Domestic and Economic
Policy
Chapter 14
The Policymaking Process
1.    Agenda Building
      Congress has to be aware of a problem that requires action
2.    Policy Formulation
      Policy proposals are debated between public officials and the public
3.    Policy Adoption
      Congress chooses a specific policy among those that were
       discussed
4.    Policy Implementation
      Congress passes the law and various levels of government enforce it
5.    Policy Evaluation
      Group studies are done to determine how effective the policy is after
       a given time
Health Care
 Big Spending in Today’s Federal Budget
   Social Security
   Medicare
   Medicaid

 Universal Health Insurance
   Any of several possible programs to provide health insurance to
    everyone in the country
   Federal government may not provide the insurance itself, but
    may subsidize the purchase of insurance from private insurance
    companies
Other Big Issues
 Immigration
   Arizona immigration law
 Crime
   Rapid incarceration since 1990
   Build more jails or let more people out?
 Energy and the Environment
   Oil Industry
    56 MPG car by 2025?
    Horizon Oil Spill
   Global Warming
Immigration
Crime in the 21st Century
Environmental Policy
The Politics of Economic Decision
Making
 Terms to Know
   Unemployment – inability of those who are in the labor force to find a
    job

   Recession – two or more successive quarters in which the economy
    shrinks instead of grows

   Inflation – sustained rise in the general price level of goods and
    services
     Today’s dollar is worth 1/20th of what it was worth in 1910

 To control the ever-changing economy, we need a good fiscal
  policy
The Politics of Economic Decision
Making
 Fiscal Policy
   Federal government’s use of taxation and spending policies to affect
    overall business activity
   Congress is the creator of fiscal policy

 Keynesian Economics
   School of economic thought that tends to favor active federal
    government policymaking to stabilize economy-wide fluctuations,
    usually by implementing discretionary fiscal policy

 Basically, if the economy is down, the government should step
  in, spend some money, and help return the economy to a
  normal state
Monetary Policy
 Controlling the rate of growth of the money supply is called
  monetary policy and is the job of the Federal Reserve
  System

 The Fed attempts to stabilize nationwide economic activity by
  controlling the amount of money in circulation
   Loose monetary policy – policy that makes credit inexpensive
    and abundant; possibly leads to inflation
     Car loans and mortgage rates go down
   Tight monetary policy – policy that makes credit expensive in an
    effort to slow inflation
     Car loans and mortgage rates go up
The Politics of Taxes
 Federal taxation is a right the government extended to us
  through the 16th Amendment
   Congress makes the tax law
   The Internal Revenue Service enforces the tax law

 Understanding Tax Deductions 101
   If you are in the 15% tax bracket, every dollar that you write off as
    tax deductions essentially saves you 15 cents in tax liabilities
   Not worth writing off?
   What if your tax bracket was 94%?
     Common during World War II
The Politics of Taxes
 Tax Loopholes
   Typically, the higher the tax bracket, the more individuals and
    corporations write to Congress to add legal means for people to
    reduce their tax liabilities

 Methods of Establishing Tax Brackets
   Progressive Taxes – taxes that rise in percentage terms as
    income rises
    Federal income taxes, estate taxes
   Regressive Taxes – taxes that fall in percentage terms as
    incomes rise
    Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes

Govt 2305-Ch_14

  • 1.
  • 2.
    The Policymaking Process 1. Agenda Building  Congress has to be aware of a problem that requires action 2. Policy Formulation  Policy proposals are debated between public officials and the public 3. Policy Adoption  Congress chooses a specific policy among those that were discussed 4. Policy Implementation  Congress passes the law and various levels of government enforce it 5. Policy Evaluation  Group studies are done to determine how effective the policy is after a given time
  • 3.
    Health Care  BigSpending in Today’s Federal Budget  Social Security  Medicare  Medicaid  Universal Health Insurance  Any of several possible programs to provide health insurance to everyone in the country  Federal government may not provide the insurance itself, but may subsidize the purchase of insurance from private insurance companies
  • 4.
    Other Big Issues Immigration  Arizona immigration law  Crime  Rapid incarceration since 1990  Build more jails or let more people out?  Energy and the Environment  Oil Industry  56 MPG car by 2025?  Horizon Oil Spill  Global Warming
  • 5.
  • 6.
    Crime in the21st Century
  • 7.
  • 8.
    The Politics ofEconomic Decision Making  Terms to Know  Unemployment – inability of those who are in the labor force to find a job  Recession – two or more successive quarters in which the economy shrinks instead of grows  Inflation – sustained rise in the general price level of goods and services  Today’s dollar is worth 1/20th of what it was worth in 1910  To control the ever-changing economy, we need a good fiscal policy
  • 9.
    The Politics ofEconomic Decision Making  Fiscal Policy  Federal government’s use of taxation and spending policies to affect overall business activity  Congress is the creator of fiscal policy  Keynesian Economics  School of economic thought that tends to favor active federal government policymaking to stabilize economy-wide fluctuations, usually by implementing discretionary fiscal policy  Basically, if the economy is down, the government should step in, spend some money, and help return the economy to a normal state
  • 10.
    Monetary Policy  Controllingthe rate of growth of the money supply is called monetary policy and is the job of the Federal Reserve System  The Fed attempts to stabilize nationwide economic activity by controlling the amount of money in circulation  Loose monetary policy – policy that makes credit inexpensive and abundant; possibly leads to inflation  Car loans and mortgage rates go down  Tight monetary policy – policy that makes credit expensive in an effort to slow inflation  Car loans and mortgage rates go up
  • 11.
    The Politics ofTaxes  Federal taxation is a right the government extended to us through the 16th Amendment  Congress makes the tax law  The Internal Revenue Service enforces the tax law  Understanding Tax Deductions 101  If you are in the 15% tax bracket, every dollar that you write off as tax deductions essentially saves you 15 cents in tax liabilities  Not worth writing off?  What if your tax bracket was 94%?  Common during World War II
  • 12.
    The Politics ofTaxes  Tax Loopholes  Typically, the higher the tax bracket, the more individuals and corporations write to Congress to add legal means for people to reduce their tax liabilities  Methods of Establishing Tax Brackets  Progressive Taxes – taxes that rise in percentage terms as income rises  Federal income taxes, estate taxes  Regressive Taxes – taxes that fall in percentage terms as incomes rise  Social Security taxes, Medicare taxes