The New Federalism: Can the States Be Trusted?Hoover Press |
Contents
CHAPTER TWO Entrusting the States with Welfare Reform | 65 |
CHAPTER FOUR State Competition for Corporate Charters | 129 |
CONCLUSION The Politics of the New Federalism | 157 |
CONTRIBUTORS | 165 |
Other editions - View all
The New Federalism: Can the States be Trusted?, Volume 443 John A. Ferejohn,Barry R. Weingast No preview available - 1997 |
Common terms and phrases
acid rain AFDC American argue argument assigned benefit levels block grants borrowing constraints capital central government Clean Air Act commerce clause Congress corporate codes corporate law costs Court debt decentralization Delaware Delaware's downwind efficiency emissions environmental regulation equity ernment event studies example export federal ambient standards federal environmental federal government federal regulation federal system Fiscal Federalism fiscal separation incentives income institutions interstate competition interstate externalities jurisdiction Law Review legal regime legislation limited lower tiers lower-tier governments mandates McKinnon ment mobile monetary NAAQS national government Nechyba nomic optimal policy laboratories political politicians potential programs public choice Public Economics public finance race race-to-the-bottom regulatory reincorporating firms rent seeking residents responsibilities result revenues Revesz Richard Revesz role Romano shareholders sources spending spillovers suggest takeover statutes tall stacks TANF tax bases tax competition taxation Tiebout Tiebout Model tion U.S. federal upwind pollution Weingast welfare benefits welfare recipients welfare reform