Public Policy and the Two States of Kansas
Edited by H. George Frederickson
216 pages, 58 tables, 1 figure, 1 map, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0665-8, $17.95
From 1974 to 1991, while the national
inflation rate edged just over 100%, state government spending
in Kansas grew a phenomenal 411%. During the same period, the
state's federal revenue share declined from 23.9% to 19.1%. As
a consequence, the average Kansas taxpayers have seen their yearly
state and local tax bills increase from an average of $530 in
1974 to $1,676 in 1991.
How is this money spent? What is the state government doing
with it and why? Investigating these and related questions, the
authors in this book address the most pressing public policy
issues confronting Kansas today.
They survey general revenue and demographic issues and then
analyze the five policy areas--education, prisons, transportation,
welfare, and health--that consume 84.3% of the state budget and
that, in terms of both cost and controversy, rank highest on
the state's policy agenda. Emerging from this analysis is the
disturbing consensus that Kansas is an increasingly divided state:
one urban, younger and wealthier; the other rural, older, and
poorer.
Managing the policy problems of such a state has become much
more difficult and has resulted in virtually "impossible
jobs" for the people charged with implementing approved
policies. Responding to these problems, the authors offer ways
to simplify the issues and suggest policy changes that could
improve the well-being of all Kansans.
H. GEORGE FREDERICKSON is professor public administration
at the University of Kansas. He is author of New Public Administration
and coeditor of Public Administration and Public Policy.
CONTRIBUTORS: William R. Arnold, Julie Bundt, Darwin
Daicoff, Raymond G. Davis, Dimitrios S. Dendrinos, H. George
Frederickson, Charles E. Krider, Dorothy C. Miller, and Ann Weick
|