Fiscal Policy and Stimulus: Crash Course Economics #8 - YouTube

Channel: CrashCourse

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Today, we peer into a world where shadowy government stuges
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manipulate the levers of fiscal policy from deep in their evil lairs.
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They pick economic winners, and losers.
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And control the business cycle, creating recessions and controling inflation
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to serve ... their nefarious purposes.
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Nah, Fiscal Policy is a completely legitimate tool used by non-shadowy government officials
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to correct fluctuations in the economy.
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[Theme Music]
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Okay, in previous videos we've discussed the business cycle and how the economy goes up and down and up and down and up and down overtime.
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This line represents the economy's potential GDP,
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the maximum sustainable amount that the economy will produce in the long run.
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But the business cycle shows that the economy isn't always at its potential.
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When actual output is below potential, economists call it a recessionary gap.
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Workers are unemployed and factories are sitting unused
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Sometimes, actual output can briefly rise above potential.
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Economists call this an inflationary gap.
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Unemployment is super low and factories are working over time
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but it's not sustainable.
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Eventually producers will bite up the price of scarce resources and higher cost will lead to more inflation rather than more output.
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Obviously real life fluctuations aren't as predictable as the business cycle might suggest,
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but every modern industrialized economy sees times of boom and bust.
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You know, you get your empire strikes back and you get you're phantom menace.
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So look at the real GDP growth rate in the United States since 1920
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see up and down overtime.
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In the mid 1980s, things flattened out
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and we had been called the Great Moderation
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it seemed like the days of deep recessions and high inflation were over.
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Then came the great recession, as a result of the 2008 financial crisis.
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Back to the same old up and down, up and down of the business cycle.
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Both recessionary and inflationary gaps cause serious problems.
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High unemployment when the economy is bad?
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That's bad, like really bad,
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And not just for the economy -- for people.
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High employment rate have been linked to higher suicide rates
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more domestic violence, and social upheaval.
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High inflation can be just as bad.
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Rising costs wipe out savings,
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and have been the root of protests and riots throughout the world.
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Well, this seems like a fun episode.
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Stan, what's with all the doom and gloom?
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Isn't there some way to smooth out these fluctuations?
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I'm gonna answer my own question: there might be.
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Many economists argue that policy makers should intervene in the macroeconomy in order to promote full employment or reduce inflation.
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Today, we are gonna look at one of the ways to do this: fiscal policy.
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The idea of fiscal policy is really simple,
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when the economy is going too slow, or too fast,
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the government can step on the gas or the brake by changing government spending, or taxes.
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In the United States, that's the job of Congress and the President.
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When the economy falls into a deep recessionary gap,
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the government can increase government spending, cut taxes, or do some of both,
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that's called expansionary fiscal policy.
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The idea that government spending creates jobs and increases income for construction workers and teachers and other labours.
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In turn, theses workers spend more of their additional income, increasing consumer spending and boosting the entire economy.
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Cutting taxes follows a similar logic.
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A tax cut will increase disposable income for consumers that will increase our
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consumer spending and boost the entire economy.
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This is exactly what the U.S. did in 2009 during the depths of the Great Recession.
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The American recovery and reinvestment act was a stimulus build that added more than 8 hundred billion dollars to the economy.
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That stimulus was spilt 60-40 between new government spending and tax cuts
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and the expansionary fiscal policy funded new roads and bridges and upgrades to the electric grid,
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and those projects created jobs.
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But when the economy has an inflationary gap
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the government can cut spending, or raise taxes or do some combination of the two.
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That's called contractionary fiscal policy, and that's not half as fun.
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The idea is that higher taxes will lead consumer with less money to spend,
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and lower government spending will mean fewer public jobs, all that should reduce consumer spending
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cooling off the economy and reducing inflation.
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We don't see contractionary fiscal policy very often in practice
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because politicians rarely want to hit their voters with a slower economy, it's a hard sell
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and it could cost policy makers their job.
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U.S. President George H. W. Bush famously stated "Read my lips, no new taxes." While campaigning in 1988.
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A few years later, he agreed to raise taxes to reduce the debt and lost the election in 1992.
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So the big question here is: Does fiscal policy actually work?
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Does stimulating the economy with spending and tax cuts actually, you know, make the economy grow?
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That is the most heated debate in modern economic, and it's been raging for decades.
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It's been known to drive mild-mannered economists to use their loud voices on cable news shows.
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Let's learn about it in the Though Bubble.
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Classical theories assumed that the economy will fix itself in the long run, and that government intervention
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will, at best, lead to unintended consequences and, at worst, cause massive inflation and debt.
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These theories dominated policy decisions during the earliers of the
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Great Depression, which saw little stimulus.
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Economists argue that unemployed workers would eventually accept lower wages,
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since some pay is better than no pay,
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and resource prices would have eventually fall; since fewer people were using resources.
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Lower cost would lead to more production, more jobs and poof, the economy is back on track.
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At the time, many policy makers thought about a sick economy,
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the way doctors a thousand years ago thought about a sick patient.
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The thinking was that problems resulted from accumulated imbalance,
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which could be cured by aggressive purging.
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In the case of doctors, that meant bleeding their patients.
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In the case of a recession, that meant standing back and letting the economy bleed jobs and output until balance was restored.
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Then entered British economist John Maynard Keynes
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One of the most influential and controversial economist of the 20th century.
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Keynes basically invented modern economics, and developed theories and models about spending in production.
