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Title: G-17: Domestic Policy


1
G-17 Domestic Policy
  • Chapter 17a Learning Objectives 1-5
  • Economic Theories
  • Fiscal Policy vs. Monetary Policy
  • And

2
Chapter 17- Domestic Policy
  • (1). Outline the various economic theories
    proposed for managing the economy.
  • (2). Contrast fiscal policy and monetary policy,
    and explain the key role of the Fed.
  • (3). Assess Government's ability to manage the
    economy in view of the Lucas critique.
  • (4). Discuss US distribution of income wealth
    and the role of supply-side economics.
  • (5). Assess whether the US should pursue an
    industrial policy or remain a free market.
  • (6). Describe the basic concepts categories of
    how the Government regulates business.
  • (7). Describe the key government economic and
    social regulatory agencies their role..
  • (8). Assess the effectiveness and projected
    impact of current environmental policy.
  • (9). Describe the various concepts and categories
    of Social Welfare policy.
  • (10). Contrast social insurance w/public
    assistance explain the role of means testing.
  • (11). Outline Social Welfare Policy and assess
    impact of the Social Security Act of 1935.
  • (12). Assess the current and future status of
    Social Security, Welfare, and Health Policy

3
Managing the EconomyA Brief Historical Overview
  • From Government Restraint to Government
    Intervention
  • 1800 to early 1900sgt Restraint dominated by the
    late 18th century economic theory - known as
  • Classical economicsgt based on lassez faire

An economic theory, dominant at the start of the
twentieth century, that argued that the federal
government's only role in the economy was to
ensure a stable supply of money.
Theory applied to President Hoovers balanced
budget as solution to what major economic crisis?
4
Managing the EconomyA Brief Historical Overview
(1929 thru 1930s)
  • Start of the Great Depressiongt
  • 25 unemployment
  • 1929 stock market crashgt
  • Homeless named where they were lived
    Hoovervilles in protest lack of aggressive
    Federal action
  • Public impatient with inability of Government to
    fix problem
  • 1932 Presidential election gt
  • Landslide election of FDR
  • First Hundred Days gt
  • Aggressive Federal action to fix
  • New Deal programsgt
  • Federal projects spending
  • Objective spur economy to lifegt
  • get America back to work
  • Examine FDRs policy to spur economy

5
FDRs Economic Policy- Summary
  • Major economic events and actions of FDRs
    Presidency
  • Became President in 1933
  • During Great Depression the U.S. suffered 25
    unemployment
  • Roosevelts Administration instituted the New
    Deal
  • At first employed public works programs.
  • Later used government spending to spur on the
    economy

What kind of Government economic policy uses
spending to spur economy?
6
?_____________ Policy
Using the federal government's control over taxes
and spending to influence the condition of the
national economy.
7
Managing the Economy Fiscal Policy
  • Fiscal Policy
  • Government policy to Tax and Spend
  • What economic theorist came up with this concept?
  • John Maynard Keynes
  • 20th century economic theorist
  • Wrote General Theory of Employment, Interest,
    Money
  • Keynes thesis
  • Less jobsgt less gt low consumption
  • Less spending gt Low demandgt result?
  • Low GDP ( downward spiral continues
    perpetuates)
  • What was Keynes economic theory called?

8
?__________ Economics
An economic theory, based on the work of British
economist John Maynard Keynes, that contends that
the national government can manage the economy by
running budget surpluses and budget deficits.
9
Role Played by Keynesian Economics
  • Active government role in the Nations economy
  • Create surplus deficit how?
  • Through manipulation of the Budget
  • Objective
  • Stimulate or retard a Boom or Bust economy
  • How achieved?gt
  • Federal action spend (put more into economy)
    or
  • Tax (take money out of Nations economy)
  • Forever after associated with New Deal
    Democrats

10
Application of Keynesian Economics
  • During Recession
  • Government should spend to raise demand thus
    spur economy
  • Okay to run a budget deficit
  • Overheated economy
  • Government should cut spending to control
    inflation (How?)
  • Raise taxes to take out of economy
  • This will cut demand slow economy down
  • Complication to above theory
  • counter-cycle programs
  • Automatic government programs kick in to
    counter downturn
  • Food Stamps
  • Public Assistance
  • Unemployment compensation

