For the many or the few : the initiative, public policy, and American democracy
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
For the many or the few : the initiative, public policy, and American democracy
(American politics and political economy)
University of Chicago Press, 2004
- : cloth
Available at / 8 libraries
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National Graduate Institute for Policy Studies Library (GRIPS Library)
: cloth314.9||Ma8700857623
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. 187-194) and index
Contents of Works
- An American institution
- A blizzard of data
- Spending and taxes, 1970-2000
- For the many or the few
- Conservative or liberal
- When legislators get out of step
- Key episodes in the twentieth century
- Majority tyranny and the constitution
- Delegation, information, and competition
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Direct democracy continues to grow in importance throughout the United States. Citizens are increasingly using initiatives and referendums to take the law into their own hands, overriding their elected officials to set tax, expenditure, and social policies. John G. Matsusaka's "For the Many or the Few" studies a century of budget data from states and cities to provide the first comprehensive, empirical picture of how direct democracy is changing government policies.Matsusaka argues against the popular belief that initiatives empower wealthy special interest groups that neglect the majority view. Examining demographic, political, and opinion data, he demonstrates how initiatives led to significant tax and expenditure cuts over the last thirty years and that these cuts were supported by a majority of citizens. He concludes that, by and large, direct democracy in the United States has worked for the benefit of the many rather than the few.
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