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The New American Politics

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Title: The New American Politics


1
The New American Politics
  • Mr. Greens American Government

2
Outline of the Lecture
  • The Turn Toward Big Government
  • The New Deal
  • The New Federalism
  • The Rise of Bureaucracy
  • Interest Group Liberalism
  • Keynesian Macroeconomics
  • The Progressive Judiciary
  • Majority Culture
  • The Imperial Presidency
  • The New Ideologies

3
Federalism 5
4
Federalism 6
5
The Depression
6
The New Deal
Franklin Delano Roosevelt
7
The New Deal
  • The Hundred Days
  • Bank Holiday
  • Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • AAA
  • National Industrial Recovery Act
  • NRA
  • Public Works Administration
  • PWA
  • Federal Emergency Relief Administration
  • FERA
  • Tennessee Valley Authority
  • TVA

8
Toward The Single Republic
  • The Big Switch
  • Schechter Poultry Corporation vs. U.S. (1935)
  • Does the emergency of the Great Depression change
    the interstate/intrastate Federal/State power
    relationship?
  • NLRB vs. Jones Laughlin Steel Corp. (1937)
  • Does the emergency of the Great Depression change
    the interstate/intrastate Federal/State power
    relationship?
  • Wickard vs. Filburn (1942)
  • How far does Federal power over intrastate
    commerce extend?

9
The New Deal
  • 1933 The Hundred Days
  • Bank Holiday
  • Agricultural Adjustment Act
  • AAA
  • National Industrial Recovery Act
  • NRA
  • Public Works Administration
  • PWA
  • Federal Emergency Relief Administration
  • FERA
  • Tennessee Valley Authority
  • TVA
  • 1935 Second New Deal
  • Emergency Relief Appropriation Act
  • Works Progress Administration
  • WPA
  • Social Security Act
  • National Labor Relations Act
  • NLRB
  • Wealth Tax Act
  • Banking Act of 1935
  • Public Utilities Holding Company Act
  • Rural Electrification Act
  • REA
  • Resettlement Administration
  • Farm Security Administration

10
89th Congress and the Great Society
  • Medicare
  • Federal Aid to Education
  • to end discrimination
  • to end poverty
  • Urban Reform
  • Creation of HUD
  • Subsidized Housing
  • Fair Housing Act
  • Model Cities
  • Aid to Mass Transit
  • The Arts
  • PBS
  • National Endowments of Humanities and of Arts
  • Poverty
  • Special Aid to Appalachia
  • Increased Minimum Wage
  • Head Start
  • Medicaid
  • Food Stamps
  • Legal Services Corporation
  • Environment
  • Pure Air Standards
  • Clean Water Standards
  • Wilderness Bill
  • Misc
  • Truth in Lending
  • Auto Safety Requirements

11
Federalism 7
12
Tocqueville
13
The Rise of Bureaucracy
14
The Bureaucracy
  • Definition
  • A large, complex organizational system in which
    tasks, roles, and responsibilities are structured
    to achieve a goal.
  • Bureaucrats
  • People who work in a bureaucracy

15
Organization Structure
16
The American Bureaucracy
  • The Cabinet

17
The American Bureaucracy
  • Independent Agencies and Regulatory Commissions,
    Including
  • FED (Federal Reserve)
  • FCC (Federal Communications Commission)
  • SEC (Securities and Exchange Commission)
  • NLRB (National Labor Relations Board)
  • NTSB (National Transportation and Safety Board)
  • EPA (Environmental Protection Agency)

18
The American Bureaucracy
  • Government Corporations, Including
  • U.S. Postal Service
  • Corporation for Public Broadcasting
  • FDIC (Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation)

19
American Bureaucracy
  • Civil Service Appointees
  • The Pendleton Act of 1883
  • Using merit in hiring and promotion for
    government jobs
  • Political Appointees
  • 3000 Assistant Secretaries, and Under
    Secretaries, and Deputy Secretaries, etc.
  • Issue Networks

20
Issue Networks
  • Need for Experts
  • Expanding Government Programs Need Experts Who
    Understand Program Complexity.
  • Experts Move In And Out Of Government.