Examine Recession cycle in greater detail
11
Cycle of Recession
Because businesses cant sell goods, they fire
workers and produce less
Supply and demand for goods and services fall
Because people have less money, they buy less
Unemployment rises and the overall GDP falls
12
Key Term Review
A measure of a country's total economic output in
any given year.
GDP
An economic theory, based on the work of British
economist John Maynard Keynes, that contends that
the national government can manage the economy by
running budget surpluses and budget deficits.
Keynesian Economics
13
Managing the Economy
  • Besides Fiscal Policy (or Federal Tax Spending)
  • Whats the other way to manage the economy?
  • Controlling the Money Supply
  • What economic theory advocates control of money
    supply?
  • Monetary Theory
  • Nations money supply is primary to economys
    health
  • Therefore controlling the circulation of money in
    Nations economy will control inflation or spur
    economic growth
  • Who controls the Nations money supply and how
    does it control it?

14
The ?__________ ?__________
  • An independent regulatory commission that
    Congress created in 1913 to oversee the nation's
    money supply.
  • How does Federal Reserve control the money
    supply?
  • The Fed controls the Nations money supply in 3
    ways
  • 1. discount rate gt (i.e. short term interest
    rates)
  • 2. Buy or sell U.S. Treasury Securitiesgt (US
    Savings Bonds)
  • 3. Change required reserve ratio that Banks must
    hold
  • Ratio of money that Banks must hold in reserve
    cant loan
  • Examine structure of the Federal Reservegt

15
The Federal Reserve
  • Four Key Parts
  • 1. The Board of ?__________
  • 2. The Federal ?_______ ?_________ Committee
  • 3. Twelve Regional Federal ?__________ Banks
  • 4. The ?__________ banks that are members of
    Federal Reserve System

16
Federal Reserve System
Who heads this system?
17
Chairmen of the Federal Reserve
Ben S. Bernanke was sworn in on February 1, 2006,
as Chairman and a member of the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Dr.
Bernanke also serves as Chairman of the Federal
Open Market Committee, the System's principal
monetary policymaking body. He was appointed as a
member of the Board to a full 14-year term, which
expires January 31, 2020, and to a four-year term
as Chairman, which expires January 31, 2010.
  • Ben S. Bernanke was sworn in on

18
Government Management of the Economy
  • Assessment
  • Can the Government effectively manage the
    economy?
  • Role impact of the Robert E. Lucas critique
  • Chicago New Classical school of economics
  • Publics private corporations response to Gov.
    actions to counter its ill effects on their
    interests
  • The Neo- or new Keynesians
  • Employed math models showing that wages tended to
    be sticky
  • Debate disagreements centered around following
  • How economy works proper Gov. policy to be
    applied
  • Bottom Line
  • No sure resolution on Gov. role (big or small
    role)

19
Current Status of Economic Stewardship
  • 12 economists with 13 conflicting opinions
  • Applying Fiscal Monetary controlsgt
  • Aim economic stability
  • Continuing disagreements over how to manage
    economy
  • Distribution of Income Wealth
  • Supply-side economics the trickle down effect
  • Industrial Policy (as practiced in Japan)
  • Impact on economy of Government management
    actions?
  • Governments Track Record?
  • Gradual dampening of Boom Bust swings
  • Examine recent trends since 1950 gt

20
A Century of US Economic Growth
21
Debate over Management of Economy
  • Continuing disagreements over how to manage
    economy
  • Growing gap Distribution of Income Wealth

2005
U.S. income distribution as a percentage of
income earned
22
US Wealth Income DistributionAnother
Perspective
Wealth income, real estate, stocks, bonds, and
material goods.
Top 20 (1.8K)
Top 1 (2.3M)
Control 80 of all wealth in the United States
Control 40 of all wealth in United States
23
Debate of Management of Economy Alternative
Theories Variations
Supply Side Economics the Trickle Down
Effect
An economic theory that argues that if the
government cuts taxes, reduces spending, and
eliminates regulations, resources will be freed
up to fuel the economy to produce even more goods
and services.
  • Another proposal to manage economy?
  • ?__________ Policy (as practiced in Japan)

24
Industrial Policy
The government selects an industry that it thinks
can be a world leader and spur on the economy
Government Aid
R D Funds
Regulation Exemption
Tax Incentives
Any downside to this approach?
25
Industrial Policy Challenges
  • How ?__________ can government bureaucrats
    predict which particular industry or corporation
    will be the next up and coming winner?
  • Past government track record efficiency in
    spending money dont inspire confidence
  • What if investors in the market or future
    consumers disagree with the governments
    ?__________ ?__________ or go another direction
    instead?

