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fiscal stance (1 Viewer)

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could someone explain this a bit clearer...:)

- expansionary fiscal policy is associated with budget deficit, where injections are greater than leakages or G>T.

- contractionary fiscal policy is associated with surplus budgets, where injections are less than leakages G<T.

and also, when the government imposes tax increases, would that be a contractionary or expansionary fiscal policy?

thx.
 

Rorix

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well, does a tax increase reduce or increase the amount of tax paid to the government?...
 

grimreaper

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ToO LaZy ^* said:
- expansionary fiscal policy is associated with budget deficit, where injections are greater than leakages or G>T.

- contractionary fiscal policy is associated with surplus budgets, where injections are less than leakages G<T.
This is actually wrong. A fiscal policy is only contractionary if the surplus rises or the deficit becomes smaller - it isnt contractionary just because it is in surplus. This years budget is mildly expansionary even though it is in surplus, as the surplus became smaller.
 

grimreaper

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Yeah I heard someone say a a while ago that the csu economics notes were copied straight from the excel textbook so...... yeah I think that pretty much sums up the credibility of that site
 

rumour

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ToO LaZy ^* said:
could someone explain this a bit clearer...:)

- expansionary fiscal policy is associated with budget deficit, where injections are greater than leakages or G>T.

- contractionary fiscal policy is associated with surplus budgets, where injections are less than leakages G<T.

and also, when the government imposes tax increases, would that be a contractionary or expansionary fiscal policy?

thx.
If T>G then there is a surplus budget
 

tWiStEdD

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well okay.

Fiscal policy is a government tool which is used as a part of macroeconomic policy to regulate levels of demand within the economy. Discretionary factors such as tax cuts and asset sales (asset sales are 'one offs', and as such are ignored by economists when calculating the fiscal balance (the amount to which the govt is adding to national savings)) and cyclical factors, automatic stabilisers such as progressive income tax and unemployment benefits, both have an effect on the level of government revenue and government tax, for obvious reasons... right? If the economy is growing 'too fast' then progressive income tax revenue will be increasing due to the fact that people will be earning more and more people are employed... but to prevent excess demand fuelling further growth, more tax is taken from income earners. Similarly, when we are in a recession and people are LOSING jobs, unemployment benefits will inflate Gx but at the same time stimulate demand so as to ensure we make it out of the recession alive and well.

Assume we had a netural to accomidating budgetary stance and that the economy was growing strongly at 3.25%. Now if the Commonwealth Bank collapsed in say August and over the following months businesses went with it and then the stock exchange crashed. National income would fall dramatically, and demand would go with it... right? [NB: This is basically what happened in America in the lead-up to the great Depression, so yes... I am right :p] The following budget would therefore include more Gx to accomodate for the increase in transfer payments. Consumers therefore have money to spend, and demand is at least supported if not stimulated, however at the same time the govt is recieving much less tax as people have less taxable income.

Hence, Gt<Gx for the purposes of avoiding a potential recession. Therefore it is expansionary fiscal policy thanks to the massive deficit.

Similarly if Australia, in a period of low demand, lowered interest rates with inflation down to an contextually unrealistic 1% and cut tax by huge amounts then Australian demand will skyrocket. Then say Australia felt uncontrolled rates of economic growth and rising inflation due to increased demand pull pressures, the federal government would cut spending and probably increase taxes or interest rates again in an attempt to regulate the rate of economic growth.

Hence Gt>Gx to control inflation and prevent an overheated economy. Therefore it is contractionary fiscal policy due to the surplus.

This is basically Keynesian theory. It doesnt take into account microeconomic reforms, but for the purposes of the HSC... this stuff is still relevant.
 
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aditya

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now that we're in the latter part of the course... its fucking confusing huh?

i mean there a million reasons for everything now, wheras in our half yearlies, it wasn't so...
damn this sucks :'(
 
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don'y worry..90 more days then it's allllll over...
oh wait..i'm doing bcommerce at uni hopefully..yay..another 3 years of eco/biz
 

tWiStEdD

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Gt = Government Taxation
Gx = Government Expenditure.

its just how we do it in class.

ToO LaZy ^* said:
do you mean Gt>Gx?

you're quite right. sorry.
good to know that you were listening ;)
 

wildtiger

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tWiStEdD said:
This is basically Keynesian theory. It doesnt take into account microeconomic reforms, but for the purposes of the HSC... this stuff is still relevant.
So how does micro reform affect the fiscal stance?
 
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micro reform affects fiscal stance indirectly.
if a micro reform was used...say competition policy was used to reduce tariffs, this would force domestic markets to operate more efficiently to fight foreign competition. if the policy was successful, profts will rise due to economies of scale and incomes may rise as a result. bracket creep or fiscal drag may result because of the higher income brackets and hence, the government will receive increased tax revenue for the next fiscal year and therefore influence fiscal stance (whether its deficit, surplus or neutral)
 

tWiStEdD

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Microeconomic reforms dont affect it so much as it compliments it. However, fiscal consolidation can come under microeconomic reforms. For example the sale of Telstra (privatisation) was a form of fiscal consolidation, but it also worked to improve productivity and thus output per unit of production, therefore increasing aggregate supply.

Sale of Telstra > ^ Government Revenue (one off) > need to ^ resource efficiency and productivity since there is no more govt support > ^ productivity > ^ AS > v prices

Microeconomic reforms are supply-side management and concentrate on pushing aggregate supply to the right and, ceterus paribus, reducing prices. Since the 1980's modern economics has taught us that demand side management was not enough, we need to be able to influence supply side as well. This was thanks to the 'Stagflation' felt during and in the wake of the oil crisis. Thus, through privatisation and deregulation (both of which lower government expenditure and thus affect fiscal policy), aggregate supply can be increased and economic growth is enhanced. Why? Because economic growth refers to the change in real output from year to year. If AS is increasing, so too is output, right?
 
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tWiStEdD

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yes, i think i made that point... didnt i?

if i didnt, then he's right, it is.

EDIT:
previous edit was to put stagflation in :p perhaps you didnt read it well enough Lazy!
 
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