Information about Budget Surplus

Public finance
This article is part of the series:
Finance and Taxation
Taxation
Direct tax   Indirect tax
Income tax   Payroll tax
CGT   Stamp duty
Sales tax   VAT   Flat tax
Tax, tariff and trade
Tax incidence
Tax rate   Proportional tax
Progressive tax   Regressive tax
Tax advantage
Australia
Canada
France
Germany
Hong Kong
India
Indonesia
New Zealand
Republic of Ireland
Russia
Singapore
United Kingdom
United States
European Union
     [ e] 
Tax rates around the world
Tax revenue as % of GDP

Economic policy Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement
Finance Financial market
Financial market participants
Corporate   Personal
Public   Banking   Regulation

     [ edit]  project A budget deficit occurs when an entity (often a government) spends more money than it takes in. The opposite is a budget surplus.

An accumulated deficit over several years (or centuries) is referred to as the government debt. Often, a certain part of spending is dedicated to paying of debt with certain maturity, which can be refinanced by issuing new government bonds. That is, a fiscal deficit leads to an increase in an entity's debt to others. A deficit is a flow. And a debt is a stock. Debt is essentially an accumulated flow of deficits.

Since debt is the total amount one owes, a deficit can also be defined as the amount by which a debt grows or a savings decreases. For instance, prior to the Second Gulf War, many Americans confused debt and deficit, believing that the United States government still had a massive deficit; in fact, the government had a sizable surplus that, suprisingly enough, the human by-products were unfathomable. The deficit was gone, but the debt was still being paid down. Because the United States government counts money it collects through its Social Security program as income, many people had also become accustomed to the notion that the deficit was far larger than it actually was, yet, even removing Social Security funds, there was a significant surplus. (Although the Social Security program currently collects income, the money is considered "owed" to the people who pay into the program.)

Debt formula

A formula to calculate debt, , is:





where is the real interest rate, is last year's debt, is the interest rate, is the growth rate, is government spending, and is tax revenue.

However the fiscal deficit of each nation will have its own factors influencing. For example the booming growth of India and China will directly reflect on the inflation due to influences in fiscal deficit.

Early deficits

Before the invention of bonds, the deficit could only be financed with loans from private investors or other countries. A prominent example of this was the Rothschild dynasty in the late 18th and 19th century, though there were many earlier examples.

These loans became popular when private financiers had amassed enough capital to provide them, and when governments were no longer able to simply print money, with consequent inflation, to finance their spending.

However, large long-term loans had a high element of risk for the lender and consequently gave high interest rates. Governments later tried to marketize their debts by issuing bonds that were payable to the bearer, rather than the original purchaser. This meant that someone who lent the state money could sell on the debt to someone else, reducing the risks involved and reducing the overall interest rates. Examples of this are British Consols and American Treasury bill bonds.

Structural and cyclical deficits

A government deficit can be thought of as consisting of two elements, structural and cyclical.

At the lowest point in the business cycle, there is a high level of unemployment. This means that tax revenues are low and expenditure (e.g. on social security) high. Conversely, at the peak of the cycle, unemployment is low, increasing tax revenue and decreasing social security spending. The need to borrow money at the low point of the cycle is a cyclical deficit. A cyclical deficit will be entirely repaid by a cycical surplus at the peak of the cycle.

A structural deficit is the deficit that remains across the business cycle, because the general level of government spending is too high for prevailing tax levels.

The observed total budget deficit is equal to the sum of the structural deficit with the cyclical deficit or surplus.

The idea of cyclical vs. structural deficits has come under criticism by those economists who believe that the business cycle is too difficult to measure to make cyclical analysis worthwhile.

Largest national budgets (2004)

National Government Budgets for 2004 (in billions of US$)
Nation GDP Revenue Expenditure Exp / GDP Budget Deficit Deficit / GDP
US (federal)117001862233819.98%-25.56%-4.07%
US (state)-9008507.6%+5%+0.4%
Japan 46001400174838.00%-24.86%-7.57%
Germany27001200130048.15%-8.33%-3.70%
UK210083589742.71%-7.43%-2.95%
France20001005108054.00%-7.46%-3.75%
Italy160076882051.25%-6.77%-3.25%
China160031834921.81%-9.75%-1.94%
Spain 100038438638.60%-0.52%-0.20%
Canada (federal)90015014416.00%+4.00%+0.67%
South Korea60015015525.83%-3.33%-0.83%
(This data is from 2004, the year of the largest US federal deficit on record. Since that time, the size of the deficit has been cut, nearly in half.) (Data from [https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/the-world-factbook/fields/2056.html CIA Factbook] and List of countries by GDP (nominal), senate.gov, nasbo.org)

Miscellaneous

Ricardian equivalence hypothesis states that this means a public deficit is exactly the same as a tax rise.

See also

External links

The balance of payments, (or BOP) measures the payments that flow between any individual country and all other countries. It is used to summarize all international economic transactions for that country during a specific time period, usually a year.
..... Click the link for more information.
Gael García Bernal

Gael García Bernal, 2005

Born November 30 1978 (1978--) (age 30)
Guadalajara, Jalisco, Mexico
Died

Awards

..... Click the link for more information.
Déficit is a Mexican feature film, the debut of Gael García Bernal as a director. It is currently scheduled to premiere in late 2007.

External links


..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.
Finance studies and addresses the ways in which individuals, businesses, and organizations raise, allocate, and use monetary resources over time, taking into account the risks entailed in their projects.
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.
contradict the article 2, 3. Please see discussion on the linked talk page.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.
Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
Financial market participants
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


Economic policy
Monetary policy
Central bank   Money supply
Fiscal policy
Spending   Deficit   Debt
Trade policy
Tariff   Trade agreement

Finance
Financial market
..... Click the link for more information.


This article is copied from an article on Wikipedia.org - the free encyclopedia created and edited by online user community. The text was not checked or edited by anyone on our staff. Although the vast majority of the wikipedia encyclopedia articles provide accurate and timely information please do not assume the accuracy of any particular article. This article is distributed under the terms of GNU Free Documentation License.
Herod_Archelaus


page counter