In AP Macroeconomics, a government budget surplus occurs when tax revenues exceed the sum of government purchases and transfer payments in a given year (EK POL-3.B.1). It is the opposite of a budget deficit, which adds to the national debt.
A government budget surplus is what happens when the government collects more in tax revenues than it spends in a single year. The spending side includes two things you have to count together. Government purchases are spending on actual goods and services, like highways and military equipment. Transfer payments are money handed to people without getting a good or service back, like Social Security or unemployment benefits. If tax revenues are bigger than purchases plus transfers, the budget is in surplus. If they're smaller, it's a deficit. If they're exactly equal, the budget is balanced.
The critical thing to lock in for the AP exam is that a surplus (or deficit) is a flow, meaning it's measured over one year. The national debt is a stock, the total pile of past deficits that have accumulated over time. A deficit adds to the debt (EK POL-3.B.2), and a surplus gives the government room to pay some of it down. The debt also generates interest payments, which eat up funds the government could have used for other things (EK POL-3.B.3).
This term lives in Topic 5.4, Deficits and the National Debt, inside Unit 5 (Long-Run Consequences of Stabilization Policies). It directly supports learning objective AP Macro 5.4.A, which asks you to define the budget surplus, deficit, and national debt, and it sets up 5.4.B on the burden of the debt. Unit 5 is where AP Macro asks you to think about what fiscal policy does over time, not just in one period. Every expansionary fiscal policy you learned in Unit 3 (cutting taxes, raising spending) pushes the budget toward deficit, and that deficit becomes debt that future taxpayers service with interest. The surplus is the other side of that story, so you can't fully explain the long-run consequences of stabilization policy without it.
Keep studying AP® Macroeconomics Unit 5
National Debt (Unit 5)
Think flow versus stock. The surplus or deficit is this year's water flowing in or out, and the debt is the level of water in the tub. Deficits raise the debt, and surpluses let the government drain some of it. Interest on accumulated debt then claims revenue that could have gone to other uses.
Balanced Budget (Unit 5)
A balanced budget is the knife's edge between surplus and deficit, where tax revenues exactly equal government purchases plus transfer payments. On the exam, you classify a fiscal situation as one of these three outcomes, so always compare revenues to total outlays first.
Recessionary Gap and Fiscal Policy (Units 3 and 5)
When the economy is in a recessionary gap, the textbook fix is expansionary fiscal policy, which means more spending or lower taxes. That fix pushes the budget toward deficit. Surpluses tend to show up when the government runs contractionary policy or when a booming economy pumps up tax revenues on its own.
Loanable Funds Market (Unit 4)
A budget surplus means the government is saving, which adds to national saving in the loanable funds market. More saving means a larger supply of loanable funds and a lower real interest rate. It's the mirror image of the crowding-out story that deficits cause.
This is mostly a multiple-choice term, and the questions are very predictable. One style asks you to pick the correct definition, so know the exact formula. Surplus equals tax revenues minus the sum of government purchases and transfer payments. The other style gives you numbers and asks you to classify the fiscal situation. For example, a government collects $2.5 trillion in taxes but spends $2.8 trillion on purchases and $1.2 trillion on transfers. Total outlays are $4.0 trillion, so that's a $1.5 trillion deficit, not a surplus. The classic trap is forgetting to add transfer payments to government purchases before comparing to revenues. No released FRQ has used this term verbatim, but the concept underpins FRQ prompts about fiscal policy, the loanable funds market, and crowding out, where you may need to show how a change in government borrowing or saving shifts the supply or demand for loanable funds.
A budget surplus (or deficit) is a one-year flow, while the national debt is the accumulated stock of all past deficits minus past surpluses. A country can run a surplus this year and still have a huge national debt, because one good year doesn't erase decades of borrowing. The CED makes this distinction explicit. EK POL-3.B.2 says a deficit adds to the debt, which only makes sense if you treat them as different measurements.
A government budget surplus exists when tax revenues exceed government purchases plus transfer payments in a given year.
Always add transfer payments to government purchases before comparing spending to tax revenues, because forgetting transfers is the most common multiple-choice trap.
A surplus or deficit is a flow measured over one year, while the national debt is a stock that accumulates from past deficits.
Running a deficit adds to the national debt, and the government must then pay interest on that debt, leaving fewer funds for other uses.
In the loanable funds market, a budget surplus increases national saving, shifts the supply of loanable funds right, and lowers the real interest rate.
Contractionary fiscal policy pushes the budget toward surplus, while expansionary fiscal policy used to close a recessionary gap pushes it toward deficit.
It's when tax revenues exceed government purchases plus transfer payments in a given year (EK POL-3.B.1). For example, if a government collects $3 trillion in taxes and its total outlays are $2.7 trillion, it has a $0.3 trillion surplus.
No. A surplus is a one-year measure, while the debt is the total accumulation of past borrowing. A surplus lets the government pay down some debt, but the debt itself can remain large for decades even with occasional surplus years.
A balanced budget means tax revenues exactly equal government purchases plus transfer payments. A surplus means revenues are strictly greater than that total. They're two of the three possible fiscal outcomes, along with a deficit.
Yes, and this is the classic exam trap. The surplus is tax revenues minus government purchases AND transfer payments. If a government collects $2.5 trillion but spends $2.8 trillion on purchases plus $1.2 trillion on transfers, ignoring the transfers makes it look like a $0.3 trillion deficit when it's actually a $1.5 trillion deficit.
A surplus adds public saving to national saving, which increases the supply of loanable funds and pushes the real interest rate down. This is the reverse of crowding out, which happens when deficits raise interest rates.
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Review units, study guides, and course resources.
Check this vocabulary in multiple-choice context.
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