26
Chapter 17b Domestic Policy (continued)
  • Learning Objectives 6-12Regulatory policy 1.
    Economic regulation 2. Social regulation


27
Regulating Business
  • Regulatory policy
  • Origins Interstate Commerce Act of 1887 (Box
    17-1)
  • Purpose Control unfair monopolistic practices
    of who?
  • Short versus Long Haul prices to market?
  • Public attitude towards regulatory policygt
  • Mixed many times conflicting why?
  • Theory versus reality
  • Theory Government should stay out of business
    versus?
  • Reality Consumer protection small businesses
  • Two major categories Regulatory policy?
  • 1. ?__________ regulation
  • 2. ?__________ regulation

28
Regulations- Two Different Types
?__________ Regulations
  • Rules affecting business practices
  • Seeks to ensure competition and prevent illegal
    monopolies

?__________ Regulations
  • Rules that protect citizens from dangerous or
    unfair practices associated with how businesses
    produce products or with the products themselves.

29
Objectives of Economic Regulation
  • Government influences competitive practices of
    industry
  • Promote competition ( prevent monopolies)
  • Microsoft Stifled competition innovations in
    software
  • Control firms entry into industry
  • Or control the industrys prices when a
    Monopoly is necessary- example?
  • RR role of Interstate Commerce Commission of
    1889
  • Disagreement in principle practice continues
  • Impact of recent trends in deregulation
  • Failure of Savings Loans (1980s) Airlines
    industries
  • How has economic regulation evolved over US
    history?
  • Evolved in three major phases

30
Important Events in Economic Regulation- Phase I
  • Congress responds to farmers and small
    businesses complaints about major monopolies
    trusts
  • 1887 establishes Interstates Commerce Commission
    (ICC)
  • Commission with no real enforcement capability
  • 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act (against monopolies)
  • General statement of intent (still lacked teeth
    to enforce)
  • 1914 Clayton Antitrust Act
  • Fix above weakness- established enforcement
    mechanism
  • 1914 Federal Trade Commission Act
  • (Same as above)

31
Events in Economic Regulation - Phase II
  • More regulation following events leading to
    Depression
  • 1934 Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
  • 1934 Securities and Exchange Commission (SCC)
  • 1938 Civil Aviation Board (CAB)
  • 1960sgt Federal Government established four key
    areas of economic regulatory policy
  • 1. Antitrust- Prevent monopolies encourage
    competition (Microsoft suit)
  • 2. Financial Institutions- Savings
    Loans/SEC/Enron debacle
  • 3. Transportation- Air/Ground/Rail
  • 4. Communication- FCC (Radio TV)

32
Events in Economic Regulation- Phase III
  • Economic Regulationgt 1970s through present
  • Deregulationgt benefits unintended consequences
  • Mixed bag- sometimes good sometimes bad
  • When is Deregulation good ?
  • ?__________ rises prices fallgt benefits
    consumer
  • Examples Telecoms, Computers, Airlines
  • Deregulation can be very bad for the public when
  • Corporate greed leads to poor service risky
    business decisions
  • Airline service to passengers declines
  • Savings Loan default (tax payers pick up
    multi-B tab)
  • Stock Market price manipulation fraudulent
    accounting
  • Such as Enron debacle (life savings retirement
    lost)

33
Social Regulation
  • Social Regulation focus on conditions under
    whichgt
  • Goods services are produced
  • When contrasted with economic regulation
  • Social regulations cut across industries
  • (vice focus on a specific industry)
  • Regulations grounded in specific technical
    legislation
  • Very specific detailed
  • vice vague general guidelines of economic
    regulations
  • Aim protect public interest
  • Principal Federal Agencies established to
    administer
  • Social regulation from 1930 through 1975 (See
    Table 17-1)

