Outlook for the Future: Difference between revisions
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<big>''Positive:'' Could potentially reduce the real value of government debt. | <big>''Positive:'' Could potentially reduce the real value of government debt. | ||
''Negative:'' Not a viable long-term strategy for managing recurring budget deficits. | ''Negative:'' Not a viable long-term strategy for managing recurring budget deficits. | ||
Revision as of 10:51, 4 May 2006
Federal deficits reduce the future standard of lining by lowering national saving which slows the accumulation of national wealth. Increases in government spending (increased government consumption) and federal tax cuts (increased public consumption) increase the federal deficit and reduce national saving. Even if the financial market (i.e. interest rates) is not significantly affected by the shifting of resources from from saving to consumption, decreased national saving can still occur. Although domestic investment is reduced by federal deficits, captial inflows from abroad tend to increase the productivity or both labor and capital.
Effects of Rising Debt on the Economy
- decrease national savings and reduce investment in domestic capital stock and foreign assets
- decline in the growth of workers' productivity would decline and real wages
- tapering off of economic growth, leading to a sustained contraction of the economy
- some portion of the deficit could be financed by foreign investors
- over time:
- foreign investors would own larger shares of US output, leaving fewer resources available for domestic consumption
- financing of the deficit by foreign investors could decline
- the exchange value of the US dollar could plummet
- interest rates could soar
- consumer prices could climb
- the economy could contract abrubtly
- stock markets could collapse
- the economic problems in the US could extend to the rest of the world, weakening the economies of US trading partners
- over time:
- decline in the growth of workers' productivity would decline and real wages
Budgeting Strategies
A Policy of Higher Inflation
Positive: Could potentially reduce the real value of government debt.
Negative: Not a viable long-term strategy for managing recurring budget deficits.
Reasoning: The government would be able to repay its debt in “cheaper dollars.” This would initially make borrowing better off at the expense of creditors, but financial markets would eventually demand higher interest rates. This situation would in time lead to hyperinflation if the government continued to print new money in order to finance the deficit.