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Federal Aid to Local Governments in the West: An Irony of the Reagan Revolution
Author(s) -
Clark Janet
Publication year - 1992
Publication title -
review of policy research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.832
H-Index - 45
eISSN - 1541-1338
pISSN - 1541-132X
DOI - 10.1111/j.1541-1338.1992.tb00335.x
Subject(s) - reagan administration , federalism , disappointment , state (computer science) , american west , irony , power (physics) , political science , political economy , administration (probate law) , public administration , economics , law , sociology , politics , psychology , social psychology , art , ethnology , physics , literature , algorithm , quantum mechanics , computer science
Despite the fact that the Reagan election was viewed as a power shift toward the West, the decade of the 1980s produced cruel disappointment. The region was generally left out of the economic recmery of the nation because of the bust in the agricultural and mineral industries. These state and local gmernments which sufferfrom high costs and low resources were particularly dependent on the national gmernment at the very time when the Reagan Administration was cutting federal aid and transferring power to the states. Unlike Nixon's New Federalism which helped the state and local governments of the West, Reagan's policies caused their relative position in federal aid flows to deteriorate. Although the Reagan revolution in cutting domestic programs was viewed as the embodiment of western rugged individualism, the region lost in terms of federal aid to small rural local governments.