34
Social Regulation Agencies
35
Protecting Worker Safety and Health
  • Occupational Safety and Health Act of 1970
  • Created OSHA gt regulate industrygt worker safety
  • Problems criticism?
  • Too ?__________ ?__________ regulations
  • Employers complaints (time to comply)
  • Advocates for OSHA?
  • Labor Union consumer advocates gt support
  • Favor posted OSHA regulations (see example)
  • Debate OSHAs over proper role continues
  • Debate centered around costs versus benefits
    gained

36
OSHA Regulations example
37
Protecting the Environment
  • Evolution of Environmental Policy (Silent Spring)
  • 1960s gt environmental activists movement
  • Union Oil of California oil spill off Santa
    Barbaragt
  • VIP public outcry (who owns homes off West
    Coast?)
  • National Environmental Policy Act (1969)
  • Requirement for Environmental impact statement
  • Required for all government agencies
  • Later exploited by environmental activists
  • (Endangered Species Act)
  • Nixon consolidates various agencies into EPA
    (1970)
  • Vast array of laws regulations ensued (Table
    17-2)
  • (It was the early 70s after all)

38
EPA Responsibilities
So what areas exactly does the EPA regulate?
39
Protecting the Environment
  • The Environmental Protection Agency regulates
  • ?__________ Quality
  • ?__________ Quality
  • Disposal of ?__________ Waste
  • Chemicals
  • ?__________ Levels

Any problem w/Government regulations to protect
the environment? Significant potential for
?__________ Conflict Who is affected?
40
Political Conflict Who is effected
President
Congress
Public
Environmental Policy impact
Republicans
Democrats
regulations
Why?
41
Environmental Policy Conflict Its Impact
  • Political conflicts of Environmental Protection
  • Environmental policies creates ?__________
    ?__________
  • Due to those affected by benefits vs. costs
  • Somebody has to pay for it
  • Other related factors
  • Diffused benefits (to Public) with specific costs
    to a few (Industry)
  • Benefits often hard to measure
  • Measuring extent of environmental problem very
    difficult
  • Costs rise significantly for each incremental
    improvement gained at the margin

42
Future Directions
  • Future Directions for Environmental Policy
  • Direction taken depends on whose in power
  • As a resultgt conflicting guidance given to the
    EPA
  • Democrats want more environmental regulation
  • GOP favor business therefore want less
    regulation
  • Options for how government protects environment
  • Three different methods
  • 1. Command ?___________
  • 2. ?__________________ incentives
  • 3. ?_____________________ prevention

43
Differing Options to Protect EnvironmentA
Comparison
Market Incentives Pollution Prevention
Command and Control
Vs.
  • Agencies draft regulations
  • Agencies dictate enforcement mechanisms
  • Establish allowable pollution levels
  • Issue permits to pollute
  • Recipients can trade and sell permits

Debate great conflict over environmental policy
to continue
44
Social Welfare Policy
What is Social Welfare Policy?
Government programs that provide goods and
services to citizens to improve the ?______ _
____ _______.
45
Promoting Social Welfare
  • Federal government runs broad range of programs
  • Several specifically designed to promote social
    welfare
  • Basic concepts functions of Social Welfare
    Policy
  • Federal programs designed specifically to
    provide
  • goods services to improve Publics quality of
    life
  • What are the two major categories of Social
    Welfare?
  • 1. Social ?_____________ programs
    qualifications
  • You pay in to the programgt you qualify
    (example?)
  • Social Security Medicare
  • 2. Public ?_____________ programs
    qualifications
  • ?______________ tested (?) programs- (examples?)
  • SSI, Food Stamps, Medic?______

46
Social Welfare strategies
  • What are the three social welfare strategies?
  • 1. ?______________
  • Programs designed to alleviate or lessen effects
    of poverty
  • (food stamps Meals on Wheels)
  • 2. ?______________
  • Programs designed to prevent or avoid poverty
  • (Unemployment Compensation Social Security)
  • 3. ?______________
  • Programs designed to cure poverty conditions at
    its root
  • (Head Start job training)

