Executive Branch.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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Popular pressure for increased regulation of businesses increased in the early 20th century.
This pressure led to laws such as the Pure Food and Drug Acts, and the1906 Meat Inspection Act.
Pressure for reform also led to creation of the Federal Trade Commission in 1914 to prevent unfair business practices.
Worldwide depressionin the 1930s brought new demands that government take a more activist role in regulating businesses, protecting workers, and ensuring national economic stability.
Aspart of the reform agenda of President Franklin Roosevelt, known as the New Deal, government departments grew quickly, and Congress and the executive branchcreated many new independent regulatory agencies.
A number of new agencies, including the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Environmental Protection Agency, were created in the 1960s and1970s.
These agencies were established to enforce laws and implement regulations in areas such as air and water pollution, vehicle safety, workplace safety,prescription drugs, and bank lending practices.
Few of the new regulations have been repealed, but recently critics have argued that the government should cut backon such regulations and eliminate the agencies that carry them out.
IV EXECUTIVE AUTHORITY AROUND THE WORLD
As in the United States, most countries rely upon large executive bureaucracies to carry out laws and enforce rules.
However, the United States government isproportionately smaller than the governments of comparable nations—for example, Britain, Canada, France, or Germany.
There are several reasons for this.
First, the United States has a tradition of limited government.
From colonial times to the present, Americans have distrusted government, preferring to let privateindividuals, firms, and groups operate with a minimum of governmental interference.
Second, U.S.
citizens resist taxes even more fiercely than people in other nations.
The 1773 Boston Tea Party, for example, was a protest against taxes levied by theBritish on a variety of products, including tea.
More recently, President George H.
W.
Bush appealed to voters during the 1988 presidential campaign by promising “Nonew taxes!” As a result of this resistance to high taxes, Americans pay lower taxes than citizens of most other industrialized countries.
Third, local and state governments perform many services valued by citizens, including policing services, fire safety, and even welfare programs.
These entities haveseen steady growth, in contrast to the federal government, which has had a shrinking workforce and little increase in spending.
The executive branch in the United States is also unusual in its separation from the legislature and the judiciary.
In many other countries these powers are closelyintegrated.
In India, for example, executive agencies are supervised by cabinet ministers who are also members of the parliament (national legislature).
See also Separation of Powers.
Contributed By:Roger H.
DavidsonMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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