politics of federalism & federal grants. types of grants categorical-formula - congress...
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Politics of Federalism & Federal Grants
Types of Grants• Categorical-Formula - Congress appropriates funds for
specific purposes such as school lunches or for building highways
– Subject to detailed federal conditions
• Project - Congress appropriates a certain sum, which is allocated to state and local units and sometimes to nongovt. agencies, based on applications from those who wish to participate
• Block - broad grants to states for prescribed activities—welfare, child care, education, social services, preventive health care, and health services—with only a few strings attached
Types of Federal Grants
• In 1996 there was a shift from Categorical Grants to Block Grants
Purposes of Federal Grants to State and Local Governments
The Changing Purpose of
Federal Grants to State and
Local Governments
Budget of the U.S. Government, Fiscal Year 2005, table 12.2.
Federal Grants to State and Local Governments, 1984-2004
Budget of the U.S. Government, Fiscal Year 2002, Historical Tables, table 6.1, and Budget of the U.S. Government, Fiscal Year 2005, table 12.1.
Federal Aid and Federal Control
• Conditions of aid – tell state governments what they must do if they wish to receive grant money
• Unfunded mandates – programs that the federal govt. requires states to implement w/out federal funding– Ex.) NCLB, Americans w/ Disabilities Act
The Devolution Revolution
• Devolution initiatives returned program management of things like welfare to the states, with some federal guidelines
• Devolution proponents harbor a deep-seated ideological mistrust of the federal government and believe that state governments are more responsive to the people
The Politics of Federal Grants: Devolution
The Republican “Contract with America” called for devolution-- the transfer of political and economic power to the states
The Politics of Federal Grants: Devolution
Positives and Negatives of Federalism
• Negative view: Federalism blocks progress and protects powerful local interests
• Positive view: Federalism contributes to governmental strength, political flexibility, and fosters individual liberty– Federalist #10: small political units allow
all relevant interests (factions) to be heard
– Federalism increases political activity
The Growth of Big Government
Why has the power of the national
government grown over the last two centuries?
The Future of Federalism
The persistence of international terrorism, the war in Afghanistan
and Iraq, and rising deficits all ensure a
substantial role for the national government in
the years to come