If given an example, can you ID the proper
strategy?!
47
Social Welfare Programs
What are the different types of Social Welfare
Programs?
  • Income ?______________ programs
  • Nutrition programs
  • Health programs
  • ?______________ programs
  • Education programs
  • Social ?______________ programs

See Table 17-3 for specific associated programs
by type
48
The Evolution of Social Welfare Policy
  • Welfare as private sector local responsibility
  • True for first half of our Nations history
  • Federal government initial involvement
    deserving poor
  • 1880s thru 1910s gt
  • Focused on disabled elderly Union Veterans
  • State government also expanded selective benefits
  • Addressed needs of other poor citizens
  • Both Federal State governments target
    deserving poor only
  • Then what major event caused both to reconsider
    who should take lead in addressing needs of its
    citizens?
  • What major legislation was enacted as a result?

49
Impact of Great ?_________ the ?_______ Deal
Social Security Act of 1935
  • Act established Federal programs providing goods
    services to improve the lives of American
    citizens in two major areas
  • 1. Provided Social ?______________ programs for
    elderly and disabled
  • 2. Established Public ?______________ programs to
    help blind, elderly, and dependent children

50
Nationalizing Social Welfare A Summary
  • Social Security Act of 1935
  • Significantly expanded Federal governments
    welfare role
  • Social insurance programs (elderly unemployed)
  • Created as old age survivors program
  • 1956 Congress adds Disability Insurance
  • Social Security has grown significantly over the
    years
  • Both in number of entitled and costs of
    administration
  • Beneficiaries grew from 222K in 1940 to 46.4
    Million in 2002
  • Increased costs 32M (1940) to 454 Billion in
    pay out in 2002
  • Cost increase due to inflation COLA over 60
    year span
  • FICA deductions have also increased (see Chapter
    16)

51
Public Assistance Programs
  • Administration of Public Assistance left to
    states gt
  • Responsible for managing care for elderly, poor,
    blind
  • 1972 Congress standardized benefits
    eligibility
  • Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
  • Cost grew from 495 Million in 1940 to 32.2
    Billion in 2001
  • 1960s ADC gt AFDC (controversial from start)
  • 1996 Congress replaced AFDC with TANF
  • 1964 LBJs War on Poverty resulted in
  • Number of additional programs created
  • Economic Opportunity Act of 1964
  • Job Corps Head Start (associated with what
    strategy?)
  • Food Stamp program (significantly grew over
    decades)

52
Public Assistance Programs - problems
  • Many War on Poverty programs eventually phased
    out why?
  • Activists poor of 1960s challenged established
    power
  • Traditional Public Assistance establishments
    controlled distribution of Public Assistance
  • (and resented Activists challenge to their
    established Power)
  • Strong political bias for alleviative/preventative
    against ?_________ programs ultimately shapes
    policy
  • What about the Nations Health Care system?

53
Health Care
  • Two major categories of Health Care?

Medic?___
Medic?___
(versus)
Whats the difference between the two?
A social ?_______ program that provides basic
hospital insurance and supplementary insurance
for doctors' bills and other health care expenses
for people over the age of 65 or
older (Entitlement)
A public ?__________ program that provides
publicly subsidized health care to low-income
Americans. (Means Tested)
54
Current Status of Social Welfare Policy
  • Criteria used to measure Social Welfare Policy
    status
  • 1. Social welfare Policies of other Industrial
    Democracies
  • 2. Social Welfare vs. other types of U.S.
    government spending
  • 3. Spending on different types of Social Welfare
    programs
  • 4. Objective measurements of success of Social
    Welfare Programs

55
1. Policies of other Industrial DemocraciesA
Comparison
  • Full Health care provided by other Industrial
    Democracies
  • US spends less on social welfare than Japan
    Europe
  • US spends 30 of Budget vs. 40 of European
    budgets
  • Europeans receive greater amount of government
    services
  • European health care paid in full by government
  • American tradition of relying on private sector
  • Strong bias against big government social
    medicine

56
2. Social Welfare vs. other types of spending
57
3. Spending on different types of Social Welfare
Distribution of Social Welfare Expenditures
Across Programs

