Title: Splash Screen
1Splash Screen
Chapter 10
Government Spending
2Section 1-4
Introduction
- Government is big business in America. ?
- In fact, all levels of government in the United
States spend more than all privately owned
businesses combined. ? - Government is a major player in our economy due
to its enormous expenditures.
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3Section 1-4
Did You Know?
- Between 1962 and 1993, federal transfer payments
to people eligible for benefits because of
poverty rose from under 1 percent of the nations
Gross Domestic Product (GDP) to just about 2.5
percent. In contrast, at the height of World War
II (the early 1940s), federal spending on defense
was 40 percent of GDP. In 2001 the total
government expenditures at all levels amounted to
about 30 percent of GDP.
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4Section 1-5
Government Spending in Perspective
- Total government expenditures at all levels was
almost 3 trillion in 2003about 10,300 for
every American. ?
- Government spending did not begin to increase
until the 1940s for three reasons (1) high costs
of World War II (2) the Great Depression changed
public opinion about the government assisting in
everyday economic affairs and in improving
Americans economic welfare and (3) the success
of large-scale public works projects.
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5Section 1-6
Government Spending in Perspective (cont.)
- Debate continues over the role government should
play in the economy. Government promotes the
broad social and economic goals of Americans, but
the benefits of a government policy should
outweigh its costs.
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6Section 1-7
Government Spending in Perspective (cont.)
Figure 10.1
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7Section 1-9
Two Kinds of Spending
- Government spending is for the purchase of goods
and services and payments to disadvantaged
Americans. ?
- Goods and services that the government buys
includes everything from tanks for the nations
defense to paper and soap for its employees.
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8Section 1-9
Two Kinds of Spending (cont.)
- Transfer payments include Social Security,
welfare, and unemployment compensation. Two
kinds of transfer payments exist. If the payment
is made from one level of government to another,
it is called a grant-in-aid. Subsidies are
payments made to individuals or entire industries
to encourage or protect a certain economic
activity.
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9Section 1-10
Two Kinds of Spending (cont.)
Figure 10.2
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10Section 1-13
Impact of Government Spending
- Government spending affects resource allocation
because purchase decisions, subsidies, and
transfer payments either stimulate economic
activity or affect the factors of production. ?
- Government spending influences income
distribution when transfer payments increase
family incomes, federal projects provide or take
away jobs, and subsidies give income support to
American workers. ?
- Government spending creates competition with the
private sector.
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11End of Section 1
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12Section 2-4
Introduction
- Taking action on spending bills is but one step
in the preparation of the federal budget an
annual plan outlining proposed revenues and
expenditures for the coming year. ?
- Approximately two-thirds of the federal budget
consists of mandatory spending spending
authorized by law that continues without the need
for annual approvals of Congress.
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13Section 2-5
Introduction (cont.)
- Mandatory spending includes interest payments on
borrowed money, Social Security, and medicare. ?
- The remaining one-third of the budget deals with
discretionary spending programs that must
receive annual authorization. ?
- Discretionary spending decisions include how much
to spend on programs such as the military, the
Coast Guard, and welfare.
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14Section 2-6
Establishing the Federal Budget
- The federal budget consists of (1) mandatory
spending, which includes interest payments on
borrowed money, Social Security, and medicare
(two-thirds of the budget) and (2) discretionary
spending, which includes programs that congress
must approve annually (one-third of the budget). ?
- The governments fiscal year is from October 1 to
September 30.
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15Section 2-6
Establishing the Federal Budget (cont.)
- The second step is House actionCongress has the
power to approve, modify, or disapprove the
presidents proposed budget. The House sets
budget targets for each category of the
discretionary budget, then assigns appropriations
bills to various subcommittees where subcommittee
members study and debate each bill. If the bill
is approved in subcommittee, it is sent to the
full House Appropriations Committee. If approved
there, it goes to the entire House for a vote.
All these congressional steps must be completed
by September 15 each year.
