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Fiscal Policy
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Section 2

Evaluating Fiscal Policy

Book Version 3
By Boundless
Boundless Economics
Economics
by Boundless
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10 concepts
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Automatic Stabilizers

Automatic stabilizers are modern government budget policies that act to dampen fluctuations in real GDP.

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Automatic Stabilizers Versus Discretionary Policy

Automatic stabilizers and discretionary policy differ in terms of timing of implementation and what each approach sets out to achieve.

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The Role of the Federal Budget

The federal budget dictates how much money the government plans to raise and how it plans to spend it in the upcoming year.

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Arguments for and Against Balancing the Budget

Balanced budgets, and the associated topic of budget deficits, are a contentious point within both academic economics and politics.

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Long-Run Implications of Fiscal Policy

Expansionary fiscal policy can lead to decreased private investment, decreased net imports, and increased inflation.

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Problems of Long-Run Government Debt

Government debt limits future government actions and can be hard to pay off because Congressmen are unwilling to do what is necessary to pay down the debt.

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Limits of Fiscal Policy

Two key limits of fiscal policy are coordination with the nation's monetary policy and differing political viewpoints.

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Difficulty in Getting the Timing Right

Discretionary fiscal policy relies on getting the timing right, but this can be difficult to determine at the time decisions must be made.

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Crowding-Out Effect

Usually the term "crowding out" refers to the government using up financial and other resources that would otherwise be used by private enterprise.

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Evaluating the Recent United States Stimulus Package

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) was drafted in response to the Great Recession, primarily in order to create jobs.

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