http://roadmap.republicans.budget.house.gov/
28. Explain the potential supply-side effects of Paul Ryan’s tax plan.
Mr. Ryan’s plan effectively lowers the tax on business income. By
decreasing the tax on profits, business’s demand for investment
increases, which increases the nation’s capital stock. Aggregate
supply and potential GDP both increase.
29. Where on the Laffer curve do you think Paul Ryan believes the U.S.
economy lies? Explain your answer.
Mr. Ryan probably believes that the tax rate U.S. economy lies
beyond the rate that maximizes U.S. tax revenue.
30. Mandatory Spending Is Hard to Contain
In Fiscal 2013, spending on the big three entitlement programs—Social
Security, Medicare, and Medicaid—was $2.1 trillion. The CBO baseline
projection sees this expenditure rising by 70 percent to $3.55
trillion by 2022. Over that same period, discretionary expenditure,
mainly national defense, is projected to grow by only 17 percent from
$1.2 trillion to $1.4 trillion. The deficit is projected to fall from
$1 trillion to $200 billion.
Source: Congressional Budget Office, 2013
If politicians continue to avoid debating the projected increases in
the three big entitlement programs, how do you think the fiscal
imbalance will change? If Congress introduced changes that slowed the
growth of expenditure on the three entitlement programs, who would
benefit and who would pay?
If politicians avoid tackling spending from the three big
entitlement programs, the fiscal imbalance will increase because
their scheduled spending will skyrocket. If Congress introduces
changes that slow the growth of expenditures on the three
entitlement programs, the current generation would pay because they
do not receive the benefit from any growth in the programs. The
future generation would benefit because they do not have to pay
higher taxes.
31. The economy is in a boom and the inflationary gap is large.
a. Describe the discretionary and automatic fiscal policy actions
that might occur.
Fiscal policy that decreases expenditure or increases taxes would
decrease aggregate demand. In terms of automatic fiscal policy,
need-tested spending decreases in expansions and tax revenue
increases. Congress might also use discretionary policy by cutting
spending programs or increasing tax rates.
b. Describe a discretionary fiscal restraint package that could be
used that would not produce serious negative supply-side effects.
A decrease in government expenditure with an offsetting decrease in
autonomous taxes would not bring a change in government saving and
so would not change investment and the growth of real GDP.
c. Explain the risks of discretionary fiscal policy in this
situation.
The risk of discretionary policy is that, because of time lags, it
takes effect too late and ends up moving the economy away from
potential GDP.
32. The economy is growing slowly, the inflationary gap is large, and
there is a budget deficit.
a. Do we know whether the budget deficit is structural or cyclical?
Explain your answer.
The economy is at an above full-employment equilibrium because there
is an inflationary gap. Real GDP exceeds potential GDP. There is a
budget deficit, but with potential GDP greater than real GDP there
is a cyclical surplus. The structural deficit is larger than the
total budget deficit because the cyclical surplus offsets some of
structural deficit. So the budget deficit is composed of a
structural deficit and a cyclical surplus.
b. Do we know whether automatic stabilizers are increasing or
decreasing aggregate demand? Explain your answer.
We know that automatic stabilizers are decreasing aggregate demand
relative to what it would be otherwise in an inflationary gap.
c. If a discretionary decrease in government expenditure occurs,
what happens to the structural budget balance? Explain your
answer.
A discretionary decrease in government expenditure decreases the
structural deficit. Following the change in fiscal policy,
government outlays would be smaller even when the economy returned
to full employment.
Use the following news clip to work Problems 33 to 35.
Is Fiscal Stimulus Necessary?
China’s economy is slowing from its normal 9 percent or higher rate
to just below 9 percent. The source of the slowdown is the global
economic slowdown that is restricting exports growth and the
government’s deliberate decision to discourage unproductive
investment. The situation now is not like that in 2008 when real GDP
growth dropped from 9 percent to 6.8 percent and fiscal stimulus does
not appear to be urgently needed.
Source: China Daily, June 8, 2012
33. Explain why fiscal stimulus was needed in 2008 but not in 2012.
Fiscal stimulus was needed in 2008 because the growth rate of the
Chinese economy significantly slowed. The slowdown in the growth
rate in 2012 is much milder and hence fiscal stimulus is not needed.
34. Would you expect automatic stabilizers to be operating in 2012
and if so, what effects might they have?
China’s automatic stabilizers will operate in 2012. China has fewer
automatic stabilizers than the United States because China has fewer
unemployment benefit programs and fewer welfare programs. China’s
income tax, however, will operate as an automatic stabilizer as
fewer people rise into higher tax brackets and some fall into lower
tax brackets.
35. Why might stimulus come too late? What are the potential
consequences of stimulus coming too late?
Stimulus might come too late because forecasters’ predictions that
the slowdown in China’s growth will be slight might prove incorrect.
So stimulus might be delayed until the economy was actually in a
d. Draw a graph to show how the fiscal cliff changes real GDP and
the output gap if the effect on aggregate demand is greater than
that on aggregate supply.
The labor market tax wedge
decreases potential GDP and
short-run aggregate supply. If
these effects are larger than
other effects that increases
potential GDP, then both
potential GDP and short-run
aggregate supply decrease.
Figure 13.7 shows the effect of
the decrease in potential GDP
and short-run aggregate supply.
In Figure 13.7, the long-run
aggregate supply curve shifts
from LAS0 to LAS1 and the short-
run aggregate supply curve
shifts from SAS0 to SAS1. In the
figure aggregate demand does not
change. Potential GDP decreases
from $13.0 trillion to $12.8
trillion and equilibrium real GDP decreases from $12.6 trillion to
$12.5 trillion. The recessionary gap—the difference between
potential GDP and real GDP—decreases from $0.4 trillion to $0.3
trillion.
37. More Fiscal Stimulus Needed?
In New York Times articles and in blogs, economists Paul Krugman and
Joseph Stiglitz say there is a need for more fiscal stimulus in both
the United States and Europe despite the large federal budget deficit
and large deficits in some European countries.
a. Do you agree with Krugman and Stiglitz? Why?
Students who agree with Mr. Krugman and Mr. Stiglitz likely believe
that the U.S. economy will not return to full employment rapidly
without further government stimulus. Students who disagree with Mr.
Krugman and Mr. Stiglitz likely believe that the U.S. economy is on
track to return to full employment.
b. What are the dangers of not engaging in further fiscal stimulus?
If the economy is not returning to full employment, fiscal stimulus
might be necessary. In this situation, if there is no fiscal
stimulus, the economy will remain mired in a recessionary gap and
unemployment will exceed natural unemployment.
c. What are the dangers of embarking on further fiscal stimulus
when the budget is in deficit?
The fiscal stimulus will further increase the budget deficit. The
rise in the deficit increases the government’s demand for loanable
funds and thereby raises the real interest rate. The higher real
interest rate decreases—crowds out—investment. The net effect on
aggregate demand is uncertain: The fiscal stimulus increases
aggregate demand; however, the decrease in investment expenditure
© 2014 Pearson Education, Inc.
FISCAL POLICY 227