ECON 101 Lecture Notes - Lecture 9: Rent-Seeking, Productive Efficiency, Capital Formation

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Alternative views of fiscal policy an overview. Keynesians stress the potency of fiscal policy and its use to maintain. Ad at a level consistent with full employment. Others argue there are secondary effects of fiscal policy which undermine its effectiveness. Critics also argue that keynesian analysis ignores important incentive effects of fiscal changes, including both changes in the composition of government spending and the supply-side effects of marginal tax rates. Theory that an increase in borrowing to finance a budget deficit will push real interest rates up and thereby retard private spending, reducing the stimulus effect of expansionary fiscal policy. The implications of the crowding-out analysis are symmetrical: restrictive fiscal policy will reduce real interest rates and (cid:862)(cid:272)ro(cid:449)d-i(cid:374)(cid:863) pri(cid:448)ate spe(cid:374)ding. Crowding-out effect in an open economy: larger budget deficits and higher real interest rates lead to an inflow of capital, appreciation in the dollar, and a decline in net exports.

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