The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

Similar documents
Politics, Surpluses, Deficits, and Debt

CHAPTER FOURTEEN: THE CONGRESS, THE PRESIDENT, AND THE BUDGET: THE POLITICS OF TAXING AND SPENDING

Chapter 10 Fiscal Policy Macroeconomics In Context (Goodwin, et al.)

[ A] Cost of Acquisition / Enhancement Where Debt Released Restriction of Allowable Cost for CGT purposes

Econ 202 Section 4 Final Exam

CTJ s Presidential Candidate Tax Policy Scorecard

The 2004 Report of the Social Security Trustees: Social Security Shortfalls, Social Security Reform and Higher Education

CHAPTER 5 Review... Page 1

Macroeconomics Instructor Miller Fiscal Policy Practice Problems

Note: This feature provides supplementary analysis for the material in Part 3 of Common Sense Economics.

US Sovereign Debt - Truth and Consequences

Common Sense Economics Part III: Economic Progress and the Role of Government Practice Test

Government Budget and Fiscal Policy CHAPTER

Pre-Test Chapter 11 ed17

History. Discussion of Proposals

CHAPTER 5: MEASURING GDP AND ECONOMIC GROWTH

Chapter 4 Consumption, Saving, and Investment

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts

Chapter 30 Fiscal Policy, Deficits, and Debt QUESTIONS

Macroeconomics Machine-graded Assessment Items Module: Fiscal Policy

Capital gains tax treatment of earnout arrangements

Module 4 Glossary. Board of Governors of the Fed. Business Cycle. Contraction in the business cycle Contractionary Fiscal Policy

United States General Accounting Office GAO. High-Risk Series. February Farm Loan Programs GAO/HR-95-9

11/6/2013. Chapter 16: Government Debt. The U.S. experience in recent years. The troubling long-term fiscal outlook

Financial Analysis of Real Estate Enterprises: A Case Study of Vanke

Student Loan Scheme Amendment Bill (No 2) A briefing note prepared for the Finance and Expenditure Committee

Objectives for Chapter 18: Fiscal Policy (This is a technical chapter and may require two class periods.)

Objectives for Chapter 9 Aggregate Demand and Aggregate Supply

Strategies to Manage the Ever Bigger Bite of Taxes

CRS Report for Congress Received through the CRS Web

Chapter 2 Balance sheets - what a company owns and what it owes

Treatment of COD Income by Partnerships

Chapter 1 Lecture Notes: Economics for MBAs and Masters of Finance

LOCKING IN TREASURY RATES WITH TREASURY LOCKS

How to overcome the Silver Democracy in Japan? December 3 rd, 2014 Naohiro Yashiro International Christian University yashiro@icu.ac.

1st Session Mr. HATCH, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following R E P O R T. [To accompany S. 905]

The CAO s Experience in Auditing Public Debt

U.S. Government Receivables and Debt Collection Activities of Federal Agencies

Tax System Challenges in the 21 st Century

March 19, 2014 The President s Budget in Pictures By Jasmine Tucker Chart assistance by Daniel Gautreau

FISCAL POLICY* Chapter. Key Concepts

BEREA COLLEGE DEBT POLICY

Debt and Deficits. David Rosen

AMERICANS VIEWS OF THE ECONOMY AND THE STATE OF THE COUNTRY March 28- April 2, 2008

Reference: Gregory Mankiw s Principles of Macroeconomics, 2 nd edition, Chapters 10 and 11. Gross Domestic Product

9. Employee Stock Ownership Plans

The Economic Environment for Business

Congressional Budget Office s Preliminary Analysis of President Obama s Fiscal Year 2012 Budget

E D I T I O N CLEP O F F I C I A L S T U D Y G U I D E. The College Board. College Level Examination Program

Exam 1 Review. 3. A severe recession is called a(n): A) depression. B) deflation. C) exogenous event. D) market-clearing assumption.

1st Session MILITARY SPOUSE JOB CONTINUITY ACT OF Mr. HATCH, from the Committee on Finance, submitted the following R E P O R T

1st Session A BILL TO AMEND THE INTERNAL REVENUE CODE TO EXCLUDE AMOUNTS RECEIVED UNDER WORK-LEARNING SERVICE PROGRAMS

Bailouts and Stimulus Plans. Eugene F. Fama

2010 Actual 2011 Proposed Budget* Married [1] Single Rate Married [1] Single Rate

THEME: DEPRECIATION. By John W. Day, MBA

EC2105, Professor Laury EXAM 2, FORM A (3/13/02)

Chapter 18. MODERN PRINCIPLES OF ECONOMICS Third Edition

Learning Module 3 Journal Entries

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

The Fiscal Policy and The Monetary Policy. Ing. Mansoor Maitah Ph.D.

Frequently Asked Questions About Money Market Funds and Credit Ratings on U.S. Treasury Securities

Unemployment Compensation (UC) and the Unemployment Trust Fund (UTF): Funding UC Benefits

GURTIN FIXED INCOME CREDIT RESEARCH FLASH

Financial Market Instruments

With compound interest you earn an additional $ ($ $1500).

2.2 An Economy Producing Consumption Goods: Model I. 2.3 An Economy That Also Produces Capital Goods: Model II

The Truth about the State Employees Retirement System of Illinois

Lecture Notes on MONEY, BANKING, AND FINANCIAL MARKETS. Peter N. Ireland Department of Economics Boston College.

