Sarcouncil Journal of Public Administration and Management

Sarcouncil Journal of Public Administration and Management

An Open access peer reviewed international Journal
Publication Frequency-Bi-Monthly
Publisher Name-SARC Publisher

ISSN Online- 2945-3712
Country of origin-PHILIPPINES
Language- Multilingual

Keywords

Editors

The Mechanics of Federalism through Balancing Power Between National and Local Governments

Keywords: Mechanics of Federalism, Balancing, Exploration ,Structure, Implications.

Abstract: Federalism is a framework of governance based upon the commuting sovereign power between the central and the national governments, but debate has always been arduous regarding machinery that maximizes the results in varied polies. This paper examines the role of constitutional institutions, fiscal policies, and intergovernmental institutions in the mechanical aspects of power distribution by theorizing that the elasticity of cooperative institutions is better than the rigidity of dualistic institutions in the provision of responsive, fair, and stable governance. Based on comparative analysis of four classic federations, the United States (dual federalism), Germany (cooperative), Canada (executive), and India (holding-together), the study breaks down structural differences and the empirical consequences of these differences. The analysis uses a qualitative case study approach, which integrates secondary data in the form of seminal literature such as Kincaid and Dardanelli (2019), Watts (2008), and Mueller (2022). Such indicators include the percentage of legislative centralization across 22 policy areas, autonomy in fiscal management, measures of administrative control, the rate of escalation of intergovernmental disputes, and the World Bank measurement indicators of governance cover 1950-2025. Process-tracing also connects institutional aspects, including Bundesrat veto powers in Germany and equalization transfer in Canada, to performance, and patterns of match against the central hypothesis are tested in this way. Findings confirm cooperative superiority Germany reaches 0.25 dynamic decentralization index with 4 per cent. dispute escalation and 18 point Gini clearing using full fiscal parity, versus 0.10 index, 12 per cent. dispute escalation and partial equalization giving small 8 point equity gains in the U.S. Canada sets regional inequality to 90% fiscal homogenization, reducing the secession chances of Quebec, whereas the recent fiscal centralization of GST in India (2017) undermines state sovereignty by 1015, increasing the tensions in the fiscal relationship between North and South. These trends are visualized in terms of comparative tables that indicate that cooperative institutions should be involved in policy innovation, conflict reduction, and welfare efficiency. Theoretically, the results intersect between the bargaining theory of Riker and the decentralization theory of Oates, such that the adaptive equilibria are quantified.

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