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III. Generational Effects of Fiscal Policy

Generational accounting is an accounting system that measures the lifetime tax burden and benefits of government programs to each generation.

Generational Accounting and Present Value

To compare the costs and benefits that occur at different points in the future, which is necessary in generational accounting, the concept of present value is used. A present value is an amount of money that, if invested today, will grow to equal a given future amount when the interest that it earns is taken into account. Because there is uncertainty about the proper interest rate to use when calculating present values, plausible alternative numbers are used to estimate a range of present values.

The Social Security Time Bomb

  • Fiscal imbalance is the present value of the government’s commitments to pay benefits minus the present value of its tax revenues. In 2010, the fiscal imbalance was estimated to be $79 trillion and growing by about $2 trillion every year. The fiscal imbalance is high because of obligations under Social Security laws and Medicare.
  • There are four alternatives for redressing the fiscal imbalance: raise income taxes, raise Social Security taxes, cut Social Security benefits, or cut federal government discretionary spending. But the changes needed would be severe. It is estimated that income taxes would need to be raised by 69 percent; or Social Security taxes raised by 95 percent; or Social Security benefits cut by 56 percent.

Generational Imbalance

Generational imbalance is the division of the fiscal imbalance between the current and future generations assuming that the current generation will enjoy the current levels of taxes and benefits. It is estimated that the current generation will pay 43 percent of the fiscal imbalance and the future generations will pay 57 percent.

IV. Fiscal Stimulus

  • A fiscal action that is initiated by an act of Congress is called discretionary fiscal policy.
  • A fiscal action that is triggered by the state of the economy is called automatic fiscal policy.

Automatic Fiscal Policy and Cyclical and Structural Budget Balances

  • Tax revenues and needs-tested spending change with the business cycle.

· The government sets tax rates. As incomes vary with the business cycle, the tax revenue collected changes. Tax revenue automatically falls in recessions and automatically rises in expansions.

· Government expenditure on programs that pay benefits to people and businesses depending on their economic status is called needs-tested spending. Needs-tested spending automatically increases in a recession and automatically decreases in an expansion, helping to stabilize the economy.

  • Induced taxes and needs-tested spending mean that the federal budget deficit is counter-cyclical, with the deficit increasing in a recession and decreasing in an expansion.
  • The structural surplus or deficit is the budget balance that would occur if the economy were at full employment and real GDP were equal to potential GDP. The cyclical surplus or deficit is the actual surplus or deficit minus the structural surplus or deficit.

· In 2010 the total U.S. budget deficit was $1.4 trillion. According to the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) the cyclical deficit was $0.4 trillion so the structural deficit was $1.0 trillion.



· The structural deficit skyrocketed after 2008, from about $400 billion in that year to $1.0 trillion in 2010.

  • Automatic fiscal policy helps stabilize the business cycle because it provides an automatic stimulus during a recession and an automatic contraction during an expansion.

Date: 2015-12-11; view: 845


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