From Diagnosis to Treatment
Section 3.4 ended with a key insight: the economy does self-correct from output gaps over time — but the correction can be slow, painful, and politically intolerable. A recessionary gap might mean years of high unemployment while wages slowly fall. An inflationary gap might mean accelerating prices while the labor market overheats. Both situations cry out for a faster solution.
Fiscal policy is one of two tools governments use to act faster. By deliberately changing government purchases (G) or taxes (T), Congress and the President can shift Aggregate Demand directly — without waiting for SRAS to crawl into position. This section covers exactly how fiscal policy works, why a dollar of government spending often generates more than a dollar of GDP change (the multiplier effect), and the major limitations that make fiscal policy harder to use than the model suggests.
A few orientation points before we begin. Fiscal policy is the responsibility of the fiscal authority — Congress and the President in the U.S. It's distinct from monetary policy, which is the Federal Reserve's domain and which we'll cover in Unit 4. Both policies aim to shift AD, but they pull different levers. Don't mix them up: fiscal policy means taxes and spending; monetary policy means interest rates and the money supply.
📝 Why this section matters: Fiscal policy is the highest-weighted topic in Unit 3 and one of the most-tested concepts on the entire AP exam. The free-response section almost always asks you to recommend fiscal policy actions, calculate multiplier effects, or analyze trade-offs like crowding out. Master 3.5 and you'll dominate the FRQ.
What Fiscal Policy Is
Fiscal policy is the deliberate use of government spending and taxation to influence the economy. The two main tools are simple to describe — adjust G or adjust T — but their effects ripple outward through every component of AD.
Fiscal Policy: The use of government spending (G) and taxation (T) by Congress and the President to influence aggregate demand and macroeconomic outcomes. Two general types: expansionary (designed to increase AD, fighting recessions) and contractionary (designed to decrease AD, fighting inflation).
The Two Types of Fiscal Policy
Tools:
- Increase government purchases (↑ G) — buy more military equipment, infrastructure, public services
- Decrease taxes (↓ T) — leave households more disposable income, which they spend (↑ C)
- Or both at once
Budget effect: Creates or worsens a budget deficit (G > T). This is the trade-off — closing a recessionary gap costs the government money.
Tools:
- Decrease government purchases (↓ G) — cut spending on programs and infrastructure
- Increase taxes (↑ T) — reduce households' disposable income, dampening consumption (↓ C)
- Or both at once
Budget effect: Creates or expands a budget surplus (T > G). Politically harder to enact because cutting spending and raising taxes are both unpopular.
Showing Fiscal Policy on the AD-AS Model
Fiscal policy shifts the AD curve directly. Here's how to visualize expansionary fiscal policy closing a recessionary gap:
⚠️ The "G includes everything the government spends" trap: G in the AD formula refers only to government purchases of goods and services — military equipment, teachers' salaries, road construction. It does not include transfer payments (Social Security, unemployment benefits, welfare). Transfer payments affect AD indirectly by raising disposable income → ↑ C, but they're not directly counted in G. We saw this distinction in Section 2.1 and it returns here.
The Multiplier Effect: Why $1 Becomes More
Here's one of the most powerful ideas in macroeconomics. When the government spends $1 billion building a bridge, the total impact on GDP isn't $1 billion — it's more. The reason: the dollars keep moving. Construction workers earn that $1 billion, then spend some of it at restaurants, on cars, and at grocery stores. Those businesses earn revenue and pay their employees, who spend their income, and so on. Each round generates additional economic activity. This chain reaction is the multiplier effect.
Multiplier Effect: The phenomenon where an initial change in spending (by the government, businesses, or households) triggers additional rounds of spending throughout the economy, producing a total change in GDP that exceeds the original injection.
