ECON 2020U Lecture Notes - Lecture 7: Tax Wedge, Real Wages, Potential Output

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The federal budget is the annual statement of the federal government"s outlays and revenues. The federal budget has two purposes: 1. To finance the activities of the federal government: 2. Fiscal policy is the use of the federal budget to achieve macroeconomic objectives, such as full employment, sustained economic growth, and price level stability. Highlights of the 2013 budget: the projected fiscal 2013 federal budget has revenues of billion, outlays of. Fiscal policy has important effects on employment, potential gdp, and aggregate supply. An income tax changes full employment and potential gdp. 10 percent, a dollar earned buys only 65 cents worth of goods and services: the tax wedge is 35 percent. Taxes and the incentive to save and invest. Lecture 7: a tax on capital income lowers the quantity of saving and investment and slows the growth rate of real gdp, the interest rate that influence saving and investment is the real after-tax interest rate.

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