Quiz #6
- The Australian (or US, for that matter) government's net spending is
- similar in impact to money created by commercial bank credit creation.
- unique because spending derived from private credit creation cannot add to the private sector's net worth.
- unique because the Government can always pay for goods and services by crediting bank accounts.
- While it is likely that the GDP (output) gap will be around 5 per cent this year, the national government's capacity to fill this gap
- will be constrained by nothing but its political will.
- will be constrained by how much private bank lending is available to facilitate spending by consumers and firms.
- will be constrained by its ability to access capital in the global markets given the lack of credit available domestically at present.
- From the perspective of aggregate demand, creating a minimum wage private sector job
- will probably be better than creating a minimum wage public sector job because the private sector job is likely to be more productive.
- will probably be better than creating a minimum wage public sector job because the private sector job reflects market choices of what people want to buy.
- will probably have the same impact as creating a minimum wage public sector job.
- If the Government introduced a permanent Job Guarantee (offer of minimum wage job to anyone who wanted it) then
- it would have no inevitable implications for future deficits or aggregate demand levels.
- it would mean that aggregate demand would always be higher than otherwise.
- it would lock itself into budget deficits forever.
- The losses that the Futures Fund (or any sovereign fund) has made on its share holding
- suggest that public and hence national saving has declined which will diminish the capacity of the national government to net spend in the future.
- are similar in concept to any depreciating publicly-held asset and have no implications for the national government's future capacity to net spend.
- may need future taxation revenue offsets to restore the capacity of the national government to net spend in the future.