The MPC and MPS
The multiplier's size depends on how much of each additional dollar of income households spend versus save. Two quantities capture this:
MPC + MPS = 1
The Marginal Propensity to Consume plus the Marginal Propensity to Save always equals 1
- Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC): The fraction of each additional dollar of income that households spend. If you give someone an extra $100 and they spend $80 of it, MPC = 0.80.
- Marginal Propensity to Save (MPS): The fraction of each additional dollar of income that households save. If you give someone an extra $100 and they save $20 of it, MPS = 0.20.
By definition, every additional dollar of income is either spent or saved (in this simple model). So MPC + MPS must equal 1. A high MPC means households spend most of any new income — which makes the multiplier large. A low MPC means most new income goes to saving — which makes the multiplier small.
Walking Through the Chain Reaction
To see why the multiplier exists, watch what happens when the government injects $100 million into the economy via spending (with MPC = 0.80):
Each round of spending shrinks because some of every income round leaks into saving. Eventually the rounds become tiny and effectively stop. But the sum of all the rounds is far larger than the original $100M — in this case, five times larger.
The Spending Multiplier Formula
Rather than adding up endless rounds, we use a formula. The mathematical identity for an infinite geometric series gives us the exact total:
Spending Multiplier = 1 / (1 − MPC) = 1 / MPS
Both formulas give the same answer because MPC + MPS = 1
Worked Example: MPC = 0.80
💡 Intuition check: A higher MPC means a bigger multiplier — because each round of spending is bigger before saving leaks out. If MPC = 0.9, multiplier = 1 / 0.1 = 10. If MPC = 0.5, multiplier = 1 / 0.5 = 2. The closer MPC gets to 1, the larger the multiplier grows. The closer MPC gets to 0, the smaller the multiplier (and at MPC = 0, the multiplier is just 1 — no chain reaction at all).
The Tax Multiplier: Why Tax Cuts Are Less Powerful
If the government can also use tax cuts to fight a recession, why focus so much on spending? The answer: tax cuts have a smaller multiplier effect than equivalent spending. Understanding why reveals something important about how fiscal policy actually works.
Why Spending and Taxes Differ
When the government spends $100M, every dollar gets injected into the economy immediately. The full $100M becomes someone's income in round 1, and the multiplier chain begins from $100M.
When the government cuts taxes by $100M, that's $100M of extra income in households' pockets. But households don't spend all of it — they save a fraction (MPS). With MPC = 0.80 and MPS = 0.20, households spend $80M of the tax cut and save $20M. The multiplier chain therefore begins from $80M, not $100M. The saved portion never enters the multiplier process.
The Tax Multiplier Formula
Tax Multiplier = − MPC / (1 − MPC) = − MPC / MPS
Always smaller in absolute value than the Spending Multiplier
Two things about this formula deserve attention. First, the multiplier is negative. That's because the tax change works inversely — ↑ T reduces income (so GDP falls), while ↓ T raises income (so GDP rises). The negative sign captures this inverse relationship: when you plug in a positive tax change, you get a negative GDP change, and vice versa.
Second, the formula starts with MPC in the numerator (instead of 1). This is the mathematical reflection of the fact that only the MPC fraction of any tax change actually enters the spending stream.
Worked Example: MPC = 0.80
Comparing the Two Multipliers
| MPC | Spending Multiplier | Tax Multiplier | Difference (in absolute value) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0.50 | 1 / 0.50 = 2 | −0.50 / 0.50 = −1 | Always 1 unit larger |
| 0.75 | 1 / 0.25 = 4 | −0.75 / 0.25 = −3 | Always 1 unit larger |
| 0.80 | 1 / 0.20 = 5 | −0.80 / 0.20 = −4 | Always 1 unit larger |
| 0.90 | 1 / 0.10 = 10 | −0.90 / 0.10 = −9 | Always 1 unit larger |
Notice the pattern: in absolute value, the spending multiplier is always exactly 1 unit larger than the tax multiplier. This isn't a coincidence — it's a direct consequence of the saved portion of any tax change leaking out of the chain immediately.
