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Session Notes - October 27, 2025

Session Overview

  • Date: 2025-10-27
  • Duration: ~40 minutes
  • Main Topics: B.11 Economic Concepts (Fiscal Policy, GDP, Economic Indicators), B.13 Education Needs Analysis
  • Format: Practice questions and Socratic teaching

Questions Asked

Question 1: Fiscal Policy - Restrictive Government Actions

Student's Question: "Federal fiscal policy is restrictive when the government does which of the following?"

  • Options: (1) Increases taxes and expenditures, (2) Decreases debt and reserve requirement, (3) Increases interest rates and taxes, (4) Decreases expenditures and debt

Initial Understanding:

  • Thought fiscal and monetary policy "go against each other"
  • Correctly identified fiscal policy = government, taxes, law changes
  • Knew increasing taxes relates to restrictive policy
  • Did NOT know: "Expenditures" means government spending
  • Confused about what "debt" means in this context

Explanation Given:

  • Fiscal vs Monetary distinction clarified:
    • Fiscal = Government (Congress/President) uses taxes and spending
    • Monetary = Federal Reserve uses interest rates and money supply
    • They DON'T oppose each other - just different tools by different entities
  • Expenditures = Government SPENDING (money going out)
  • Restrictive policy goal: Slow economy (fight inflation)
    • Take MORE money out → Increase taxes
    • Put LESS money in → Decrease spending
  • Result: Budget surplus → pays down debt

Comprehension Check:

  • Question asked: "Should government increase or decrease spending to be restrictive?"
  • Student's response: "Decrease spending, that's the right answer"
  • Understanding level: Strong

Follow-up:

  • Student asked: "What about debt, what debt is that?"
  • Explained: Government debt = accumulated deficits, decreases when there's a surplus
  • Clarified trap answers mixing fiscal (taxes/spending) with monetary (interest rates/reserves)

Key Learning:

  • Fiscal = Government taxes & spending
  • Monetary = Fed interest rates & reserves
  • Restrictive fiscal = ↑ taxes + ↓ spending → ↓ debt

Question 2: Financial Planning - Car Purchase Decision (INCOMPLETE)

Student's Question: "Early career couple wants $30K vehicle, CFP concerned about cash flow. They live paycheck to paycheck, fluctuating income, have $50K IRA, 3 months left on car payment. What should CFP advise?"

Initial Understanding:

  • Student thinking: "Lease new vehicle to lower monthly payment"

Explanation Given:

  • Started Socratic questioning:
    • What does "paycheck to paycheck with fluctuating income" mean?
    • What's the first foundation needed before big purchases?
    • In 3 months, current car is paid off - what happens to cash flow?

Student's Response: "I'm thinking about the lease new vehicle, what do you think is that a good choice?"

Status: Question NOT completed - student moved to next topic before answering

Note: Should return to this - tests B.7 (financial planning process) and B.9 (emergency fund priority)


Question 3: Education Needs Analysis - Factors to Consider (B.13)

Student's Question: "Which factors should be considered when performing education needs analysis? Expected inflation rate, Family's contribution to financial aid, Time until college, Student's career longevity"

Initial Understanding:

  • Good reasoning: "Of course inflation matters, family contribution matters, time matters"
  • Correctly identified: Career longevity probably doesn't matter
  • Confusion: "I don't know what's the right way of choosing" - thought multiple answers might be correct

Explanation Given:

  • Education Needs Analysis = Calculate how much to SAVE for future education costs
  • Key factors needed:
    • Inflation rate: Project future costs (college costs $50K today → $80K in 10 years)
    • Time until college: Time horizon affects inflation calculation AND investment growth
    • Career longevity: Happens AFTER college, irrelevant to cost calculation
    • Financial aid contribution: Uncertain, not part of cost calculation (separate analysis)
  • Critical distinction:
    • Education Needs Analysis (CFP does): How much will college cost? How much to save?
    • Financial Aid Analysis (FAFSA does): How much aid might family qualify for?
  • Financial aid is UNCERTAIN and hard to predict - shouldn't rely on it in planning

Comprehension Check:

  • Question asked: "Should you RELY on getting financial aid, or plan to save enough and treat aid as bonus?"
  • Student's response: [Moved to next question before answering]
  • Understanding level: Partial - grasped concepts but didn't confirm full understanding

Key Learning:

  • Education needs analysis uses: inflation rate + time horizon
  • Financial aid = separate calculation, too uncertain for needs analysis
  • Plan for full cost, treat aid as bonus

Question 4: GDP Components (B.11)

Student's Question: "Which of the following are components included in calculation of GDP? Net exports, National debt, Exchange rates, Gross national income"

Initial Understanding:

  • Vague knowledge: "I think there's components where you do trade, investment, produce something"
  • Correct intuition about trade and investment being involved

Explanation Given:

  • GDP Formula: GDP = C + I + G + NX (MUST MEMORIZE)
    • C = Consumption: Household spending (~70% of GDP)
    • I = Investment: Business spending + new home purchases
    • G = Government Spending: Salaries, military, infrastructure
    • NX = Net Exports: Exports - Imports
  • Evaluated each answer:
    • Net Exports: YES (that's NX in formula)
    • National Debt: NO (accumulated borrowing, not production)
    • Exchange Rates: NO (currency price, not production)
    • Gross National Income: NO (different measure, not component)

Comprehension Check:

  • Question 1: "Why is national debt NOT part of GDP? (Production vs borrowing?)"
  • Question 2: "If exports $500B, imports $600B, what is Net Exports?"
  • Student's response: [Moved to next question before answering]
  • Understanding level: Good initial grasp, needs reinforcement

Key Learning:

  • GDP = C + I + G + NX (memorized)
  • GDP measures PRODUCTION, not debt or financial metrics
  • Net Exports = Exports - Imports

Question 5: Economic Indicators Affecting Interest Rates (B.11)

Student's Question: "Which economic indicators can affect interest rates? GDP, Unemployment Rate, Producer Price Index (PPI), National Debt Level"

Initial Understanding:

  • EXCELLENT real-world observation: "When I read the news, government talks about constraining PPI and reducing unemployment, they don't really care about national debt increasing like crazy"
  • Correct intuition that PPI and unemployment matter, debt doesn't
  • Asked: "Is national debt the government debt or average people's debt?"

