106
C H A PT E R 5 Policy Makers and the Money Supply
infl uence on economic activity through taxation and expenditure plans. Fiscal policy is carried
out by the president and Congress. The U.S. Treasury supports
economic policy objectives
through its debt management practices.
Ethical Behavior in Government
ETHICAL
Since World War II, 12 individuals served as president of the United States. The decade
of the 1990s included George H. W. Bush and William (Bill) Clinton. The decade of the 2000s
was primarily under the direction of George W. Bush and Barack Obama.
One would expect that the leader of the United States should and would exhibit a very
high level of moral and ethical behavior. We expect the people of our nation to practice sound
ethical behavior by treating others fairly and honestly. Certainly,
the president has the oppor-
tunity to lead by example. Two recent presidents, Richard Nixon (who served as president
during 1969–1974) and Bill Clinton (who served as president during 1993–2001), were each
accused of unethical behavior while president. Nixon resigned on August 9, 1974, just before
he was impeached because of the Watergate scandal involving offi
ce break-ins. In 1998, Clinton
became the second president to be impeached by the House of Representatives. Clinton’s
handling of personal indiscretions with a White House intern led to his trial in the Senate. He
was found not guilty and completed his second term.
3
Unethical behavior in government has not been limited to presidents. There also have
been numerous accounts of unethical behavior on the part of members of Congress. Some
individuals have been impeached and others have been sent to prison. With this said,
the vast
majority of members of Congress and past presidents have practiced high ethical behavior,
including fair and honest treatment of their constituents. The other good news is that the U.S.
government and society have overcome the isolated unethical behavior of a few leaders.
Policy Makers in the European Economic Union
GLOBAL
As in the United States, European governments use monetary and fi scal policies to try
to achieve similar economic goals, such as economic growth and price stability.
In December
1991, the members of the
European Union (EU)
signed the
Maastricht Treaty
in Maastricht,
Netherlands. The objective was to converge their economies, fi x member country exchange
rates, and introduce the euro as a common currency at the beginning of 1999. Monetary
and fi scal policy actions of each country were to focus
on maintaining price stability, keep-
ing government budget defi cits below 3 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) and total
government debt below 60 percent of GDP, and maintaining stability in relative currency
exchange rates. Of the 15 EU countries, 12 members formed the
European Monetary Union
(EMU),
ratifi ed the Maastricht Treaty, and qualifi ed to adopt the euro as their common cur-
rency with conversion offi
cially taking place in 2002. Since then, EU membership has grown
to 28 countries, (although the United Kingdom has recently voted to withdraw from the EU),
with 19 of these countries joining the EMU and adopting the euro as their common currency.
It is striking that initially 12 and now 19 countries with widely diff erent
past applica-
tions of monetary and fi scal policies could agree on similar economic and fi nancial object-
ives. While each country continues to formulate its own fi scal policies today, the
European
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