How do lags affect stabilization policy? Your answer should include three specific types of lags


Lags make stabilization policy difficult, if not counterproductive. The first type of lag may be called a recognition lag or an information lag. This refers to the length of time it takes for policy makers to recognize that an economic problem has occurred. This lag is unavoidable in that data are almost always collected after conditions change. The second type of lag may be called the policy lag. This is the length of time it takes for policy makers to take appropriate action. With respect to this lag, monetary policy is much superior in that the FOMC has only twelve members and meets at least eight times per year. Congress, on the other hand, may take years to actually pass a tax law or a spending change. The third lag may be called the expenditure lag and refers to the length of time it takes for a particular policy to affect aggregate demand and the macroeconomy. In this case, fiscal policy has the advantage because changes in government spending directly affect the expenditure schedule and the level of income and employment. Monetary policy works more indirectly. It first affects interest rates and then investment spending and then aggregate demand. Because both fiscal and monetary policy have advantages and disadvantages, the problems of lags does not point to a clear superiority for either fiscal or monetary policy.

Economics

You might also like to view...

Refer to the figure above. What is the revenue of the firm when it sells the profit-maximizing level of output?

A) $40 B) $160 C) $180 D) $240

Economics

What aspects of a game are specified by "the rules of the game"?

A) timing of players' moves B) payoffs C) information available to each player D) All of the above

Economics

The demand curve for a perfectly competitive firm is horizontal because

A) consumers are willing to pay any price to obtain its product. B) its production decisions cannot influence the market price. C) the firm profits from setting its price higher than the market price. D) its product is easy for consumers to differentiate from those of other firms.

Economics

If you believe that expectations react slowly, you are likely

A. a believer in rational expectations. B. a Keynesian. C. a theoretical economist. D. None of the above is correct.

Economics