Explanation Given:

  • National Debt = Total amount GOVERNMENT owes (accumulated deficits)
  • Federal Reserve's Dual Mandate:
    1. Keep inflation low (~2%)
    2. Keep employment high
  • Indicators Fed watches:
    • GDP: Economy growing fast or slow?
    • Unemployment Rate: Jobs market strong or weak?
    • PPI/Inflation: Prices rising too fast?
    • National Debt: Long-term fiscal issue, doesn't drive rate decisions
  • Verified with web search: FOMC explicitly tracks GDP, unemployment, inflation - NOT national debt

Student's Response: "I know right? The answer is National Debt Level so that's why I got confused"

Confusion Identified:

  • Answer key says: National Debt Level is the answer
  • Fed actually watches: GDP, Unemployment, PPI (confirmed by research)
  • Possible explanation:
    1. Question asks "CAN affect" (indirect) vs "Fed uses to decide" (direct)
    2. National debt affects rates through "crowding out" (government borrowing competes with private)
    3. Answer key might be testing exclusion (which is NOT a primary indicator)
    4. Answer key might be WRONG

Status: UNRESOLVED CONFUSION - needs clarification from answer key explanation

Key Learning:

  • Fed watches: GDP growth, unemployment, inflation (PPI/CPI/PCE)
  • National debt = accumulated government borrowing, affects rates indirectly
  • Student's real-world observation skills are EXCELLENT

Knowledge Gaps Identified

Topic Severity Notes
Fiscal vs Monetary policy confusion Low RESOLVED - Now understands they're different tools, not opposing forces
"Expenditures" terminology Low RESOLVED - Now knows it means government spending
Education needs vs financial aid analysis Medium PARTIALLY RESOLVED - Understands distinction, needs reinforcement
Economic indicators question Medium UNRESOLVED - Answer key conflict, needs clarification

Topics Mastered Today

Topic Confidence Notes
B.11 Fiscal Policy High Restrictive = increase taxes + decrease spending → decreases debt. Understands fiscal (gov) vs monetary (Fed)
B.11 GDP Components Medium-High GDP = C + I + G + NX. Knows Net Exports is component, debt is not. Needs comprehension reinforcement
B.13 Education Needs Analysis Medium Knows inflation rate and time horizon matter, financial aid and career longevity don't. Understands CFP analysis vs FAFSA

Key Concepts Covered

  • Fiscal Policy: Government uses taxes and spending to manage economy

    • Restrictive (contractionary): ↑ taxes, ↓ spending → slow economy, fight inflation
    • Expansionary: ↓ taxes, ↑ spending → stimulate economy
  • Monetary Policy: Federal Reserve uses interest rates and money supply

    • NOT opposing fiscal policy - different tools by different entities
  • GDP Formula: C + I + G + NX

    • Consumption + Investment + Government Spending + Net Exports
    • Measures PRODUCTION, not debt or financial metrics
  • Education Needs Analysis: Calculate future college costs and required savings

    • Uses: Inflation rate, time horizon, expected returns
    • Does NOT use: Financial aid estimates (too uncertain)
  • Economic Indicators: Fed watches GDP, unemployment, inflation for rate decisions

    • National debt affects rates indirectly but not primary decision factor

Action Items for Next Session

  • Review: Fiscal vs Monetary policy (solidified today)
  • Practice: More B.11 questions (business cycle, monetary/fiscal tools)
  • Complete: Car purchase question (emergency fund priority)
  • Explore: B.13 education savings vehicles and funding strategies
  • Clarify: Economic indicators answer key explanation

Notes

Student Strengths Observed:

  • Excellent real-world observation skills: Noticed Fed talks about PPI/unemployment, not debt
  • Strong critical thinking: Questioned why financial aid would be in needs analysis
  • Good retention: Remembered fiscal policy concepts immediately after explanation
  • Honest about confusion: Asked questions when uncertain

Learning Pattern:

  • Learns well through Socratic questioning
  • Benefits from real-world examples and observations
  • Strong when connecting news/current events to concepts
  • Needs reinforcement through comprehension checks (sometimes moves to next question too quickly)

Teaching Adjustments:

  • Continue Socratic method - it's working well
  • Ensure comprehension checks are completed before moving on
  • Use web searches to verify confusing answer keys
  • Connect economic concepts to current news (student's strength)

Progress on Study Plan:

  • Day 8 focus (B.7-B.11 General Principles): ✓ Making good progress
  • B.11 now partially covered: Fiscal policy ✓, GDP ✓, Economic indicators ✓
  • Still need: Financial statements, ratios, business cycle details, monetary/fiscal policy tools

Next Session Recommendation:

  • Continue B.11: Business cycle (4 phases), monetary/fiscal policy tools
  • Review B.13: Education savings vehicles (529, Coverdell, etc.)
  • Practice problems to reinforce today's concepts