🎯 The AP-favorite implication: When the government wants the biggest possible economic impact per dollar of fiscal action, direct spending is more powerful than tax cuts. A $100M increase in G has a bigger effect on AD than a $100M decrease in T. This pattern shows up constantly on FRQ scenarios asking "which is more expansionary?"
The Balanced Budget Multiplier
What if Congress wants to expand the economy without changing the budget balance? Say it raises G by $100M and pays for it by raising T by $100M. The two effects partially cancel — but not completely.
With MPC = 0.80, ΔG = +$100M, ΔT = +$100M:
The Balanced Budget Multiplier: Always equals exactly 1, regardless of the MPC. When the government raises both G and T by equal amounts, GDP rises by exactly that amount. The balanced budget approach is mildly expansionary, even with no change in the deficit.
This is a beautiful little result that the AP exam loves to test. It shows that fiscal policy can have real effects on output even without running a deficit — but the effect is much smaller than running an unbalanced expansionary policy.
Automatic Stabilizers vs. Discretionary Policy
So far we've talked about fiscal policy as if Congress always has to actively legislate it. But there's a quieter form of fiscal policy that works in the background, no legislation required. Recognizing the two types is essential for the AP exam.
Automatic Stabilizers: Features of the tax and spending system that automatically increase G or decrease T during a recession, and automatically decrease G or increase T during a boom — without any new legislation.
Discretionary Fiscal Policy: Deliberate changes in G or T that require Congress to pass new legislation. Stimulus packages, infrastructure bills, and tax reform acts are all discretionary.
How Automatic Stabilizers Work
Several programs in the U.S. tax-and-spending system respond automatically to economic conditions. They were designed for other reasons (fairness, social insurance), but they happen to dampen the business cycle as a side effect:
- Progressive income tax. When the economy slows, incomes fall and many people slip into lower tax brackets. Total tax revenue drops automatically — like an automatic tax cut. In a boom, the opposite happens: incomes rise, more people land in higher brackets, and tax revenue surges.
- Unemployment insurance. When unemployment rises during a recession, more people automatically claim benefits, expanding G-like spending. When unemployment falls during a boom, benefit payments shrink automatically.
- Welfare and SNAP (food assistance). Need-based programs expand automatically as more households fall below eligibility thresholds during downturns, and contract as fewer households qualify during expansions.
Together, these programs make government spending automatically more expansionary during recessions and more contractionary during booms — without any politician lifting a finger.
The Tradeoffs Between the Two Approaches
| Feature | Automatic Stabilizers | Discretionary Policy |
|---|---|---|
| Speed of response | Immediate — kicks in the moment economic conditions change | Slow — Congress must recognize the problem, debate, vote, and implement |
| Size of impact | Modest — built-in programs aren't designed to fully close gaps | Can be very large — Congress can pass trillion-dollar packages |
| Political friction | None — happens automatically without votes | High — every package faces partisan negotiation |
| Targeting | Generic — applies to anyone meeting eligibility rules | Targeted — can direct funds to specific sectors or regions |
📝 AP test point: Questions sometimes ask which kind of fiscal response happens faster, or which doesn't require new legislation. Automatic stabilizers always win on speed and political ease; discretionary policy wins on scale and targeting. Most economists view the two as complementary, not competing — automatic stabilizers smooth the smaller fluctuations, and discretionary policy handles the big shocks.
Limitations of Fiscal Policy
Fiscal policy in theory looks like a clean fix: a recessionary gap appears, the government boosts spending or cuts taxes, AD shifts right, and the gap closes. In practice, several real-world problems make fiscal policy harder to execute and less powerful than the textbook diagrams suggest. The AP exam tests every one of these limitations.
Recognition lag: It takes months for economic data to confirm a problem exists.
Legislative lag: Congress must debate, negotiate, and pass any policy change — often taking months.
Implementation lag: Once passed, programs take time to actually distribute funds and have an effect.
