Passing the Buck

Congress, the Budget, and Deficits

Jasmine Farrier author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:The University Press of Kentucky

Published:30th Sep '04

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Passing the Buck cover

In the past thirty years, Congress has dramatically changed its response to unpopular deficit spending. While the landmark Congressional Budget Act of 1974 tried to increase congressional budgeting powers, new budget processes created in the 1980s and 1990s were all explicitly designed to weaken member, majority, and institutional budgeting prerogatives. These later reforms shared the premise that Congress cannot naturally forge balanced budgets without new automatic mechanisms and enhanced presidential oversight. So Democratic majorities in Congress gave new budgeting powers to Presidents Reagan and Bush, and then Republicans did the same for President Clinton.

Passing the Buck examines how Congress is increasing delegation of a wide variety of powers to the president in recent years. Jasmine Farrier assesses why institutional ambition in the early 1970s turned into institutional ambivalence about whether Congress is equipped to handle its constitutional duties.

A timely and compelling example of first-rate scholarship. - Lawrence C. Dodd

ISBN: 9780813123356

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

296 pages