21
Issue Networks
22
Issue Networks
  • Need for Experts
  • Expanding Government Programs Need Experts Who
    Understand Program Complexity.
  • Experts Move In And Out Of Government.
  • Experts Are Not Loyal To Their Bosses
  • Status Determined by Other Experts, Not
    Politicians or Electorate
  • Loyal To Their Network and Issue Rather Than
    Politicians And Parties.

23
Bureaucratic Theory
  • Social Efficiency
  • Producing Desirable and Necessary Goods and
    Services With the Least Expenditure of Time,
    Effort and Resources
  • Max Weber
  • Bureaucracies Improve Social Efficiency
  • William Niskanen
  • Bureaucracies Undermine Social Efficiency

24
Webers Thesis
  • Specialization
  • Expertise and merit
  • Hierarchy
  • Establishes clear lines of authority
  • Facilitates decision making

25
Hierarchy
26
Hierarchy
27
Bureaucracies Improve Social Efficiency
  • Specialization
  • Hierarchy
  • Formal Rules (Red Tape)
  • Simplify and Routinize Complex Procedures
  • Curtail favoritism
  • Improve Decision Making By Creating A Formula For
    A Broad Array Of Situations
  • Therefore, Bureaucracies Improve Social
    Efficiency

28
Niskanens Thesis
  • Self Interested Entrepreneurs and Managers in a
    Competitive System
  • Must Lower Prices, Raise Quality, and/or Be
    Innovative to Succeed (Gain Profits)
  • This Dynamic Leads to Social Efficiency
  • Bureaucratic Managers are Monopolists Motivated
    by Self-Interested
  • They Have No Objective Price, Quality, Innovation
    Comparisons To Assess The Relative Costs And
    Benefits Of Their Services
  • This Dynamic Leads to Social Inefficiency

29
Niskanens Thesis
  • Bureaucratic Accountability
  • Bureaucratic Managers Seek to Please
    Congressional Subcommittees Rather than Voters
    (Consumers)
  • Committee Members self select
  • Congressional leadership defers to committees
  • They Are Generally Not Personally or
    Professionally Rewarded for Minimizing Costs or
    Maximizing Benefits
  • They Are Generally Not Personally or
    Professionally Harmed if They Maximize Costs and
    Minimize Benefits

30
Niskanens Thesis
  • Bureaucratic Accountability
  • They Are Rewarded Or Punished Based on Compliance
    With
  • Assessment by self or peers
  • Avoidance of negative publicity (and generation
    of positive publicity)
  • Complete use of their budgets
  • Ability to successfully request and defended
    budget increases.

31
Niskanens Thesis
  • Bureaucratic Managers Are Self-Interested
  • Seek career advancement, higher salaries, and
    perquisites
  • They will seek to ensure that their bureau grows
  • They will seek to acquire ever larger budgets

32
Niskanens Law
  • Bureau Budgets Will Be Larger Than the Median
    Voter Would Desire
  • Government Agencies Will Be Larger the Median
    Voter Would Desire
  • The Economic and Social Benefits of Bureaucratic
    Policies Will Seldom Cover Their Corresponding
    Economic and Social Costs
  • Therefore, Bureaucracies Undermine Social
    Efficiency

33
System Dynamics
  • Government Budgets
  • Since They Are Not Forced To Balance Costs vs.
    Benefits, Bureaucrats Will Always Seek Larger
    Budgets
  • Interest Group Liberalism
  • Since They Looking for Maintaining Their Power
    Positions, Members of Congressional Committees
    Will Always Support Larger Budgets
  • Since They Are rent seeking, Interest Groups Will
    Always Advocate Larger Budgets

34
Model 2
35
The End
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