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Top Federal Expenditures and the National Debt

Explore the three top expenditures of the federal government, the impact of the national debt, and the use of fiscal policy to manage the business cycle. Learn about Social Security, Medicare, and National Defense, as well as intergovernmental expenditures, public education, and public welfare. Understand deficits, surpluses, and their effect on the national debt. Discover how the debt influences taxes, purchasing power, and interest rates.

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Top Federal Expenditures and the National Debt

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  1. Government Spending, Pt. 2

  2. What are the three top expenditures of the federal gov’t? • Social Security (#2) • Medicare (#3) • National Defense (#1)

  3. State and Local Expenditures • Intergovernmental expenditures (Funds sent to another level of gov’t) • Public education • Public welfare

  4. Deficits, Surpluses, and the National Debt • Deficit spending = spending > revenue • Sometimes this is planned and intentional • The difference is made up by borrowing • Deficits add to debt

  5. Surpluses • A surplus = Revenue > spending • Last president to run a surplus : Clinton • A surplus helps reduce the debt

  6. The Federal Debt • What is it ? • The total amount borrowed by investors to finance our deficit spending • It grows from deficits • It shrinks with surpluses • It remains unchanged if we BALANCE THE BUDGET

  7. How big is the debt today? • As of 12:37 p.m. on 3/23/12, the national debt was $15,571,367,306,891. • Just round that to the nearest TRILLION.

  8. Impact of the Debt • Higher taxes • Purchasing power moves from private sector to public sector • Higher taxes reduce incentive to work • The “crowding out effect” higher than normal interest rates caused by heavy government borrowing

  9. FISCAL POLICY • Definition : the deliberate taxing and spending policies of Congress and the Presidentintended to manage the business cycle. • ****The two tools of fiscal policy are TAXING AND SPENDING*****

  10. Using fiscal policy to manage the business cycle • During a recession, the problem is lack of money . • Fiscal policy : Cut taxes Increase gov’t spending Run a deficit

  11. continued During expansion the problem is inflation; there is too much money. Fiscal policy : Raise taxes Cut gov’t spending Run a surplus

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