450 likes | 462 Views
Explore the concept of federalism, advantages, disadvantages, American Federalism, and different types, including Dual, Layer Cake, and Marble Cake Federalism. Learn about key cases, challenges, and the evolution of American federalism over time.
E N D
Federalism • Sovereignty is shared between central and state (regional) governments • Sovereignty = no higher authority • Local units make some decisions without regard to national preferences • Germany, Canada, Australia, India
Advantages • Recognizes local interests and differences • Prevents secession (usually) • Check federal government power • Managing large country • Promotes competition among jurisdictions • Flexibility • Innovation • Citizen participation • A vital Congress • Local autonomy
Disadvantages • Policies are not uniform • Protects powerful local interests • Inefficiency • Lack of Accountability • Obstructive • harmful spillover effects • It can make for weak parties • Can lead to a parochial Congress • Weakened nationalism
Other Systems • Confederation: • States are sovereign • Switzerland • Unitary: • National Government sovereign • England, France, Italy
American Federalism • Restrictions on states’ powers • Coining money • No treaties • Bills of attainders • Ex Post Facto Laws
American Federalism • Federal government guarantees • Republican state governments • Admitting new states • Uniform taxes • State to State • “Full faith and credit” with respect to other state’s laws • Extradition • Elastic Clause • Necessary and proper for carrying out congress’ powers
Problems arising from federalism McCulloch v Maryland (1819) Nullification Gibbons v Ogden (1824)
McCulloch v. Maryland (1819) • “Necessary and Proper” clause • National Bank is allowed • States can’t tax federal government • Federal government is supreme
Nullification • States can’t declare federal laws unconstitutional • States are not the Supreme Court
Gibbons v. Ogden (1824) • NY gave Ogden exclusive navigational rights • Federal Government gave Gibbons license • Gibbons won due to interstate commerce
Dual Federalism (1789 – 1930) • Layer Cake (1865 – 1930) • Marble Cake (1930s – Present) • Cooperative Federalism (1930s – 1960s) • Creative Federalism (1960s) • Competitive Federalism (1970s –1980s)
Dual Federalism (1789 – 1930) • Federal Government supreme in its sphere • Articles I – IV, VI • States supreme in their sphere • Article IV, Tenth Amendment • Shared Powers • Tenth Amendment
Layer Cake Federalism (1865 – 1930) • Each level sovereign in its own reign • Growing government at both levels, with states as senior partners in police powers and providing services, federal government in regulating commerce. • "to perfect the free economy" • But Federal government becoming stronger to implement: • 13th, 14th, 15th Amendments
Layer Cake Federalism (1865 – 1930) • The Morrill Act of 1862: • Land grants to states to support public institutions of higher education • First time the national government participated financially in a program of state welfare
Layer Cake Federalism (1865 – 1930) • Interstate Commerce Act 1887 • Sherman Antitrust Act of 1890 • Both a part of the expansion of federal authority over commerce that took place during that period, often at the expense of states. • Thirty state railroad commissions, for example, were replaced by a federal authority, as were existing state antitrust and lottery laws
16th amendment (1913) • Federal Income tax • Watershed for twentieth century, modern federalism. • Size of the tax was extremely modest by today's standards • Emphasis on intergovernmental transfers and the use of taxing and spending powers to further national policies
1920s:11 Grant-in-Aid programs • As the country moved from a primarily rural, agrarian society to an urban industrial one, large-scale social institutions developed to cushion some of the worst social dislocations caused by the changes. • Even with the capacity to levy progressive income taxes, national efforts at social welfare programs were highly tentative at first.
1920s:11 Grant-in-Aid programs • By 1920 there were eleven grants-in-aid programs. Challenges to the legality of such grants were rejected by the court on the grounds that participation in the programs was voluntary on the part of the states and thus did not violate separation of powers. • The earliest such program in health, the 1921 Sheppard-Towner Act maternity and infancy health program aroused much opposition from state and professional groups, and was allowed to die in 1929.
Marble Cake Federalism (Cooperative Federalism): 1930s – 1960s • Federal Government more interfering in local matters • Shared functions, focus on providing services, broadly collaborative patterns. • Federal Government provides funds • States administer • 1930s Examples: • FDIC • Civilian Conservation Corps
Postwar • 21 new grant-in-aid programs: 1946-1961 • Eisenhower attempted to reverse the centralizing trend in the national government's involvement in domestic policy • established the Commission on Intergovernmental Relations to identify activities to return to the states. • Commission found few such programs, • No changes were implemented.
Civil Rights • Courts, for the first time, asserted national authority in regards to civil rights under the equal protection clause of the fourteenth amendment • Southern states = deniers of liberty against national government. • Nullification = interposition: • states defied federal orders to integrate schools in the wake of Brown v. Board of Education.
