Choices about budget priorities are arguably the most important made by the federal government, profoundly affecting the well-being of citizens. Bruce Jansson documents how presidents from FDR to Clinton have made ill-advised choices that wasted trillions of dollars. Going beyond charges of corruption or bureaucratic waste, the book is an eye-opening exposé revealing innumerable useless projects (military as well as civilian), unnecessary tax concessions, and the use of interest payments to cover deficit spending, among other costly mistakes. Using Office of Management and Budget projections through 2004, Jansson shows how the madness continues—and how an informed electorate can put an end to it.
Price: $37.00
Pages: 496
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Publication Date:
04 September 2002
ISBN: 9780231114332
Format: Paperback
BISACs:
HISTORY / United States / General
This isn't a polemical book, it's a somber one that makes you realize how routinely we've come to mistake absurd polemics for common sense.
Bruce S. Jansson is the author of Social Policy: From Theory to Political Practice, The Reluctant Welfare State, and many other books and articles on social policy and welfare. He teaches at the University of Southern California and lives in Los Angeles.
Preface
1. Failed National Priorities from FDR to Clinton
2. Roosevelt as Magician
3. Roosevelt's Dilemma
4. The Conservatives' Revenge
5. Truman's Nightmare
6. Truman's Bombshells
7. Eisenhower's Ambivalence and Kennedy's Obsession
8. Johnson's Policy Gluttony
9. Nixon's Megalomania
10. Reagan's Fantasies
11. Reagan's Gordian Knot
12. Bush's Myopia
13. Clinton as Backpedaler and Counterpuncher
14. Clinton Boxes with Reagan's Shadow
15. On the Magnitude of Failed National Priorities
Notes
Collections, Oral Histories, Interviews
Bibliography
Index