Title: Fiscal Policy Government Spending and Taxation
1Fiscal Policy (Government Spending and Taxation)
- A2 economics revision presentation on the
operation of government fiscal policy including
changes in government spending, tax revenue and
public sector borrowing
2The Main Goals of Fiscal Policy
- The Treasury has outlined the main goals of
fiscal policy to be the following - Equity concerns
- To ensure that government spending and taxation
impact fairly both within and across generations - Funding government spending
- To meet the governments key spending and tax
priorities without a damaging rise in the burden
of government debt - The Benefit Principle
- To ensure that those who benefit from public
services also meet as far as possible the costs
of the services they consume - Macroeconomic Stability
- Fiscal policy is now designed to support monetary
policy in smoothing the path of aggregate demand
over the economic cycle
3Distribution of Public Spending
4Government spending on education and health ( of
GDP)
5Composition of Government Spending
- Transfer Payments
- Social security payments
- Over 110 billion including
- Income support
- Jobseekers Allowance
- State Pensions
- Housing benefit / Council Tax Benefit
- Some benefits are means tested
- Others are universal or are based on national
insurance contributions - Current spending on goods services (G)
- Capital Spending
- Infrastructural spending by the public sector
- Spending that results in the acquisition of
assets
6Recent trends in total UK government spending
7Why Do We Have Government Spending?
- The provision of public and merit goods
- The redistribution of income and wealth
- Welfare benefits reduce income inequalities and
relative poverty by providing a basic minimum
level of income for those out of employment and
also income replacement for those who have
recently been made redundant. - Influencing regional resource allocation and
industrial efficiency - This is achieved via regional policy, which aims
to reduce regional economic disparities within
the UK - Influencing the level of economic activity
- Changes in government spending impact directly on
aggregate demand and can therefore be used as a
tool of macro-economic demand-management
8Government Spending An Optimal Level?
- One debate is about how high public spending
should be relative to national output (GDP) - In the United States and many Asian countries,
government spending is less than 30 of GDP - In European countries, such as Germany and
Sweden, it has been as high as 40-50 - Some economic studies suggest that lower public
spending relative to GDP results in higher rates
of economic growth in the long run, though this
conclusion is controversial - Certainly, over the years, much public spending
has been highly inefficient hence the current
Labour governments concern to maximise the
volume of output from extra spending in health
and education
9The Private Finance Initiative (PFI)
- Private Finance Initiative in 1992 as a way of
funding infrastructure developments without
running up excessive public sector debts - Examples of PFI projects include hospitals,
prisons, railways, laboratories, schools, defence
facilities and integrated information systems for
government departments. - Under a PFI, private sector companies borrow the
cash to build and run new hospitals, schools and
prisons for a period of up to 60 years - The main objection to the PFI has revolved around
a fundamental question. How can private sector
firms finance major public infrastructure
projects more cheaply than the government when it
costs them more to borrow? - Supporters of the PFI arguing that the evidence
of PFI projects completed so far is that they
enjoy a clear lead over conventional government
procurement in delivering big capital projects on
time and to specified budgets
10Taxation
11Reasons for having taxation
- Revenue
- To raise revenue to finance spending on goods and
service by central local government - Managing AD
- The government when managing the level of AD,
output and prices uses taxation - Changing the distribution of income and wealth
- A progressive system of taxation can be utilized
to achieve great equality in income wealth
between individuals and households - Meeting environmental targets
- Taxes can correct for externalities and other
forms of market failure - Helping the balance of payments
- Import taxes may control imports and therefore
help the countrys balance of payments and
protect industries from overseas competition
12Income tax and national insurance contributions
13Income Tax
14Direct and indirect taxes
- Direct taxation
- Direct taxation is levied on income, wealth and
profit while indirect taxation is levied on
expenditure - Direct taxes include income tax, national
insurance contributions, capital gains tax, and
corporation tax - Indirect taxation
- Indirect taxes is levied on spending on goods and
services - Indirect taxes include VAT excise duties on fuel
and alcohol, car tax, betting tax and the TV
licence - VAT An indirect tax at the rate of 17.5,
although domestic fuel is taxed at 5 - Excise duties are specific duties. The main
duties are placed on cigarettes, alcohol, and fuel
15Tax revenues in 2002-03 ( billion)
16Government Taxes (2003-04)
17Examples of indirect taxation
18Effects of an indirect tax using supply
demand analysis
An ad valorem tax when demand is inelastic
A specific tax when demand is elastic
S Tax
Price
Price
S Tax
S1
S1
P2
P2
P1
D1
P1
D1
Q2
Quantity
Q1
Quantity
Q2
Q1
19Progressive and regressive taxation
- Progressive taxes
- With a progressive tax, the marginal rate of tax
rises as income rises. I.e. as people earn more
income, the rate of tax on each extra pound
earned goes up - This causes a rise in the average rate of tax
(the percentage of income paid in tax) - Proportional taxes
- With a proportional tax, the marginal rate of tax
is constant. For example, we might have an income
tax system that applied a standard rate of tax of
25 across all income levels - Regressive taxes
- With a regressive tax, the rate of tax falls as
incomes rise I.e. the average rate of tax is
lower for people of higher incomes - In the UK, most examples of regressive taxes come
from excise duties of items of spending such as
cigarettes and alcohol.
20Evaluation Direct versus Indirect taxation
21Trends in the government tax burden
22The benefit principle of taxation
- The benefit principle of taxation is that taxes
paid have a link with the benefit that the person
paying the tax receives from government spending - There are some problems with too much emphasis on
the benefit principle - It ignores the redistributive aims of taxation.
The benefit principle is mainly concerned with
allocative efficiency rather than equity. - The benefit principle assumes correct revelation
of preferences by consumers whereas in reality
many consumers do not have to pay for the public
goods and services provided for them
(free-riders)