And The Objective Was What?
Chris Edwards, director of tax policy studies at the Cato Institute wrote an interesting “policy analysis” last year on federal aid to the states as a historical cause of government growth and bureaucracy. In the executive summary, he begins by saying:
“In recent years, members of Congress have inserted thousands of pork-barrel spending projects into bills to reward interests in their home states. But such parochial pork is only a small part of a broader problem of rising federal spending on traditionally state and local activities.
“Federal spending on aid to the states increased from $286 billion in fiscal 2000 to an estimated $449 billion in fiscal 2007 and is the third-largest item in the federal budget after Social Security and national defense. The number of different aid programs for the states soared from 463 in 1990, to 653 in 2000, to 814 by 2006.”
And later writes:
“At all levels of the aid system, the focus is on spending and regulations, not on delivering quality services. And by involving all levels of government in just about every policy area, the aid system creates a lack of accountability. When every government is responsible for an activity, no government is responsible, as was evident in the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina.
“The failings of federal aid have long been recognized, but reforms and cuts have not been pursued for years. Aid has spawned a web of interlocking interests that block reform, including elected officials at three levels of government, armies of government employees, and thousands of trade associations representing the recipients of aid.”
A link to the entire policy analysis is available after the brief executive summary. Understanding how government grows is a necessary step in bringing the country back to the Founders’ vision of limited government.