6355 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Inflation Targeting, Official Cash Rate, Real Interest Rate

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Week 12- Fiscal Policy and International Trade
Fiscal Policy
Policy objectives;
ļ‚·Economic growth
ļ‚·Full employment
ļ‚·Stable price level
Policy Instruments
ļ‚·Fiscal policy
ļ‚·Monetary policy
Fiscal Policy
ļ‚·Fiscal policy is changes in federal taxes and purchases that are intended to achieve
macroeconomic policy objectives, such as high employment, price stability, and
healthy rates of economic growth.
ļ‚·Fiscal policy refers to the actions of the federal government, and not state, territory,
or local governments.
Using fiscal policy to influence aggregate demand
Aggregate Demand: the total demand for goods and services within a particular market.
Expansionary fiscal policy
ļ‚·Increases in government purchases and/or decreases in taxes in order to increase
aggregate demand
ļ‚·An increase in government purchases will increase aggregate demand directly
ļ‚·A reduction in taxes has an indirect effect on aggregate demand through the affect
on disposable income.
ļ‚·The goal of expansionary fiscal policy is to increase aggregate demand by more than
what it would have increased without policy
ļ‚·Appropriate when the economy is in equilibrium, below full-employment, e.g. during
an economic contraction or recession
ļ‚·Leftward shift
Contractionary fiscal policy
ļ‚·Contractionary fiscal policy: decreases on government purchases and/or increases in
taxes in order to reduce aggregate demand
ļ‚·Appropriate when the economy is above full employment equilibrium and the
inflation rate is high.
ļ‚·Rightward shift
Automatic Fiscal Stabilisers
ļ‚·They work to stabilise the economy without the need to change policy
ļ‚·Examples:
ļ‚·Progressive personal income tax rates and transfer payments
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ļ‚·When GDP rises, taxes increase and transfer payments fall
ļ‚·When GDP falls, taxes received fall, and transfer payments rise
The Limits of Using Fiscal Policy to Stabilise the Economy
ļ‚·There are two main problems associated with fiscal policy effectiveness
1. Timing lags
2. Crowding out
What is monetary policy?
ļ‚·Monetary policy: the actions taken by the Reserve Bank of Australia to manage
interest rates in the pursuit of macroeconomics
ļ‚·Since 1993 the RBA has focused on monetary policy on achieving price stability
ļ‚·Inflation targeting: conducting monetary policy so as to commit the central bank to
achieving a publicly announced level of inflation
ļ‚·Inflation: a general increase in prices and fall in the purchasing value of money.
ļ‚·The RBA's target inflation is between 2% and 3% per annum on average over the
business cycle
Bonds
ļ‚·Bonds are a method of raising finance available to businesses and governments
ļ‚·Bonds are a legal promise to repay a loan, usually including a principle amount and
regular interest payments. On issue, the agreed interest rate is called the coupon rate
and the interest payments are called the coupon payments
Supply of Money and Equilibrium
ļ‚·The money supply is influenced by the RBA and consists of notes and coins in
circulation plus deposits in the banking system
ļ‚·Does not depend on interest rates, so money supply curve is vertical with respect to
interest rates
ļ‚·Equilibrium interest rate occurs where monetary demand and supply curves
intersect
Monetary Policy and Open-Market Operations
ļ‚·An increase in the supply of money leads to a decrease in the interest rate
ļ‚·Equivalently, if the central bank wants to raise the interest rate, it must decrease the
supply of money
ļ‚·Open market operations, which take place in the 'open market' for bonds, are the
standard method central banks use to change the money stock in modern economies
Monetary Policy
ļ‚·RBA no longer targets the money supply to conduct monetary policy
ļ‚·Cash rate: the interest rate on loans in the overnight money market
ļ‚·The cash rate is determined by the interaction of demand for and supply funds in the
overnight money market
RBA Targets the Cash Rate
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Document Summary

Fiscal policy is changes in federal taxes and purchases that are intended to achieve macroeconomic policy objectives, such as high employment, price stability, and healthy rates of economic growth. Fiscal policy refers to the actions of the federal government, and not state, territory, or local governments. Aggregate demand: the total demand for goods and services within a particular market. Increases in government purchases and/or decreases in taxes in order to increase aggregate demand. An increase in government purchases will increase aggregate demand directly. A reduction in taxes has an indirect effect on aggregate demand through the affect on disposable income. The goal of expansionary fiscal policy is to increase aggregate demand by more than what it would have increased without policy. Appropriate when the economy is in equilibrium, below full-employment, e. g. during an economic contraction or recession. Contractionary fiscal policy: decreases on government purchases and/or increases in taxes in order to reduce aggregate demand.

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