About the Book
Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 29. Chapters: Disposable and discretionary income, Douane, Fiscal policy of the United States, Debt restructuring, Tariff of 1833, Khaleeji, Outrage factor, Budget process, Economic interventionism, Regulation NMS, Right-financing, Doi Moi, Thin capitalisation, Lombard credit, Government budget, Reprivatization, Municipalization, Demand management, 1985 Israel Economic Stabilization Plan, Virginia school of political economy, Term Securities Lending Facility, Williams Act, 2006 United States federal budget, Monetary system, Financial Crisis Responsibility Fee, Public interest theory, Reverse Morris Trust, Economic militarism, Odd-even rationing, Thailand National Science and Technology Development Agency, Military-industrial-media complex, War savings stamps, P60, Peace dividend, Common Monetary Area, Tax policy, Black budget, Transfer payment, 2012 United States federal budget, Fiscal memory devices, Lump-sum tax, Baker Plan, Government financial statements, Tax wedge, H share, Cool Cities Initiative, Structural deficit, European small claims procedure, Rate-of-return regulation, Retirement annuity plan, Grant-in-aid, Community ownership, Non-qualified stock option, Pension term assurance, Performance report, Commercial policy, Tariff of 1832, IRD asset, Disposal tax effect, Korean Domestic Market, Obligation assimilable du Tresor, Money Purchase, Retirement Savings Account, Annual World Bank Conference on Development Economics, Fiscalism, BTF, Sovereign credit, Pension system, Tax-benefit model, Band of fluctuation, Zero-rated supply, Coasian solution. Excerpt: Fiscal policy is considered any changes the government makes to the national budget in order to influence a nation's economy. The approach to economic policy in the United States was rather laissez-faire until the Great Depression. The government tried to stay away from ...