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Economic Policy. The Budget, the Fed, and a sundry other important economic points. I. The Budget. In Theory: how much will be collected in taxes, and how that $ will be spent on programs In Fact: a list of what will be spent on what Before 1921 Congress prepared “budget” alone
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Economic Policy The Budget, the Fed, and a sundry other important economic points
I. The Budget • In Theory: how much will be collected in taxes, and how that $ will be spent on programs • In Fact: a list of what will be spent on what • Before 1921 • Congress prepared “budget” alone • Highly decentralized process; many committees involved • Committees could increase or decrease amounts at will • President simply approved appropriations bills • Budgeting and Accounting Act of 1921 • Placed responsibility for preparing budget on President • Created Bureau of the Budget (became OMB in 1970) • Council of Economic Advisers—created in 1946 • 3 economists advise president on maintaining a stable economy • Helps president prepare annual economic report • Promotes the president’s policy goals
I. The Budget Continued • Budget Act of 1974 • Further organized budget process; Congress retook power • Budget resolutions est. ceilings for spending areas • Created CBO • Committees approve appropriations; Congress passes them; President signs • Office of Management and Budget • Located within Executive Office of the President • Director appointed by president, approved by Senate • Staff of over 500—they begin budget process in spring by meeting with the president • Based on president’s priorities, the OMB assembles a budget by working with agencies. The OMB scrutinizes agencies’ requests
I. The Budget Continued • Congress and the Budget Process • Budget must be approved by Congress • Budget Committees (2) review the whole budget • CBO—analyzes and makes proposals • Budget Resolution—used to propose budget ceilings—Congress adopts these to guide future work on the budget • Portions of the budget are sent to authorization, tax, and appropriations committees • Within the House and Senate, there are 35 committees that can authorize spending according to their expertise • Appropriations committees allocate the funding
II. Taxation • The Politics of Taxation • Income tax authorized by 16th amendment (1913) • Tax rate lower in US than other democracies • Income tax burden is progressive; other taxes are not • Tax loopholes—Client politics • Reformed by Tax Reform Act (1986)—low rates, fewer deductions—entrepreneurial politics • Reagan wanted to reduce taxes • Bush and Clinton both raised taxes • New loopholes created • Transfer payments • From wealthy to poor; economic equality
III. The Fed (Federal Reserve Board) • An independent agency est. in 1913 by Federal Reserve Act • Primary job—monetary policy • Structure of the Fed • Board of Governors (aka FRB) • 7 members; 14 year terms • Chairman (Ben Bernanke): 4 year terms • All appointed by President, confirmed by Senate • Responsibilities: set reserve requirements • FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) • 12 members including FRB • 8 meetings/year to discuss monetary policy • Responsibilities: • Set securities rate—the rate member banks buy and sell government securities • Set discount rate—the rate the Fed charges banks for loans (aka interest rate)
III. The Fed (Continued) • Buying—puts $ into circulation; interest rates drop • Selling—takes $ out; interest rates increase • This encourages or discourages borrowing and thus business expansion • Lower rate=more borrowing=more $=inflation/stimulation • Higher rate=less borrowing=less $=slows inflation • Banks set “prime rate” based on the discount rate • This affects all money borrowed from a bank • Historically—combats inflation more than stimulates economy: • “to remove the punch bowl when the party gets going” • 12 Regional Banks and 25 branches • Operate like the government’s banker • Responsibilities: • Store excess currency (reserves) • Settle checks and payments • Sell securities • 6,000 member banks (See: http://money.howstuffworks.com/fed.htm)
Reserve Requirements Too much of this leads to… More currency
Money comes out of the system, goes to Fed Less $ in circulation leads to higher interest rates
Now banks have more money to loan which drives down Interest Rates
In Summary… • The Fed affects monetary policy by: • Buying or selling securities • Changing the reserve requirements • Adjusting the discount rate • All of these change the supply of money and indirectly change the interest rate