Out of stock
$30.77 RRP $38.46 Website price saving $7.69 (20%)
Notify me by email when this item is available

For information on how we process your data, read our Privacy Policy

Description

Effective government requires that institutions be strong enough to control the efforts of organized, entrenched special interests in favor of the broader interests shared but poorly articulated by most members of society. Recent changes in our institutions and in the problems they face raise doubts about the capacity of contemporary American government to handle these parochial forces. Congress has seemingly become more fragmented, the presidency more politicized, and the bureaucracy more labyrinthine. After a decade or more of trying, our institutions have not mastered a variety of problems—the budget deficit, the trade imbalance, and energy insecurity—that threaten society's general interest in an economic future as bright as its past.
Can the Government Govern? argues that the problem is inherently and substantially institutional and discusses the politically difficult requirements for overcoming it. In so doing, this volume opens the debate and public discussion necessary for change. Contributors include John E. Chubb writing on energy policy, David B. Yoffie on trade policy, Paul E. Peterson and Mark Rom on macroeconomic policy, Samuel Kernell on the presidency, Kenneth A. Shesple on Congress, and Terry M. Moe on the bureaucracy.

Product details

Published 01 Dec 2010
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 349
ISBN 9780815707141
Imprint Brookings Institution Press
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

John E. Chubb

Anthology Editor

Paul E. Peterson

Related Titles

Get 30% off in the May sale - for one week only

Environment: Staging