Need for Public Debt or Public Borrowing
Owning to ever-increasing economic and developmental activities of the government, governments across nations have accumulated huge sums of public debt. The recent global economic crisis forced many advanced countries, such as the US, to accumulate huge amounts of debt. The US and Indian budget deficits stood at 72.5 % and 49% of their respective GDPs as of 2012.
Public debt has assumed significant importance in recent years because of the following reasons:
1. Deficit Budget:
The government borrows to cover the bridge’s temporary budget deficit raised due to large expenditures incurred on administration and for financing unforeseen events like floods, famines etc. In such an event, taxes cannot entirely bridge the budget deficit, as people oppose temporary taxes.
2. To Finance War:
The government borrows funds to finance wars. Modern wars are costly due to the use of modern ammunition and tools. They cannot be financed entirely through taxation. Thus, public debt becomes necessary. Moreover, defence is a sign of a country’s strength, and the government spends huge sums of money on its upkeep.
3. Natural Calamities:
Natural calamities like earthquakes, floods, famines etc., lead to an increase in government expenditures in order to provide relief to the victims and to build new infrastructure. In order to finance its expenditure government borrows funds.
4. Economic Development:
Public debt is considered an important tool for the economic development of a country. Countries raise funds both internally and externally. Developing countries lack resources to finance their expenditures on public enterprises, projects involving huge capital with long gestation periods and other social-economic programs and infrastructure.
Moreover, these projects cannot be financed totally from government revenues. Developed countries borrow to modernize and upkeep their infrastructure facilities like roads, railways, power plants etc.
Furthermore, developing countries are characterized by low saving ratios, low effective demand, unemployment and large-scale poverty. Here the rate of capital formation and private investment is relatively low, and thus is the rate of income generation. Thus, the government has to increase investment, and it can secure capital for investment by raising public debt.
5. To finance Public Enterprises:
Public revenue generated through sources such as tax and non-tax levies is insufficient to meet the growing requirement of funds for financing public enterprises such as roads, railways, telecom etc. The government can meet these requirements through public borrowing.
6. To Check Economic Stability:
The government borrows to stabilize the economy, to provide a safeguard against depression, and to control inflationary conditions. In a period of depression level of aggregate demand is low. Hence the government borrows to spur up investment and employment and hence to raise effective demand.
In periods of high inflation, when there is an excess supply of money, the government resorts to borrowing funds from the public to reduce the money held with the public in an attempt to control demand and inflation.
7. To Provide Foreign Exchange:
In case of the balance of payment deficit, Foreign exchange is required to correct it. The government borrows foreign exchange reserves from foreign governments and from international financial institutions.
8. Soft Revenue Option:
Increasing taxes are often met with opposition from the public. Moreover, governments are always in need of funds. Government borrowings are a soft revenue option for meeting ever-increasing expenditures.
In recent times, the need for public borrowing has increased to factors like increasing expenditure on social security schemes, increase in prices, growth of administrative expenses etc.
Read More in: Theory of Public Finance
- Public Finance: Meaning, Nature & Scope
- Role of Government in Economy
- Role of Government in Mixed Economy: Public & Private Sector
- Role of Government under Cooperation and Competition
- Role of Government in Economic Development and Planning
- Concept of Public Goods, Private Goods, and Merit Goods
- Concept of Market Failure and Functions of Government
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Decreasing Costs
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Externalities
- Market Failure and Functions of Government: Public Goods
- Future Market: Meaning, Role & Uncertainty
- Concept of Information Asymmetry
- Theory of Second Best: Concept & Explanation
- Problem of Allocation of Resources: Public & Private Mechanisms
- Preferences: Meaning, Types & Problems of Preference Revelation
- Preference Aggregation & Its Mechanism
- Voting Systems, Direct Democracy, Representative Democracy, Leviathan Hypothesis & Arrow’s Impossibility Theorem
- Economic Theory of Democracy: Concept & Explanation
- Politico Eco Bureaucracy: Concept & Explanation
- Rent-Seeking and Directly Unproductive Profit-Seeking Activities
- Rationale for Public Goods: Concept & Explanation
- Benefit Theory or Voluntary Exchange Theory
- Lindahl Model: Concept, Equilibrium & Limitations
- Bowen Model: Concept, Advantages & Limitations
- Samuelson’s Model of Public Expenditure
- Musgrave’s Model of Public Expenditures
- Demand Revealing Schemes for Public Goods
- Vickery-Clarke-Groves Mechanism
- Groves-Ledyard Mechanism
- Tiebout Model: Concept, Assumptions Equilibrium & Simple Tiebout Model
- Theory of Club Goods
- Keynesian Principles of Stabilization Policy
- Difference Between Keynesian Economic Thought and Others
- Role of Expectations and Uncertainty in Formulating Stabilization Policy
- Intertemporal Markets Efficiency & Failure
- Liquidity Preference Theory
- Diamond-Dybvig Banking Model
- Preference Shocks, Adverse Selection & Central Bank
- Equilibrium Deposit Contract
- Social Goods and Its Effect on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Infrastructural Facilities on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Distributional Inequality on Stabilization Policy
- Effect of Regional Imbalances on Stabilization Policy
- Wagner’s Law of Increasing State Activities: Explanation, Graph & Criticism
- Peacock-Wiseman Hypothesis: Explanation, Graph & Criticism
- Public Expenditure: Concept, Objectives, & Public vs Private Expenditure
- Pure Theory of Public Expenditure
- Structure & Growth of Public Expenditure in India
- Trends, Lessons & Priorities in Public Expenditure in India
- Social Cost-Benefit Analysis: Project Evaluation, Estimation of Costs & Discount Rate
- Performance Based Budgeting and Zero Based Budgeting
- Theories of Tax Incidence: Concentration Theory, Diffusion Theory & Modern Theory
- Tax System and Its Principles
- Equity Principle and Efficiency Principle of Taxation: Meaning, Explanation & Examples
- Ability to Pay and Benefits Received Principle of Taxation
- Theory of Optimal Taxation: Excess Burden & Distortions of Taxation
- Deadweight Loss of Taxation: Causes, Measurement & Example
- Concept of Equity & Efficiency in Economics
- Trade-Off Between Equity and Efficiency: Meaning & Example
- Theory of Measurement of Dead Weight Loss
- Double Taxation: Meaning, Desirability, Forms & Solution
- Solution to Problem of Double Taxation: Intra-Country & International
- Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) and Indian Policy
- Classical View on Public Debt
- Compensatory Aspect of Public Debt Policy
- Public Debt or Borrowings: Concept, Need, Sources & Types
- Concept of Public Debt or Public Borrowings
- Need for Public Debt or Public Borrowing
- Sources of Public Debt
- Classification of Public Debt
- Burden of Public Debt: Meaning, Types & Explanation
- Debt Through Created Money or Deficit Financing
- Public Debt (Public Borrowings) and Inflation (Price Level)
- Crowding Out of Private Investment and Activity
- Principle of Public Debt Management and Debt Repayment