By the time fiscal policy kicks in, the economy may have already moved on — or even reversed direction. This is why automatic stabilizers (which have zero lag) are so valuable.
Result: The increase in G is partly offset by a decrease in I. The total AD shift is smaller than the simple multiplier would predict.
Crowding out gets its own dedicated section in Unit 5 (Section 5.4) — but the AP exam expects you to mention it as a limitation whenever discussing expansionary fiscal policy.
Result: Fiscal policy is often biased toward expansion (popular) and against contraction (unpopular). Politicians may also pass stimulus during booms when it isn't needed, just to please constituents — a phenomenon known as pro-cyclical policy.
Long-term concerns: Persistent deficits can reduce future growth (less investment in productive capacity), constrain future policy flexibility, and in extreme cases, raise concerns about default. Unit 5 (Section 5.3) covers deficits and debt in more detail.
⚠️ FRQ landmine: When the AP asks "what are the limitations of expansionary fiscal policy?", a complete answer should mention at least two of these four problems — and crowding out should almost always be one of them. It's the single most heavily tested fiscal policy limitation in the entire course.
Section 3.5 Formula Cheat Sheet
Six formulas to memorize cold for the AP exam. Practice them until they're automatic.
MPC + MPS = 1
The two propensities always sum to 1
Spending Multiplier = 1 / (1 − MPC) = 1 / MPS
Used when government changes G directly
Tax Multiplier = − MPC / (1 − MPC) = − MPC / MPS
Used when government changes T; always negative and always smaller in absolute value than the spending multiplier
Balanced Budget Multiplier = 1
When ΔG = ΔT, the net GDP change equals the size of the balanced shift
ΔY = Spending Multiplier × ΔG
Calculating the GDP change from a government spending shift
ΔY = Tax Multiplier × ΔT
Calculating the GDP change from a tax shift (remember the negative sign on the multiplier)
🎯 Practical tip for FRQs: Memorize MPC = 0.80 → spending multiplier = 5, tax multiplier = −4. This is the most commonly used MPC value on the AP exam. If you can apply it instantly to any number the question gives you, you'll save valuable seconds on the FRQ.
Common Misconceptions
Fiscal policy is the most-tested topic in Unit 3, and the multiplier math is fertile ground for errors. Master these traps before test day.
- "The Federal Reserve conducts fiscal policy." No — that's monetary policy. Fiscal policy is the responsibility of Congress and the President. The Fed handles interest rates and the money supply (Unit 4). Confusing the two is one of the most common AP mistakes.
- "Transfer payments count as G in the AD formula." No. G includes only government purchases of goods and services. Transfer payments (Social Security, unemployment benefits) flow through households and increase AD via the C channel instead. The distinction matters because a $100M transfer-payment increase doesn't shift AD by as much as a $100M G increase (it gets the tax multiplier-like treatment).
- "The spending multiplier and tax multiplier are equal." No. The spending multiplier is always exactly 1 unit larger in absolute value. This is because the first dollar of government spending goes straight into the chain, while the first dollar of a tax cut gets partially saved (the MPS fraction never enters the chain).
- "The tax multiplier is positive." No — it's negative. The negative sign captures the inverse relationship: ↑ T reduces GDP, ↓ T increases GDP. When you plug a positive number into the formula, you get a negative GDP change, and vice versa.
- "A balanced budget means no fiscal policy effect." No. The balanced budget multiplier is exactly 1 — equal increases in G and T still raise GDP by the size of the change. Fiscal policy works even without running a deficit; it's just less powerful.
- "Higher MPC means a smaller multiplier." Backwards. Higher MPC means each round of the spending chain is bigger (less leaks into saving), so the multiplier is larger. The relationship is inverse with MPS: high MPS → small multiplier.
