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Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

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Page 1: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

Federalism in the Obama

Administration

Thomas GaisDirector

The Rockefeller Institute of Government

Skidmore College

February 7, 2013

Page 2: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

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Federalism in the Obama Administration Questions:

How have the relationships between the national and state/local governments—or their respective responsibilities and powers—changed during the Obama Administration?

In these current relationships and distributions of power, what are the challenges for effective governance?

Basic points: Obama Administration has a large, activist domestic policy agenda, and that

necessarily means that federalism is critical to its success, even if the Administration cares little about the value of federalism itself

Although its ways of acting on and through the federal system are not unprecedented, they are distinctive in approach and intensity.

But its effectiveness in working through state/local governments is challenged by several developments, including the state fiscal crisis, political polarization, and demographic shifts.

Page 3: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

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Role of states in U.S. domestic programsPublic employment as percentage of labor force is neither high nor low compared to other nations

Page 4: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

U.S. is distinctive in its reliance on state and local governments to implement domestic policies:Percent of all government employees working in state & local governments

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 5: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

State and local governments spend most of the money supporting domestic programs in the U.S.Domestic expenditures by different levels of government, 1977-2010

Spending as percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP)

1st year of Obama Administration

Page 6: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

While SLGs spend more, the national government raises more revenues: Government own-source revenues as percent of GDP, 1977-2010

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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National

Page 7: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

National government assistance to state & local governments, as percent of GDP

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 8: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

Different levels of government spending money in different ways, but much overlap tooExpenditures, by level of government, in billions of dollars (2010)

  Federal State Local

Environment/natural resources 45 38 160

Public safety 56 68 160

Education 71 255 617

Transportation 93 161 90

Health 909 444 131

Income support/public welfare 1,706 65 46

Page 9: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

Major elements of Obama Administration’s assertive form of federalism1) Will spend money—and lots of it

2) Can very assertive, perhaps “coercive”

3) Uses competition to make big changes

4) Exercises executive powers, esp. waivers

5) Opportunistic, in support of policy aims; i.e., does not support “federalism” as goal Uses state discretion to advance policies through states Uses state discretion to advance aims where national

coalitions are blocked

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 10: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

Growing challenges to the U.S. federal system as a vehicle for policy change: 1) Weakening state revenue system: state government tax revenues, 1995-2012 (in constant 2011 dollars)

Page 11: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

In addition to decline in state revenues, greater volatility and uncertainty in taxes; budget pressures too

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 12: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

2) Another challenge for U.S. federalism: growing spatial mis-match between resources and needs. Population shifts (percent changes, by age, 2000-2010)

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 13: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

Changes in where social needs are greatest: increasing number of low-income children live in South and Mountain states

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Percent changes in number of low-income children (125 pct of FPL) since 1998

Sources: Census Bureau.

Page 14: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

But the states where the most vulnerable children live have the smallest programs to support them

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Education spending per child

Social policy spending per child in poverty

For more on these issues, see http://www.firstfocus.net/library/reports/children-southwestern-states-and-the-federalism-problem

Page 15: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

3) Deepening divisions among states; growing polarization and divisions even at state level Responses to welfare reform in 1990s vs. health care

reform in 2010—rejection of health care exchanges

Republican governors have also turned down funding for high speed rail

Less pragmatism among governors, especially on the Right; fewer states have divided party government

Large regional differences in financial rules (tax and spending limits)—greatest in Western states

Rockefeller Institute of Government

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Page 16: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

4) Federal assistance to states may be less, and less powerful

Federal assistance to state and local governments is, other than Medicaid, largely discretionary—and that will be under severe pressure

SC decision found a limit on the power of congressional appropriations in requiring states to carry out directives attached to the dollars; hard to know where the line will be drawn

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Page 17: Federalism in the Obama Administration Thomas Gais Director The Rockefeller Institute of Government Skidmore College February 7, 2013

The RockefellerInstitute of Government

The Public Policy Institute of theState University of New York

University at Albany

411 State StreetAlbany, NY 12203-1003

www.rockinst.org

Thomas L. [email protected](518) 443-5831