Introduction, What Is Public Finance
Introduction, What Is Public Finance
Finance:
Introduction
What Is Public Finance?
• Many state and local governments levy a sales tax on the
purchase of certain items.
• Excise taxes are used by all levels of government. An excise tax
is levied on a specific product, such as alcohol, cigarettes, or
gasoline.
Government Spending
Two forms:
• Exhaustive spending: refers to purchases made by a
government for the production of public goods. Example: to
construct a new harbor the government buys and uses
resources from the economy, such as labor and raw materials.
• Transfer spending: when government transfers income to
people to help them support themselves. Two types of transfer
spending:
1. Cash transfers are cash payments, such as social security
checks and welfare payments.
2. In-‐kind transfers involve no cash payments but instead
transfer goods or services to recipients. Examples of in-‐
kind transfers include food stamp coupons and Medicare.
Government Deficits
• When the government spends more than it
receives, it runs a deficit.
• Governments finance deficits by borrowing money.
• Deficit spending—that is, spending funds obtained
by borrowing instead of taxation—can be helpful
for the economy.
How does deficit spending work?
• When unemployment is high, the government can
undertake projects that use workers who would
otherwise be idle.
• The economy will then expand because more
money is being pumped into it.
• However, deficit spending also can harm the
economy.
• When unemployment is low, a deficit may result in
rising prices, or inflation. The additional government
spending creates more competition for scarce
workers and resources and this inflates wages and
prices.