Creative Federalism (1960s) • States are implementers of federal mandates • Federal Government and States share costs and administrative responsibilities • Guidelines, rules, funds from Federal Government • Intergovernmental fiscal transfers • Crosscutting regulation and responsibilities • Examples: • Medicare, Medicaid, War on Poverty, Civil Rights Legislation
Creative Federalism (1960s) • Federal government often bypassed states entirely • Programs aimed at both racial and economic injustice. • Categorical and project grants: aimed at specific problems or groups • Civil Rights Acts attached cross-cutting provisions on all grants
Competitive (Fiscal) Federalism (1970s-1980s) • New Federalism • Nixon, Carter, Reagan • Reduce national control over the grants-in-aid programs • Move national programs to field regions • Streamline services • Opposite has occurred • Power has not returned to states
Competitive (Fiscal) Federalism (1970s-1980s) If no compliance • Penalties • Equal Opportunity Act (1982): criminal or civil penalties States promise to develop their own programs • Restrictions on other programs • Over 60 federal programs • Crossover Requirements • State has to do something in return for money • Emergency Highway Energy Conservation Act of 1974
Competitive (Fiscal) Federalism (1970s-1980s) • Grants-in-Aid: • General Revenue Sharing • Block Grants • Categorical Grants
Block Grants and General Revenue Sharing: • Reduce federal requirements • States have greater freedom while setting the stage for withdrawal of federal fiscal support.
(General) Revenue Sharing • Great freedom to spend money • Distribution based on states’: • Population • Local tax effort • Wealth
Block Grants • “Block” (chunk) of money • Block of programs combined • Few strings attached • Welfare Reform (1996)
Block Grant Types • Operational Grants • Running programs • Capital Grants • Building plants • Entitlement Grants • Transfer money to individuals/families
Categorical Grants • Specific purpose • Specific criteria • Some matching state money • Example: Build an airport or dorm • Two Types: • Project Grants • Competitive applications from states and individuals • Formula Grants • Welfare programs
Block Grants and Revenue Sharing vsCategorical Grants • Block Grants grew more slowly because: • Distrust of state governments • Federal government wanted more control • Revenue Sharing dilutes interests • Revenue Sharing gives all communities money
New Federalism (1980s-1990s) • Cooptive Federalism • Reagan tried to reduce 83 Categorical Grants into 6 large block grants • Congress replaced 57 categorical grants with 6 block grants but with many strings attached • “state and local government responses to 1981 federal aid cuts—through replacement funding, through a variety of financial coping and delaying measures, and through administrative reforms” actually produced “higher service levels than otherwise would have been the case”
New Federalism (1980s-1990s) • Deregulation • Supply-side reductions • Deficit dominates: Revenue cuts without matching spending cuts impasse in government. • Devolution Revolution (but not always carried out)…..
Devolution Revolution • Republicans take over both Houses in 1994 election • Contract with America (1995-1997) • “The era of big government is over”—Clinton • Welfare Reform • Highway speed limits • States could administer certain programs in Safe Drinking Water Act • States decide how federal rural development funds could be used
Devolution Revolution? • “But we cannot go back to the time when our citizens were left to fend for themselves” (Clinton) • 13 new block grant programs enacted, but also included major new restrictions on how the moneys could be spent. • Court upholds the use of cross-over sanctions in tying highway funds to minimum drinking age. • Car-jacking, stalking federal crimes • National criteria for drivers’ licenses, food safety • Nullified state laws restricting telecommunications competition • The revolution “has mostly fizzled”
Second-Order Devolution • A flow of power and responsibility from the states to local governments
Third-Order Devolution • Increase role of nonprofit organizations and private groups in policy implementation
Federal Control • “He who pays the piper calls the tune” • Conditions of Aid: • Requirements if states want money • Number of strings tends to increase • Mandates: • Requirements that states must carry out • Environmental Protection • Ocean Dumping Ban (1988) • Civil Rights • Americans with Disabilities (1990)
Mandates • Most concern civil rights and environmental protection • Different forms: • Regulatory statutes and amendments that expand on previous legislation • New areas of federal involvement • Some are easy to interpret and administer and others more difficult (Americans with Disabilities Act- 1990) • School desegregation
Unfunded Mandates Reform Act (1995) • Stop Federal mandates (requirements) on States and local governments unless Federal government helps pay for the costs of programs • Made Congress more aware of this issue, but… • Not always effective: • Americans with Disabilities Act (1990) • EPA requires states to build auto pollution-testing stations
Conditions of Aid • Voluntary, in theory, but states receive 25% or more of its budget from federal government