1 / 26

FrontPage : Why do people say that “money is power?”

FrontPage : Why do people say that “money is power?”. The Last Word: Finish 6.1 for Wednesday. Today, I will scare you…. Congressional Powers: Powers of the Purse. What are the Power$ of the Purse? The Power$ of the Pur$e are the MOST IMPORTANT of all Congressional powers…. Why…?.

nelia
Télécharger la présentation

FrontPage : Why do people say that “money is power?”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. FrontPage: Why do people say that “money is power?” The Last Word: Finish 6.1 for Wednesday

  2. Today, I will scare you…

  3. Congressional Powers: Powers of the Purse

  4. What are the Power$ of the Purse?The Power$ of the Pur$e are the MOST IMPORTANT of all Congressional powers… Why…?

  5. Let’s discuss the first “Power of the Pur$e”… • But first, let’s learn a bit of wisdom from a founding father…

  6. Ben Franklin said that in life, only 2 things are certain… • What are these 2 things…?

  7. One is Death…

  8. The other is… Taxes…

  9. The Power of Taxation… • Congress has the sole power to levy (“set” or “apply”) many different national taxes… • Why does Congress tax the American people • Revenue Originally, there was only one source of revenue for the national government…tariffs. What are Tariffs?

  10. So, what did the government do to fix this? Passed the 16th amendment: Created the income tax… • This has become a major source of income for the government…

  11. …And a despised part of everyone’s paycheck!

  12. Sources of revenue - 2010 Total Revenue = $2.1 Trillion

  13. $pending Power • When Congress allocates (spends, or gives) money to a program, agency or other part of the government, this funding is called… • Appropriations All bills for taxing or spending must start in which house of Congress?

  14. Federal Spending - 2010 Total Spending – $3.4 Trillion

  15. What we “choose” to spend on…

  16. Where is all of this spending recorded so we can keep track of it? The Federal Budget • This is an outline of how much the government will spend in a given year

  17. The Federal Budget:Terms to Know • Budget Surplus • Occurs when government spends less in a single year than it brings in • Budget Deficit • Occurs when the government spends more in a single year than it brings in **For example: In 2010, the US government took in about $2.1 trillion and spent about $3.4 trillion.

  18. Why would the government need to spend more than it brings in? When this happens, Congress must use another “Power of the Pur$e”… **Which power of Congress enables it to spend more than it has?

  19. The Power to Borrow Money But when Congress does this, it contributes to the… National Debt • The total accumulated amount that government owes; • Occurs because more deficit years occur than surplus years.

  20. The US National Debt onOct 14th 2011 was: The estimated population of the United States is 311,485,011so each citizen's share of this debt is $47,755.61. The National Debt has continued to increase an average of$3.97 billion per day since September 28, 2007! Source: http://www.brillig.com/debt_clock/

  21. The increase of the National Debt

  22. $cary, isn’t it? • What is the consequence of all this “deficit spending”? • How might we start to reduce our yearly deficit, and our national debt?

More Related