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16Section 2-6
Establishing the Federal Budget (cont.)
- The third step is Senate actionthe Senate may
approve the House bill or it may draft its own
version. If differences exist, a joint
House-Senate conference committee works out a
compromise bill. ?
- The last step is final approvalthe House and
Senate send the bill to the president for his
approval or veto. Once signed, it becomes the
official budget for the new fiscal year.
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17Section 2-14
Major Spending Categories (cont.)
- Mandatory spending categories include Social
Security income security medicare interest on
the federal debt some health programs and
veterans benefits. ?
- Discretionary spending categories include
education, employment, social services,
transportation, administration of justice,
natural resources, and the environment.
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18Section 2-13
Major Spending Categories
Figure 10.4
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19End of Section 2
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20Section 3-4
Introduction
- State and local levels of government, like the
federal government, also have expenditures. ?
- Like the federal government, these governments
must approve spending before revenue dollars can
be released. ?
- The budget process at the state and local levels
can be just as complicated as it is at the
federal level.
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21Section 3-5
Approving Spending
- Most states approve their budgets using a process
similar to the federal governments process. ?
- Some states have a balanced budget amendment that
requires annual spending not to exceed revenues. ?
- Local governments empower representativesthe
mayor, city council, or county judgeto approve
the budget.
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22Section 3-7
State Government Expenditures
- Eight percent of state spending is directed
toward intergovernmental expenditures, public
welfare, insurance trust funds, higher education,
highways, hospitals, and interest on the public
debt. The other 20 percent is spent on a variety
of expenses, such as corrections, health, natural
resources, and utilities.
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23Section 3-9
State Government Expenditures (cont.)
Figure 10.5
24Section 3-10
Local Government Expenditures
- Local governments include counties,
municipalities, townships, school districts, and
other special districts. ?
- The largest categories of spending (about
two-thirds of the total) include elementary and
secondary education public utilities hospitals
police protection interest on debt public
welfare and highways. The other third includes
such expenses as housing and community
development, fire protection, and parks and
recreation.
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25End of Section 3
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26Section 4-4
Introduction
- In 1998 the federal budget had its first surplus
in 29 years. ?
- The surplus did not last long, however, as the
recession of 2001 reduced tax receipts while
politicians simultaneously opted for tax cuts
rather than debt reduction. By 2002, federal
deficits were back.
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27Section 4-5
From the Deficit to the Debt
- Throughout United States history, the federal
government has practiced deficit spending, or
spending more than the revenues it collected. In
1998 the federal budget had its first surplus in
29 years. ?
- Historically, the largest federal deficits
happened during World War II. The budget,
however, had a surplus by 1947, which lasted
until the 1980s, when the Reagan administration
increased defense spending and cut taxes. It was
not until after the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation
Act of 1993 that the deficit began to shrink.
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28Section 4-6
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.6
29Section 4-5
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
- When the budget runs a deficit, the Treasury
Department sells bonds to the public to raise
money. The federal debt is the total amount the
government has borrowed from investors to finance
its deficit spending over its long history. ?
- The total federal debt had grown to 6.74
trillion by 2003. About 1.9 trillion is trust
fund money the government owes itself, which
economists do not include in the total as
economically significant.
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30Section 4-9
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.8
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31Section 4-5
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
- The federal debt differs from private debt
because (1) we owe most of the federal debt to
ourselves, whereas private debt is owed to
others (2) private debt typically has a
repayment deadline, but federal debt does not
the government just issues new bonds (3) private
debt means individuals give up their purchasing
power as they pay down their debt but when the
federal government repays a debt, the funds
transfer to others who gain purchasing power
(unless payments are to foreign investors).
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32Section 4-11
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.7A
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33Section 4-12
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.7B
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34Section 4-13
From the Deficit to the Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.7C
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35Section 4-16
Impact of the National Debt
- The federal debt causes a transfer of purchasing
power from the private to the public sector. The
larger the federal debt, the larger the interest
payments, and the more taxes the government must
pay. ?
