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Chapter 18

Chapter 18. Deficits, Surpluses, and the Public Debt. Definitions of Deficit, Surplus, and Debt. Budget Deficit – The amount by which government’s expenditures exceed its revenues during a particular year. In contrast, a surplus is the amount by which its revenues exceed expenditures.

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Chapter 18

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  1. Chapter 18 Deficits, Surpluses, and the Public Debt

  2. Definitions of Deficit, Surplus, and Debt • Budget Deficit – The amount by which government’s expenditures exceed its revenues during a particular year. • In contrast, a surplus is the amount by which its revenues exceed expenditures.

  3. Definitions of Deficit, Surplus, and Debt • In 2002 there was a Federal deficit of $158 billion • In 2000 there was a surplus of $236 billion • The national or public debt is the total accumulation of the Federal government’s total deficits and surpluses that have occurred through time.

  4. Definitions of Deficit, Surplus, and Debt • State and local governments historically have a collective budget surplus

  5. Three Budget Philosophies • Annually Balanced Budget – Was the goal until the 1930s Depression, but this ruled out using fiscal policy as a countercyclical, stabilizing force and even makes recession or depression worse • The balanced budget is not neutral, but is procyclical – it worsens the business cycle • In a recession, the government would have to arise taxes and lower spending to balance the budget as tax revenues fell with recessionary income levels – This policy would worsen recessions

  6. Annually Balanced Budget • In an inflationary boom period, a balanced budget would intensify the inflation - As tax revenues increased, the government would need to cut taxes or increase spending to avoid budget surplus. This strategy would make the inflation worse. • Those who argue for the annually balanced budget want to limit the growth of government.

  7. Three Budget Philosophies • Cyclically balanced budget – Allows for some government stabilization policy over the length of the business cycle. Deficit spending is allowed during a recession, and surpluses during an inflationary period. • Over the business cycle, deficits would be offset by surpluses. • But in reality, surpluses and deficits do not offset each other.

  8. Three Budget Philosophies • Functional Finance – Advocate contend that deficits, surpluses, and the size of the debt are of minor importance • The primary purpose of Federal finance is to achieve noninflationary full employment. • Government should do what is necessary to achieve this goal regardless of the deficit or surplus in the budget.

  9. The Public debt • Any government deficit increases the size of the public debt. • The public debt has grown substantially since 1940

  10. Three causes of the debt: • Wars require increased Federal borrowing to finance the war effort • Recessions result in budget deficits because of the built-in stability of the economy (tax revenues fall and domestic spending rises). • Lack of fiscal discipline, such as a cut in tax rates without offsetting reductions in expenditures or a lack of control over increased spending, will contribute to deficits.

  11. The Social Security Trust Fund • Currently generates more revenue than expenditures for the federal government. This situation decreases budget deficits and increased budget surpluses. • If we do nothing to Social Security program right now, Social Security can pay every cent it owes to 2036. after 2036, can only pay about 70% (2010)

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