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He's the one that suggested using expansionary fiscal policy to speed up the economy,
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Keynes argued that government spending can make-up for a decrease in consumer spending.
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So even if the economy does self-correct in the long run, there's no reason to wait it out
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His justification: "In the long run we are all dead."
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Well, Keynes died in 1946, but his theories live on, and so does the debate. Thanks Thought Bubble.
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So at first glance, Keynesian policy seem like the perfect solution to fix a sluggish economy.
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If consumer spending falls, the government can spend instead. What's the harm in that?
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Well, the government needs to pay for all that spending.
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They can't just raise tax to cover because that would cause the decrease in consumer spending and defeat the purpose.
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So to stimulate the economy, the government needs the deficit spend;
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they need to spend more money than they collect in tax revenue.
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Now to achieve this, the government needs to borrow money, which will result in debt,
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and we are going to make a video about the national debt and different schools of economic thought. But for
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now, it's fair enough to say that the people who don't like Keynesian policy, don't like it because it causes debt.
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More technical argument against deficit spending is that it leads to something called CROWDING OUT.
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If the government borrows a lot of money that increases interest rates,
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making it harder for business to borrow money and buy things like factories and tools.
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This weakens the economy while increases government debt.
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But Keynesian economists maintain that crowding out is only a problem if the economy is operating at full
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capacity, where all workers are employed and we're producing as much as we can. In that case,
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since total output can't really rise, more government spending will result in less private spending.
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However, they argue that the situation is different when the economy is below capacity
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with lots of unemployed workers and vacant factories.
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Now in that case, more government spending can raise overall output by putting idle resources back to work.
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In fact, Keynesians will argue that government stimulus when the economy is below capacity
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can actually raise private spending.
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All those newly hired workers will start spending more money.
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So how can we figure out who's right?
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We can start by comparing the actual performance of economies that receive stimulus to those that didn't.
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As we mentioned, in 2009, the U.S. government launched a huge stimulus program
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in response to the financial crisis. Despite that, employment and GDP both fell. That sounds like a
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failure, but the majority of the economists think that the situation would have been far far worse without
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that stimulus. And while the U.S. was implementing stimulus, most European countries were doing the
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opposite -- they were pursuing a policy called AUSTERITY,
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raising taxes and cutting government spending to reduce debt.
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Since 2011, when the U.S. and European policies really started to diverge,
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the U.S. economy has grown at an average rate of 2.5 percent,
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while the Euro-zone GDP actually shrank by one percent.
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U.S. unemployment fell to 5.5 percent,
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while Euro-zone unemployment rose to 12 percent.
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Another thing to keep in mind is that stimulus is complicated and it's hard to do well.
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One reason is because of this thing called the MULTIPLIER EFFECT.
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The idea here is that the government spends 100 dollars and the highway construction worker who got the money
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will save 50 and then spend 50 in a concert or something. And the musician who got that money will
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save 25 dollars and spend the other 25 and so on.
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So because of this ripple effect, the initial increase in government spending of $100 might turn out to be $175 worth of actual spending in the economy.
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Economists would call this a multiplier of 1.75.
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But the question is, what's the real multiplier of the United States' economy?
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Economists have come up with a wide range of estimates for that multiplier, and it turns out that it
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depends on different situations. When the economy's already booming, the multiplier seems to be close to 1.
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If everyone is already working and the government wants to build a road, then they're gonna have to hire workers away from the private sector.
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Sure public sector output increases, but private sector output falls and GDP is unchanged, it's a wash.
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But when the economy's in recession with lots of unemployed workers and lot of unused capital,
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the multiplier is around 2.
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Due to that ripple effect, an increase of 100 dollars of government spending,
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would lead to about 200 dollars of total spending, which put some people back to work.
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Moreover, different policies have different multipliers.
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Spending on welfare and unemployment seem to give us the biggest bang for our buck,
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since people who have low incomes would likely to spend virtually all of their additional income.
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Spending on infrastructure, and aid to state & local governments, also seems to have a fairly high multiplier,
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about 1.5. But general cuts to payroll and income taxes seem to have a multipler of about 1: if the government
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cuts $100 in taxes, the economy's going to grow by about $100.
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More targeted tax cuts and tax credits have lower multipliers, since they tend to benefit those who have higher incomes
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who often save rather than spend additional income.
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But what we want is something that will affect the economy rapidly, but also have a high multiplier.
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So tax cuts put money in people's hands quickly,
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but that money might get saved rather than spent.
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On the other hand, infrastructure projects like making roads and bridges have strong multipliers,
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but it may take months or even years to complete.
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So fiscal stimulus maybe an important tool, at least when it comes to a recession,
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but it doesn't mean that it's easy to do or that all stimulus is created equal.
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So fiscal policy has its advantages and drawbacks
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but in the end, maybe it's all about that thing you didn't have when you were in 6th grade -- Confidence.
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When people are miserable and unemployed, they want to feel like help is on the way.
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Doing nothing doesn't create the kind of confidence that will get consumers and businesses spending again,
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and it doesn't get politicians reelected.
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So it looks like Keyne's policies are here to stay
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unless...
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Crash Course Economics is made with the help of all of these nice people.
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You can help make Crash Course free for everyone, forever. Through your support on Patreon.
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Patreon is a voluntary subscribtion service that allows you to support the content you love.
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And earn great rewards. Check it out at: patreon.com/crashcourse.
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Thanks for Watching! And DFTBA.