DEFINITION of 'Fiscal Policy'
Government
spending policies that influence macroeconomic conditions.
Through fiscal policy, regulators attempt to improve unemployment rates,
control inflation, stabilize business cycles
and influence interest rates in an effort to control the economy. Fiscal policy
is largely based on the ideas of British economist
John Maynard Keynes
(1883–1946), who believed governments could change economic performance by
adjusting tax rates
and government spending.
BREAKING DOWN 'Fiscal Policy'
To illustrate how the government could try to use
fiscal policy to affect the economy, consider an economy that’s experiencing a recession. The
government might lower tax rates to try to fuel economic growth.
If people are paying less in taxes, they have more money to spend or invest.
Increased consumer
spending or investment could improve economic growth. Regulators don’t want
to see too great of a spending increase though, as this could increase inflation.Another
possibility is that the government might decide to increase its own spending –
say, by building more highways. The idea is that the additional government
spending creates jobs and lowers the unemployment
rate. Some economists, however, dispute the notion that governments can
create jobs, because government obtains all of its money from taxation – in other
words, from the productive activities of the private sector.One
of the many problems with fiscal policy is that it tends to affect particular
groups disproportionately. A tax decrease might not be applied to taxpayers at all
income levels, or some groups might see larger decreases than others. Likewise,
an increase in government spending will have the biggest influence on the group
that is receiving that spending, which in the case of highway spending would be
construction workers.Fiscal policy and monetary policy
are two major drivers of a nation’s economic performance. Through monetary policy,
a country’s central
bank influences the money supply.
Regulators use both policies to try to boost a flagging economy, maintain a
strong economy or cool off an overheated
economy.
economic policy
The actions taken by a government to
influence its economy.
Types of economic
policy actions can include
setting interest
rates through a federal
reserve, regulating the level
of government
expenditures, creating private property rights,
and setting tax rates.
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