American Decades
Spending at the State and Local Levels
State Bureaucracy.
Throughout his two terms as president, Eisenhower worked to curb the size of government. But an entirely separate layer of government bureaucracy had grown at the state and local levels. In 1950 only three states—New York, Pennsylvania, and California—had general revenues and borrowing over $1 billion; state governments' total revenue and borrowing exceeded $13 billion, with tax revenues topping $11.8 billion. By 1959 seven states exceeded $1 billion in revenues and borrowing, and California hit a whopping $3 billion in revenues. Even states traditionally considered "poor," such as Mississippi, took in more than $320 million. By 1960 general revenues and borrowing by the states exceeded $27 billion, of which taxes accounted for only $18 billion.
Local and State Spending.
States dramatically increased their spending on highways over the decade, going from $567 million in 1950 to more than $7.3...
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1950's Government and Politics
- Overview
-
Topics in the News
- Cold War: The Bomb
- Cold War: The Korean Conflict
- Cold War: Sputnik
- Government and Business
- Government and Education
- Nationagl Politics: Election 1950
- National Politics: Republican Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1952
- National Politics: Election 1952
- National Politics: Election 1954
- National Pollitics: Democratic Primaries and Convention 1956
- National Politics: Republican Convention 1956
- National Politics: Election 1956
- National Politics: Election 1958
- The Press and the Presidency
- Spending and the Federal Government
- Spending at the State and Local Levels
- Headline Makers
- People in the News
- Deaths
- Publications
- Important Events in Government and Politics, 1950–1959
