Fiscal policy is when the government decides how much money to spend and how much to collect from people, like choosing how many toys to give out and how many candies to take back.
Lags in fiscal policy are like delays between when a decision is made and when it actually helps people. It’s like telling your friend you’ll bring cookies to the party tomorrow, but it takes time for you to bake them.
When the Decision Takes Time
Imagine your class has a big test coming up, and the teacher decides to give everyone extra help, but that help doesn’t arrive until next week. That delay is a lag.
Sometimes the government makes a decision now, like giving more money to schools, but it takes time for those changes to happen, like waiting for the new books to arrive or for teachers to get trained.
When the Help Takes Time
Think of it like waiting for your favorite pizza. The order is placed today, but you have to wait until tomorrow or even later to eat it. That’s a lag in action too!
These delays can make it harder for fiscal policy to work as fast as everyone hopes, just like how waiting for that pizza can make you extra hungry!
Examples
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See also
- How Does Fiscal Policy and Stimulus: Crash Course Economics #8 Work?
- How Does Economics basics: How fiscal policy works Work?
- How Does Fiscal Policy explained Work?
- How Does Y1 30) Fiscal Policy - Government Spending and Taxation Work?
- How Does Macro: Unit 3.2 -- The Effects of Fiscal Policy Work?