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Fiscal Policy and Deflationary Gap

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Topics

Estimated time: 8 minutes
  • Fiscal Measures
  • Key Points: Fiscal Policy and Deflationary Gap
CISCE: Class 12

Fiscal Measures

Measure 1 — Decrease in Taxes

What happens?
The government reduces taxes — especially direct taxes like Income Tax and Corporation Tax.
Why does it help?

  • Households pay less Income Tax → they have more money to spend
  • Firms/Companies pay less Corporation Tax → they have more money to invest
  • Both together → demand in the economy goes up!

Think of it this way:
If your school reduced the fee, your parents would have extra money — and they'd probably spend it somewhere. When the government reduces taxes, the same thing happens across the whole country!

Measure 2 — Increase in Public Expenditure

What happens?
The government directly spends more money on roads, schools, hospitals, defence, and welfare programmes.
According to Keynes, this is the most important measure to raise demand.
The government spends in 4 ways:

Area Examples
Social Services Hospitals, schools, public health
Law & Defence Police, armed forces
Subsidies & Transfer Payments Food subsidy, unemployment allowance
Public Works Programmes Roads, dams, bridges ← Most important!

What is Pump Priming?
Public works spending is called Pump Priming.

Measure 3 — Increase in Deficit Financing

What happens?
The government prints more money (through the RBI) to fund its extra spending during times of deficient demand.
Why does it help?

  • More money flows into the economy
  • People's purchasing power increases
  • More spending → Demand goes up → Deflationary Gap closes

Measure 4 — Reduce Public Borrowings

What happens?
The government borrows less from the public — it issues fewer bonds, securities, and savings schemes.
Why does it help?

  • Normally, government borrowing pulls money away from the public
  • If the government borrows less → people keep their money
  • That money is now available for spending and investment
  • Result → More purchasing power with the people → Demand rises!

Think of it this way:
If a friend stops borrowing money from you, you suddenly have more to spend on yourself. Same idea — when the government stops borrowing so much, people have more in their pockets.

CISCE: Class 12

Key Points: Fiscal Policy and Deflationary Gap

  • Reduce taxes to increase disposable income of households and spending by firms, which raises aggregate demand.
  • Increase public expenditure on public works, welfare, health, education, and subsidies to boost demand and employment.
  • Increase deficit financing to inject more purchasing power into the economy during deficient demand.
  • Reduce public borrowing so that people retain more money for consumption and investment.

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