58
4. Measuring success of Social Welfare
  • Conservative position complete failure
  • Traps poor in poverty cyclegt permanent
    underclass
  • Liberal position work in progress
  • Needs moderate reform but still considered
    effective
  • Objective measures gt reveals mixed success
  • Poverty has fallen since 1970 (from 13)
  • 2000 fell to 11.3 poverty rategt then back up
    to 12.5 in 2003
  • Nevertheless major gap exists between two
    groups
  • Old (10.2) vs. poor children (17.6 in 2003)
    growing
  • Infant mortality rate has fallen to 7 per 1000
    births
  • Social effects on society also reveal some
    negatives
  • Significant increase in divorce, single parent
    families, crime

59
The Future of Social Welfare Policy
  • Social Security two debated questions
  • 1. On whom should government spend (old or
    young?)
  • 2. Is Social Security headed for insolvency?
  • (and what should we do about it if it is?)
  • Welfare Policy the uneasy balance in conflict
  • The safety net versus the free ride
  • 1996 Welfare Reform law
  • Abolished AFDC gt TANF - striking a proper
    balance?
  • Concerns Impact of the economic recession on
    unemployed?
  • Poor unemployed trying to make ends meet at the
    margin
  • Health Policy gt Two major concerns cost
    access
  • How to stem medical costs who should have
    access to it

60
Social Security future insolvency?
Options to address problem?
Increase ?_______, reduce ?_______, or restrict
?_______
61
Major concerns with Health Care system
  • Access to and Cost

Impact of Baby Bommers
Who pays the costs of the uninsured?
62
Next Class Assignment
  • Chapter 18a Foreign Policy
  • Learning Objectives 1-5
  • Chapter 18b Foreign Policy (Part II)
  • Remaining Learning Objectives 6-10
  • Preparation for Course Review (in 2 weeks)
  • Also RESEARCH PAPER IS DUE in 2 weeks!!!

63
Chapter 17- Key Terms
  • Counter-cyclical programs Government programs
    that automatically increase spending when the
    economy slows down and unemployment rises, and
    decrease spending when the economy speeds up.
  • Economic regulation Laws and governmental rules
    that affect the competitive practices of private
    business.
  • Environmental impact statement A document
    federal agencies must issue that analyzes the
    environmental impact of any significant actions
    they plan to take.
  • Federal Reserve System An independent
    regulatory commission that Congress created in
    1913 to oversee the nations money supply.
  • Fiscal policy Using the federal governments
    control over taxes and spending to influence the
    condition of the national economy.
  • Food Stamp program A public assistance program
    established in 1964 that provides stamps (or
    coupons) to low-income people to buy food.
  • Gross domestic product (GDP) A measure of a
    countrys total economic output in any given
    year.
  • Industrial policy The policy of seeking to
    strengthen selected industries by targeting them
    for governmental aid rather than letting the
    forces of the free market determine their fates.

64
Chapter 17- Key Terms (2)
  • Keynesian economics An economic theory, based
    on the work of British economist John Maynard
    Keynes, that contends that the national
    government can manage the economy by running
    budget surpluses and budget deficits.
  • Laissez faire An economic theory, dominant at
    the start of the twentieth century, that argued
    that the federal governments only role in the
    economy was to ensure a stable supply of money.
  • Lucas critique An economic theory that contends
    that if people act rationally, then their
    reactions to changes in government policy will
    often negate the intent of those changes.
  • Means test A requirement that people must fall
    below certain income and wealth requirements to
    qualify for government benefits.
  • Medicaid A public assistance program that
    provides publicly subsidized health care to
    low-income Americans.
  • Medicare A social insurance program that
    provides basic hospital insurance and
    supplementary insurance for doctors bills and
    other health care expenses for people over the
    age of 65.
  • Monetary theory An economic theory that
    contends that a nations money supply, or the
    amount of money in circulation, is the primary if
    not sole determinant of the health of the
    national economy.

