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11.4: Government Spending vs. Tax Cuts

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    287992
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    When it comes to stimulating the economy, government spending and tax cuts are two primary fiscal policy tools, but they differ in their impact on economic activity - especially due to the role of the marginal propensity to consume (MPC) and its complement, the marginal propensity to save (MPS). Government spending has a more direct and potent effect on aggregate demand because it represents an immediate injection of funds into the economy. Every dollar spent by the government directly enters the circular flow, paying for goods and services, creating income, and triggering subsequent rounds of consumption and income generation via the multiplier effect. 

    Tax cuts, by contrast, rely on households and businesses to spend their increased disposable income. However, not all of that tax cut translates into consumption. Households tend to save a portion of their tax reduction (governed by the MPS) so the initial injection into the economy is smaller than the size of the tax cut itself. For example, if the MPC is 0.75, then only 75 cents of every dollar in tax cuts goes toward consumption; the other 25 cents leaks out of the spending stream as savings. This makes tax cuts less stimulative than an equivalent amount of direct government spending. 

    This difference is particularly evident when calculating how much tax cut is needed to achieve the same economic impact as a given amount of government spending. To produce a desired fiscal stimulus of $200 billion with an MPC of 0.75, a government spending increase of $200 billion would be sufficient. But to get the same $200 billion impact from a tax cut, the government would need to cut taxes by roughly $267 billion because only 75% of that would be spent. Thus, a tax cut needs to be larger than a spending increase to achieve the same effect on aggregate demand. 

    Example \(\PageIndex{1}\)

    Assume the government wants to stimulate the economy, and it has two options: 

    Option 1: Increase government spending by $100 billion 

    Option 2: Cut taxes by $100 billion 

    Assume the Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC) = 0.75 

    Solution

    Using the spending multiplier

    \[\text { Multiplier }=\frac{1}{1-M P C}=\frac{1}{1-0.75}=4 \nonumber \]

    Option 1: Government Spending of $100 Billion 

    Total change in aggregate demand = 4 × 100 = $400 billion 

    Option 2: Tax Cut of $100 Billion 

    With a tax cut, only part of the tax savings is spent. The initial consumption injection is: 

    Initial increase in consumption = MPC × Tax Cut = 0.75 × 100 = $75 billion 

    Total change in aggregate demand = 4 × 75 = $300 billion 

    In practice, both tools are often used together, and their effectiveness may depend on broader economic conditions, including consumer confidence and existing levels of public debt. Nevertheless, from a purely technical standpoint, government spending delivers a more predictable and immediate stimulus because it bypasses consumer choice and saving behavior. This is why, during deep recessions or periods of low private sector activity, policymakers often lean more heavily on direct spending to close output gaps and restore full employment. 


    This page titled 11.4: Government Spending vs. Tax Cuts is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Martin Medeiros.

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