74 Chapter 3Chapter 3 || Federa lismFedera lism
National and State Responsibilities
NUTS
& B O LT S
3.1
National Government Powers State Government Powers Concurrent Powers
Print money Issue licenses Collect taxes
Regulate interstate commerce and
international trade
Regulate intrastate (within the state)
Businesses
Build roads
Make treaties and conduct foreign policy Conduct elections Borrow money
Declare war Establish local governments Establish courts
Provide an army and navy Ratify amendments to the Constitution Make and enforce laws
Establish post offices Promote public health and safety Charter banks and corporations
Make laws necessary and proper to carry out
these powers
May exert powers the Constitution does not
delegate to the national government or does not
prohibit the states from using
Spend money for the general welfare;
take private property for public
purposes, with just compensation
Powers Denied to the National Government Powers Denied to State Governments
May not violate the Bill of Rights May not enter into treaties with other countries
May not impose export taxes among states May not print money
May not use money from the Treasury
without an appropriation from Congress
May not tax imports or exports
May not change state boundaries May not interfere with contracts
May not suspend a person’s rights without due process
political subunits. The United Kingdom, for example, is made up of England, Scotland,
Wales, and Northern Ireland. In 1998, the British Parliament created a new Scottish
government and gave it authority in a broad range of areas. However, Parliament
retained the right to unilaterally dissolve the Scottish government; therefore, the
subunit (Scotland) is not fully autonomous. This type of government, in which power is
centralized at the national level, is a unitary government. Unitary governments are
the most common in the modern world (about 80 percent); other examples include
Israel, Italy, France, Japan, and Sweden. Although U.S.-style federalism is not as
common, Australia, Austria, Canada, and Germany, among others, share this form
of government.
At the opposite end of the spectrum is a confederal government, in which the
states have most of the power. This was the first type of government in the United
States under the Articles of Confederation, but there are few modern examples.
One is Switzerland, where 26 cantons (state-level governments) exercise largely
independent policy-making powers except in the areas of foreign policy and control
of the armed forces.
unitary government
A system in which the national,
centralized government holds
ultimate authority. It is the most
common form of government in the
world.
confederal government
A form of government in which states
hold power over a limited national
government.
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