65
Chapter 17- Key Terms (3)
  • Public assistance Government programs, such as
    Medicaid and food stamps, that are funded out of
    general tax revenues and that are designed to
    provide benefits only to low-income people.
  • Regulatory policy Laws and government rules
    targeting private business for the purpose of (1)
    protecting consumers and other businesses from
    what the government deems unfair business
    practices (2) protecting workers from unsafe or
    unhealthy working conditions (3) protecting
    consumers from unsafe products and (4)
    protecting a number of groups from
    discrimination.
  • Social insurance Government programs such as
    Social Security and Medicare that require those
    who will receive benefits to make contributions
    (otherwise known as taxes) and that distribute
    those benefits without regard to the recipients
    level of income.
  • Social regulation Laws and governmental rules
    designed to protect Americans from dangers or
    unfair practices associated with how private
    businesses produce their products as well as from
    dangers associated with the products themselves.
  • Social welfare policy Government programs that
    provide goods and services to citizens for the
    purpose of improving the quality of their lives.
  • Supply-side economics An economic theory that
    argues that if the government cuts taxes, reduces
    spending, and eliminates regulations, resources
    will be freed up to fuel the economy to produce
    even more goods and services.
  • Temporary Assistance for Needy Families (TANF) A
    public assistance program that provides
    government aid to low-income families with
    children for a limited amount of time.

66
Back-up Slides
67
Ben S. Bernanke
  • Ben S. Bernanke was sworn in on February 1, 2006,
    as Chairman and a member of the Board of
    Governors of the Federal Reserve System. Dr.
    Bernanke also serves as Chairman of the Federal
    Open Market Committee, the System's principal
    monetary policymaking body. He was appointed as a
    member of the Board to a full 14-year term, which
    expires January 31, 2020, and to a four-year term
    as Chairman, which expires January 31, 2010.
  • Before his appointment as Chairman, Dr. Bernanke
    was Chairman of the President's Council of
    Economic Advisers, from June 2005 to January
    2006.
  • Dr. Bernanke has already served the Federal
    Reserve System in several roles. He was a member
    of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve
    System from 2002 to 2005 a visiting scholar at
    the Federal Reserve Banks of Philadelphia
    (1987-89), Boston (1989-90), and New York
    (1990-91, 1994-96) and a member of the Academic
    Advisory Panel at the Federal Reserve Bank of New
    York (1990-2002).
  • From 1994 to 1996, Dr. Bernanke was the Class of
    1926 Professor of Economics and Public Affairs at
    Princeton University. He was the Howard Harrison
    and Gabrielle Snyder Beck Professor of Economics
    and Public Affairs and Chair of the Economics
    Department at the university from 1996 to 2002.
    Dr. Bernanke had been a Professor of Economics
    and Public Affairs at Princeton since 1985.
  • Before arriving at Princeton, Dr. Bernanke was an
    Associate Professor of Economics (1983-85) and an
    Assistant Professor of Economics (1979-83) at the
    Graduate School of Business at Stanford
    University. His teaching career also included
    serving as a Visiting Professor of Economics at
    New York University (1993) and at the
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1989-90).
  • Dr. Bernanke has published many articles on a
    wide variety of economic issues, including
    monetary policy and macroeconomics, and he is the
    author of several scholarly books and two
    textbooks. He has held a Guggenheim Fellowship
    and a Sloan Fellowship, and he is a Fellow of the
    Econometric Society and of the American Academy
    of Arts and Sciences. Dr. Bernanke served as the
    Director of the Monetary Economics Program of the
    National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and
    as a member of the NBER's Business Cycle Dating
    Committee. In July 2001, he was appointed Editor
    of the American Economic Review. Dr. Bernanke's
    work with civic and professional groups includes
    having served two terms as a member of the
    Montgomery Township (N.J.) Board of Education.
  • Dr. Bernanke was born on December 13, 1953, in
    Augusta, Georgia. He received a B.A. in economics
    in 1975 from Harvard University (summa cum laude)
    and a Ph.D. in economics in 1979 from the
    Massachusetts Institute of Technology.
  • Dr. Bernanke is marr

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Next Assignment (Fall)
  • Chapter 17b Domestic Policy
  • Learning Objectives 6-12 (Economic Social
    Policy)

69
Next Weeks Assignment (Spring)
  • Tuesday Chapter 17b Domestic Policy (continued)
  • Learning Objectives 6-12
  • Regulatory policy
  • 1. Economic regulation
  • 2. Social regulation
  • Thursday Chapter 18a Foreign Policy
  • Learning Objectives 1-5
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