- "Crowding out only matters in the long run." It matters in both the short and long run, but the AP exam frames crowding out primarily as a short-run limitation of expansionary fiscal policy. The mechanism is straightforward: government borrowing competes with private borrowing in the loanable funds market, pushing up interest rates and reducing I.
- "Automatic stabilizers fully close output gaps." No. Automatic stabilizers dampen the business cycle but don't eliminate it. They're designed as social insurance, not as full macroeconomic stabilization. Severe gaps still require discretionary policy or simply time.
- "Multiplier effects work the same for spending and tax cuts." No — they're fundamentally different. Government spending fully enters the chain in round 1; tax cuts only partially enter (because households save part of the cut). This is why direct spending is always more expansionary per dollar than equivalent tax cuts.
⚡ 3.5 Quiz: 5 Questions
Click an answer to lock it in. Every option gets a full breakdown — what's right, what's wrong, and the AP-favorite trap each distractor is designed to catch.
1. A country has a Marginal Propensity to Consume (MPC) of 0.75. The government increases its purchases by $200 million to close a recessionary gap. Assuming no crowding out, what is the total change in Real GDP?
✓ Correct answer: (C)
Apply the spending multiplier formula:
An initial $200M injection becomes $800M of GDP change through the chain reaction of spending and re-spending. Each round, the MPC fraction (75%) of the new income is re-spent, while the MPS fraction (25%) leaks into saving.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) $200M — ignores the multiplier. The injection is $200M, but the total GDP change is larger due to the chain reaction of spending.
- (B) $400M — used a multiplier of 2 by mistake. With MPC = 0.75, the multiplier is 4, not 2. Double-check the formula: 1 / 0.25 = 4.
- (D) $150M — used the tax multiplier formula by accident (−MPC/MPS = −3, applied with a sign error). The question specifies an increase in G, so use the spending multiplier (1/MPS), not the tax multiplier.
- (E) $600M — used a multiplier of 3, which would correspond to MPC = 2/3. With MPC = 0.75 exactly, the multiplier is 4.
🔗 Review: Re-read the "Walking Through the Chain Reaction" section. The multiplier formula is just the closed-form sum of the infinite chain. Practice with several MPC values until the calculation is automatic.
2. A country has MPC = 0.80. Congress cuts taxes by $50 billion to stimulate the economy. What is the resulting change in Real GDP?
✓ Correct answer: (D)
Apply the tax multiplier formula. With a tax cut, ΔT is negative:
The negative tax multiplier and the negative tax change multiply to give a positive GDP increase. Notice that the same $50B applied as government spending would have created an even larger effect ($250B with multiplier = 5), confirming that spending is always more expansionary than equivalent tax cuts.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) +$50B — ignores the multiplier entirely. The tax cut produces GDP change larger than the cut itself due to the multiplier chain.
- (B) +$250B — used the spending multiplier (5) instead of the tax multiplier (4). This is the most common AP mistake. Tax changes have their own (smaller) multiplier.
- (C) +$40B — possibly an arithmetic error or confusion between MPC and MPS. Recompute: −0.80 / 0.20 = −4, times −$50B = +$200B.
- (E) −$200B — wrong sign. A tax cut increases GDP. The two negatives in the calculation (tax multiplier is negative, tax change is negative) cancel out to give a positive result.
🔗 Review: Look at the "Comparing the Two Multipliers" table. For any MPC value, the tax multiplier is always exactly 1 unit smaller in absolute value than the spending multiplier. With MPC = 0.80, spending multiplier = 5 and tax multiplier = −4.
3. Which of the following best describes the difference between automatic stabilizers and discretionary fiscal policy?
✓ Correct answer: (B)
Automatic stabilizers work without any vote or new legislation. Programs like progressive income taxes and unemployment insurance automatically adjust to economic conditions — collecting less tax revenue and paying out more benefits during recessions, and vice versa during booms. Discretionary fiscal policy, by contrast, requires Congress to pass specific legislation (a stimulus bill, a tax reform act, an infrastructure package).