- If taxes are increased to make the federal debts
interest payments, it may diminish incentives for
Americans to work, save, and invest. ?
- In selling bonds to raise money, the federal
government competes with the private sector for
scarce resources, leading to higher-than-normal
interest rates.
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36Section 4-18
Impact of the National Debt (cont.)
Figure 10.9
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37Section 4-19
Taming the Deficit
- Congress tried to mandate a balance budget in
1991 through the Gram Rudman-Hollings Act. GRH
failed because Congress passed spending bills in
spite of the law. ?
- The Budget Enforcement Act required that Congress
must pay as it goes. It must offset any new
spending with making reductions elsewhere. BEA
failed.
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38Section 4-19
Taming the Deficit (cont.)
- The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993
only succeeded in reducing the rate of growth of
the deficit, not the total deficit. The act
combined spending reductions with tax increases,
leading to the surplus by 1998.
39Section 4-19
Taming the Deficit (cont.)
- Congress gave the president a line-item veto, but
the Supreme Court found it unconstitutional. The
Balanced Budget Agreement of 1997 followed, with
rigid spending caps so Congress could balance the
budget by 2002. In 1999 congress increased
defense spending and cut taxes as a consequence,
they had to cut popular programs such as health,
education, and veterans programs. ?
- The federal government faces rapid growth of
entitlements.
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40End of Section 4
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41Chapter Summary 1
Section 1 The Economics of Government Spending
- Government spending takes the form of
expenditures on goods and services, most of which
are public goods, and on transfer payments such
as grants-in-aid for which the government
receives nothing in return. ?
- Government spending influences the private sector
by affecting the allocation of resources, the
distribution of income, and by competing with the
private sector for scarce resources.
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42Chapter Summary 3
Section 2 Federal Government Expenditures
- The president is responsible for developing the
federal budget for the fiscal year, which begins
on October 1. When the budget is complete, the
budget is sent to the House of Representatives. ?
- The House only deals with discretionary spending.
Mandatory spending is not part of the annual
budget process, although Congress can deal with
it separately. ? - Discretionary spending is broken down for action
by various committees that propose appropriations
bills. The budget is reassembled and voted on by
the House and the Senate.
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43Chapter Summary 4
Section 2 Federal Government Expenditures (cont.)
- If differences between the House and the Senate
emerge, a compromise bill is developed on which
both vote. ?
- The largest components of the federal budget are
Social Security, national defense, income
security, medicare, net interest on the federal
debt, and health.
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44Chapter Summary 5
Section 3 State and Local Government
Expenditures
- State budgets go through an approval process that
varies from state to state. The largest state
spending categories are intergovernmental
expenditures, public welfare, insurance trust,
and higher education. Others include highways,
hospitals, and interest on state debt. ?
- The largest single category of spending for local
governments is elementary and secondary
education. Public utilities, hospitals, police
protection, interest on debt, public welfare, and
highways follow.
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45Chapter Summary 7
Section 4 Deficits, Surpluses, and the National
Debt
- Federal budget deficits existed from 1970 until
1998 when the budget finally had a surplus. ?
- Deficits add to the federal debt, and the total
debt reached 5.7 trillion in fiscal year 2001,
approximately 3.3 trillion of which is held by
the public. ? - The debt affects the economy in several ways
Taxes are needed to pay the interest on the debt
the distribution of income is altered purchasing
power is transferred from the private sector to
the public sector and incentives to work, save,
and invest may also be altered.
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46Chapter Summary 8
Section 4 Deficits, Surpluses, and the National
Debt (cont.)
- Despite recent budget surpluses, the overall
federal budget would show a deficit if not for
the surpluses in the Social Security Trust Fund. ?
- The rapid growth of entitlements are still a
threat to future budget surpluses.
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47End of Chapter Summary
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