ECON103 Lecture Notes - Lecture 12: Ricardian Equivalence, Aggregate Demand, Business Cycle

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Equally divided among chapters (13 questions per chapter plus a few from 15) Discretionary fiscal policy: deliberate manipulation of taxes and government spending by congress to: achieve full employment and full employment gdp, control inflation, stimulate economic growth, two types: expansionary and contractionary. Determine what fiscal policy, whether gvt spending or tax changes, is needed to correct a gdp gap: ex: know how much gvt spending needs to change or know how much tax needs to change. Ratchet effect and how does it make fiscal policy more difficult: prices are upwardly flexible but downwardly inflexible during demand-pull inflation (under contractionary policy). The ratchet effect prevents declines in aggregate demand from reducing the price level and the economy to go into a recession. You do not want to push the price back down to its original price level. Problems that gvts may encounter when implementing fiscal policy: problems of timing. Recognition lag: between beginning of recession and awareness.

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