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) Both automatic stabilizers and discretionary policy shift AD, not SRAS. Fiscal policy is a demand-side tool. SRAS shifts come from cost or productivity changes (Section 3.2).
- (C) The Fed conducts monetary policy. Both kinds of fiscal policy are under Congress's authority (with the President's involvement). Never mix up fiscal and monetary.
- (D) Multiplier effects depend on MPC, not on whether the action is automatic or discretionary. Both can have similar multipliers; the difference is in speed and process, not size.
- (E) Both kinds of fiscal policy operate in both directions. Automatic stabilizers expand during recessions and contract during booms. Discretionary policy can be expansionary or contractionary depending on the bill.
🔗 Review: See the "Tradeoffs Between the Two Approaches" table. The key distinction is the legislative trigger — automatic stabilizers work in the background; discretionary requires a new vote.
4. An economy is in a recessionary gap. The government implements a large expansionary fiscal policy by borrowing to fund increased spending. According to economists, what is the most significant short-run limitation of this approach?
✓ Correct answer: (A)
Crowding out is the AP exam's most heavily tested limitation of expansionary fiscal policy. When the government borrows to fund increased spending, it competes with private borrowers in the loanable funds market, pushing up interest rates. Higher rates discourage private investment (I) and some interest-sensitive consumption — so the rise in G is partly offset by a fall in I. The total AD shift is smaller than the simple multiplier would predict. The AP exam expects you to mention this whenever discussing the downsides of expansionary fiscal policy.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (B) The Fed sets monetary policy independently. It might respond if fiscal stimulus pushes inflation too high, but it doesn't automatically offset every fiscal action.
- (C) The natural rate of unemployment reflects structural and frictional factors. Fiscal policy doesn't directly change those — and certainly not permanently.
- (D) Fiscal policy shifts AD, not LRAS. To shift LRAS, you'd need to change real productive capacity (labor, capital, technology, resources). Fiscal stimulus alone doesn't move LRAS.
- (E) Some tax revenues do rise during a recovery (an automatic stabilizer effect), but the cancellation is partial, not automatic and complete. The multiplier effect of the spending dominates the small offsetting tax revenue rise.
🔗 Review: Crowding out gets its own dedicated coverage in Unit 5 Section 5.4, but you need to recognize it as a limitation now. The mechanism: ↑ G financed by borrowing → demand for loanable funds rises → interest rates rise → private I falls → partial offset of the AD shift.
5. The government simultaneously increases government purchases by $100B and raises taxes by $100B. With MPC = 0.75, what is the net effect on Real GDP?
✓ Correct answer: (D)
This is the balanced budget multiplier in action. With MPC = 0.75:
The balanced budget multiplier is always exactly 1 — when G and T change by equal amounts, the net GDP change equals the size of the balanced shift, regardless of the MPC. This is one of the most elegant and counterintuitive results in macroeconomics, and the AP exam loves to test it.
Why the other options miss the mark
- (A) $0 — assumes the two effects fully cancel. They almost cancel, but the spending multiplier is 1 unit larger in absolute value, leaving a net positive effect.
- (B) +$400B — only counts the spending effect, ignoring the contractionary tax effect. The tax increase does reduce GDP; you have to include both.
- (C) −$300B — only counts the tax effect, ignoring the expansionary spending effect. Wrong direction overall.
- (E) +$700B — added absolute values instead of summing with proper signs. The tax effect is −$300B (it contracts the economy); it must be added as a negative, not as a positive.
🔗 Review: The balanced budget multiplier is exactly 1, regardless of MPC. Memorize this fact and the worked example in the "Balanced Budget Multiplier" subsection. It's one of the cleanest applications of multiplier math on the AP exam.
Ready for more? Take the full Unit 3 Practice Test →
End of Section 3.5 — and end of Unit 3. Up next: Unit 4: The Financial Sector — money, banking, the Federal Reserve, and monetary policy.