ECON 103 Lecture Notes - Lecture 15: Fiscal Policy, Aggregate Demand, Aggregate Supply

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Pro: policymakers should try to stabilize the economy. Left on their own, economies tend to fluctuate. When households and firms become pessimistic, for instance, they cut back on spending, and this reduces the aggregate demand for goods and services. The fall in aggregate demand, in turn, reduces the production of goods and services. Firms lay off workers, and the unemployment rate rises. Real gdp and other measures of income fall. Rising unemployment and falling income help confirm the pessimism that initially generated the economic downturn. Monetary and fiscal policy can stabilize aggregate demand and, thereby, production and employment. When aggregate demand is inadequate to ensure full employment, policymakers should boost government spending, cut taxes, and expand the money supply. When aggregate demand is excessive, risking higher inflation, policymakers should cut government spending, raise taxes, and reduce the money supply. Con: policymakers should not try to stabilize the economy.

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