CH 16
Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply Model An extension of the basic AD-AS model that introduces the following conditions:
1. The economy experiences continuing inflation, with the price level rising every year. 2. The economy experiences long-run economic growth, with the LRAS curve shifting to the right every year.
In the dynamic AD-AS model we assume:
1. The economy experiences inflation and, 2. the economy experiences long run growth. That is, the LRAS curve shifts to the right each year. In addition, the AD and the SRAS curves also shift to the right each year.
Crowding out
A decline in private expenditures as a result of an increase in government purchases
What is a contractionary fiscal policy?
Contractionary fiscal policy includes decreasing government spending and increasing taxes to decrease aggregate demand.
What is an expansionary fiscal policy?
Expansionary fiscal policy includes increasing government spending and decreasing taxes to increase aggregate demand.
What is fiscal policy?
Fiscal policy can be described as changes in government spending and taxes to achieve macroeconomic policy objectives.
What is the difference between federal government purchases (spending) and federal government expenditures?
Government purchases are included in government expenditures.
After September 11, 2001, the federal government increased military spending on wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. Is this increase in spending considered fiscal policy?
No. The increase in defense spending after that date was designed to achieve homeland security objectives.
Who is responsible for fiscal policy?
The federal government controls fiscal policy.
Automatic stabilizers are
government spending and taxes that automatically increase or decrease along with the business cycle.
Which of the following raises the largest percentage of federal government revenue?
individual income taxes
As a result of crowding out in the short run, the effect on real GDP of an increase in government spending is often
less than the increase in government spending.
Two examples of automatic stabilizers in the U.S. are
unemployment insurance payments and the progressive income tax system.
Automatic stabilizers can reduce the severity of a recession because, during a recession,
unemployment payments rise and tax collections fall, providing more spending ability to push the economy back to full employment.