Military Spending and Jobs in Massachusetts

Balance of Payments. BoP Account Definitions. Tracking International Flows Of Goods and Services. Balance of Payments

Property Tax Levy Law. Mike Sobul, Treasurer Granville EVSD OSBA Capital Conference November 13, 2012

VOCABULARY INVESTING Student Worksheet

LIMITING GOVERNMENT: THE FAILURE OF STARVE THE BEAST William A. Niskanen

Finance, Resources, Audit and Governance Committee 27 September 2012

CPA MOCK Evaluation End of Core 2 (combined Core 1 and Core 2) Page 1

Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Thirteenth Edition Edwards/Wattenberg/Lineberry. Chapter 1 Introducing Government in America

Kansas Legislator Briefing Book 2015

Enhance Your Financial Security. With a Home Equity Conversion Mortgage

Minimizing Your Social Security Payroll Tax/Self-Employment Tax

A better way your parents can help you into your first home.

Composition of Federal Spending

Municipal Credit Conditions and The Efficiency of Tax-Exemption. California Debt and Investment Advisory Commission PRESENTATION FOR: January 11, 2012

Health & the economic crisis: the Australian case

The State of Unemployment Insurance Taxes in South Carolina

MULTIPLE CHOICE. Choose the one alternative that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Calculating profitability indicators - profitability

1. A is a tax system which has higher tax rates on people with lower incomes.

The Solution is the Problem

b. What are the values of the government spending multiplier and the tax multiplier?

Control Debt Use Credit Wisely

ACHIEVABLE CORPORATE TAX REFORM 2013 PETERSON INSTITUTE FOR INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS DECEMBER 12, 2012

WHY STUDY PUBLIC FINANCE?

3. a. If all money is held as currency, then the money supply is equal to the monetary base. The money supply will be $1,000.

Obligation-based Asset Allocation for Public Pension Plans

Money Market. The money market is the market for low-risk, short-term debt.

A CITIZEN S GUIDE TO THE FEDERAL BUDGET

GAO Work on Efforts to Reduce Tax Evasion and Tax Fraud Prepared for the Internal Revenue Service Oversight Board Public Meeting May 1, 2013

AS Economics. Introductory Macroeconomics. Sixth Form pre-reading

A BIPARTISAN PLAN TO REDUCE OUR NATION S DEFICITS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

Pre-Algebra Lecture 6

Transcription:

Edwards, Wattenberg, and Lineberry Government in America: People, Politics, and Policy Thirteenth Edition Chapter 14 The Congress, the President, and the Budget: The Politics of Taxing and Spending

Introduction! Budget: A policy document allocating burdens (taxes) and benefits (expenditures)! Deficit: An excess of federal expenditures over federal revenues! Expenditures: What the government spends money on! Revenues: Sources of money for the government

Sources of Federal Revenue! Income Tax Shares of individual wages and corporate revenues The 16 th Amendment permitted Congress to levy an income tax. Individual taxes are the largest single revenue source for the government. Income tax is progressive: Those with more income pay higher rates of tax on their income.! Social Insurance Taxes Taxes for specific funds: Social Security and Medicare

Sources of Federal Revenue

Sources of Federal Revenue! Borrowing The Treasury Department sells bonds this is how the government borrows money. The federal debt is the sum of all the borrowed money that is still outstanding. The government competes with other lenders. The government does not have a capital budget.! Federal Debt: all money borrowed over the years and still outstanding

Sources of Federal Revenue

Sources of Federal Revenue! Taxes and Public Policy Tax Loopholes: tax breaks or benefits for a few people Tax Expenditures: revenue losses that result from special exemptions, exclusions, or deductions on federal tax law Tax Reduction: the general call to lower taxes Tax Reform: rewriting the taxes to change the rates and who pays them Tax Reform Act of 1986 extensive tax reform

Sources of Federal Revenue

Federal Expenditures

Federal Expenditures! Big Governments, Big Budgets A big government requires lots of money. As the size of government increases, so does its budget.! The Rise and Decline of the National Security State In the 1950s and 1960s the Department of Defense received more than half the federal budget. Defense now constitutes about one-sixth of all federal expenditures. One reason for growth of government

Federal Expenditures

Federal Expenditures! The Rise of the Social Service State The biggest part of federal spending is now for income security programs. Social Security is largest program Social Security has been expanded since 1935 to include disability benefits and Medicare. These benefit programs face financial problems with more recipients living longer. Another reason for government growth

Federal Expenditures

Federal Expenditures! Incrementalism The idea that last year s budget is the best predictor of this year s budget, plus some. Agencies can safely assume they will get at least what they got last year. Focus and debate on the increase over last year Budgets tend to go up a little each year.

Federal Expenditures! Uncontrollable Expenditures Spending determined by the number of recipients, not a fixed dollar figure Mainly entitlement programs where the government pays known benefits to an unknown number of recipients, e.g., Social Security The only way to control the expenditures is to change the rules.

Federal Expenditures! Balancing the Budget Congress passed several bills attempting to control deficits in the 1980s. By 1990, Congress focused on increases in spending. Both parties claimed victory for the budget surpluses that began in 1997. Economic downturn, income tax cuts, and increased military expenditures brought a return to deficits in 2001.

Understanding Budgeting! Democracy and Budgeting Many politicians spend money to buy votes. With many groups and people asking for government assistance, the budgets get bigger. Some politicians compete by trying not to spend money. People like government programs, but they really do not want to pay for them, thus there are deficits and federal debt.

Understanding Budgeting

Understanding Budgeting! The Budget and the Scope of Government In sum, the budget represents the scope of government. The bigger the government, the bigger the budget Limits on funding (taxes) can limit what the government can do.

Summary! Federal budget consumes one-fifth of GDP! Government growth has meant higher taxes to pay for additional services, often through deficit spending.! The budget is used, some argue, to buy votes, leading to an ever larger government.