CIA15 - Study Guide1 - Public Finance
CIA15 - Study Guide1 - Public Finance
0 10-July-2020
In the simplest terms, public finance is the study of the role of the government in the
economy. This is a very broad definition. This study involves answering the four questions
of public finance:
To understand the reason for government intervention, think of the economy as a series of
trades between producers (firms) and consumers. A trade is efficient if it makes at least one
party better off without making the other party worse off. The total efficiency of the economy
is maximized when as many efficient trades as possible are made.
There are two reasons governments may want to intervene in market economies:
Market failures – problems that causes the market economy to deliver an outcome
that does not maximize efficiency (example: health insurance)
Redistribution – the shifting of resources from some groups in society to others;
resource allocations provided by the market economy are unfair.
There are several different general approaches that the government can take to
intervention.
Tax or subsidized private sale or purchase called price mechanism whereby
government policy is used to change the price of a good in one of two ways: (1)
Through taxes, which raise the price for private sales or purchases of goods that are
overproduced, or (2) Through subsidies, which lower the price for private sales or
purchases of goods that are underproduced.
Restrict or mandate private sale or repurchase. Restrict private sale for goods that
are overproduced and mandate private purchase of goods that are underproduced.
Public Provision. Another alternative is to have the government provide the good
directly in order to potentially attain the level of consumption that maximizes social
welfare.
Public Financing of Private Provision. Governments may want to influence the level
of consumption but may not want to involve themselves directly in the provision of a
good.
In assessing the effects of government interventions, policy makers must keep in mind that
any policy has direct and indirect effects.
The direct effects of government interventions are those effects that would be
predicted if individuals did not change their behavior in response to the interventions.
The indirect effects of government intervention are effects that arise only because
individuals change their behavior in response to the interventions.
Political economy is the theory of how the political process produces decisions that affect
individuals and the economy.
Governments face enormous challenges in figuring out what the public wants and how to
choose policies that match those wants. In addition, governments may be motivated by
much more than simply correcting market failures or redistributing income. Just as there are
a host of market failures that can interfere with the welfare-maximizing outcome from the
private market, there are a host of government failures that can lead to inappropriate
government interventions. Politicians must consider a wide variety of viewpoints and
pressures, only two of which are the desire to design policies that maximize economic
efficiency and redistribute resources in a socially preferred manner.
Topic 2: Why Study Public Finance? Facts on Government in the US and Around the World
In this section, we detail that role by walking you through the key facts about government in
the United States and other developed nations. In addition, to motivate the study of public
finance, we propose some interesting questions that arise from these facts.
Gross domestic product is the monetary value of all finished goods and services
made within a country during a specific period.
GDP provides an economic snapshot of a country, used to estimate the size of an
economy and its growth rate.
b. Decentralization
- A key feature of governments is the degree of centralization across local and national
government units—that is, the extent to which spending is concentrated at higher (federal)
levels or lower (state and local) levels.
d. Distribution of spending
- The composition of federal government spending has changed dramatically over time. It is
spent on national defense or military expenditures which is an example of public good
(goods for which the investment of any one individual benefits a larger group of individuals);
Social Security programs (government provision of insurance against adverse events to
address failures in the private insurance market); health care programs and health.
Three major policy issues facing US and the rest of the world:
1. Social security
2. Health care
3. Education
It is clear from the facts presented in this chapter that the government plays a central role in
the lives of all Americans. It is also clear that there is ongoing disagreement about whether
that role should expand, stay the same, or contract. The facts and arguments raised in this
chapter provide a backdrop for thinking about the set of public finance issues that we
explore in the remainder of this course.
LEARNING ACTIVITY 1
Reflection on Learning:
What is the importance of public finance?
How does the country solve the issues and challenges our country is facing from
time to time?
Learning Activity:
During face-to-face discussion, prepare for a recitation.
Prepare for a quiz after discussion.
SUMMARY
There are four key questions to consider in the study of public finance. The first is:
When should the government intervene in the economy? Our baseline presumption is
that the competitive equilibrium leads to the outcome that maximizes social efficiency.
So government intervention can be justified only on the grounds of market failure
(increasing the size of the pie) or redistribution (changing the allocation of the pie).
Government, which consists of both national(federal) and local units (states, counties,
cities, and towns), is large and growing in the United States and throughout the world.
The nature of government spending and revenue sources is also evolving over time as
governments move away from being providers of traditional public goods(such as
defense) to being providers of social insurance (such as Social Security and health
insurance).Governments also affect our lives through regulatory functions in a wide
variety of arenas.
Public finance is central to many of the policy debates that are active in the United
States today, such as those over the Social Security program, health care, and
education.
REFERENCES