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Nonprofits and Government provides students and practitioners with
the first comprehensive, interdisciplinary, research-based inquiry
into the collaborative and conflicting relationship between
nonprofits and government at all levels: local, national, and
international. The contributors-all leading experts-explore how
government regulates, facilitates, finances, and oversees nonprofit
activities, and how nonprofits, in turn, try to shape the way
government serves the public and promotes the civic, religious, and
cultural life of the country. Buttressed by rigorous scholarship, a
solid grasp of history, and practical ideas, this 360-degree
assessment frees discussion of the nonprofit sector's relationship
to government from both wishful and insular thinking. The third
edition, addresses the tremendous changes that created both
opportunities and challenges for nonprofit-government relations
over the past ten years, including new audit requirements, tax and
regulatory changes, consequences of the Affordable Care Act and the
Great Recession, and new nonprofit and philanthropic forms.
Contributions by Alan J. Abramson, Mark Blumberg, Elizabeth T.
Boris, Erica Broadus, Evelyn Brody, John Casey, Roger Colinvaux,
Joseph J. Cordes , Teresa Derrick-Mills, Nathan Dietz, Lewis Faulk,
Marion Fremont-Smith, Saunji D. Fyffe, Virginia Hodgkinson,
Beatrice Leydier, Cindy M. Lott, Jasmine McGinnis Johnson, Brice
McKeever, Susan D. Phillips, Steven Rathgeb Smith, Ellen Steele, C.
Eugene Steuerle, Dennis R. Young, and Mary K. Winkler.
Income from capital receives uneven treatment in both the tax
system and the loan markets. This affects almost every investment
decision make by the individuals, business, and government and
causes major disruptions in the economy. In this book C. Eugene
Steuerle shows how the misallocation of capital results from the
interaction of tax laws, the operation of the market for loanable
funds, and inflation. He first analyzes the taxation of capital
income, focusing on the distortions caused by tax arbitrage and on
inflation-induced discriminations among both taxpayer and
borrowers. The author then applies this analysis to several related
issues. He concludes with a reform agenda that calls for the
adoption of a broader-based, flatter-rate income tax.
C. Eugene Steuerle, one of the country's most influential
economists, offers an insider's look at tax policy based on a
quarter century of working with officials of all political stripes.
Steuerle outlines the principles of taxation and the early postwar
period before proceeding to the tax policy battles that began with
the Reagan revolution and continue today. Those expecting a simple
story of triumph and defeat may be surprised. Rather than moving
toward consensus and progress, tax policy history has been messy,
repetitive, and often rancorous. Yet evolution-and even
revolution-do occur. The second edition has been updated with a
look at tax policy during the George W. Bush presidency.
Nonprofits and Government provides students and practitioners with
the first comprehensive, interdisciplinary, research-based inquiry
into the collaborative and conflicting relationship between
nonprofits and government at all levels: local, national, and
international. The contributors-all leading experts-explore how
government regulates, facilitates, finances, and oversees nonprofit
activities, and how nonprofits, in turn, try to shape the way
government serves the public and promotes the civic, religious, and
cultural life of the country. Buttressed by rigorous scholarship, a
solid grasp of history, and practical ideas, this 360-degree
assessment frees discussion of the nonprofit sector's relationship
to government from both wishful and insular thinking. The third
edition, addresses the tremendous changes that created both
opportunities and challenges for nonprofit-government relations
over the past ten years, including new audit requirements, tax and
regulatory changes, consequences of the Affordable Care Act and the
Great Recession, and new nonprofit and philanthropic forms.
Contributors include Alan J. Abramson, Elizabeth T. Boris, Erica
Broadus, Evelyn Brody, John Casey, Roger Colinvaux, Joseph J.
Cordes , Teresa Derrick-Mills, Nathan Dietz, Lewis Faulk, Marion
Fremont-Smith, Saunji D. Fyffe, Virginia Hodgkinson, Beatrice
Leydier, Cindy M. Lott, Jasmine McGinnis Johnson, Brice McKeever,
Susan D. Phillips, Steven Rathgeb Smith, Ellen Steele, C. Eugene
Steuerle, Dennis R. Young, and Mary K. Winkler.
This book discusses the economic effects of health care reform on
the federal budget, the labor market, income distribution,
innovation, and the adminstration of health care.
For decades, the use of vouchers has been widely debated. But
often lost in the heat of debate is the fact that vouchers are just
another tool in the government's tool chest, a restricted subsidy
that falls somewhere between the extremes of cash and direct
government provision of services. The instrument itself is not new
--the 1944 GI Bill of Rights was a voucher, and vouchers for food,
college aid, and housing have been in place for decades. Until now,
however, the study of vouchers has been restricted to a few
controversial applications. This volume, which grew out of a
conference sponsored by the Brookings Institution, the Urban
Institute, and the Committee for Economic Development, fills the
gap, offering a framework for comparative analysis of specific
policy issues related to vouchers. Its 16 essays address the
economics, politics, and legal issues of voucher use and explore
how vouchers are currently employed in the United States and abroad
for education, child care, job training, housing, and health care.
C. Eugene Steuerle is a senior fellow at the Urban Institute and
has worked under four different U.S. presidents on a variety of
reform issues in such areas as social security, budget, tax, and
health policy. Robert D. Reischauer, a senior fellow in Economic
Studies at the Brookings Institution, was director of the
Congressional Budget Office from 1989 to 1995. George Peterson is a
senior fellow at the Urban Institute; from 1976 to 1985 he directed
the Institute's Public Finance Research Center. Van Doorn Ooms,
senior vice president and director of research at the Committee for
Economic Development, was formerly executive director for policy
and chief economist of the Committee on the Budget, U.S. House of
Representatives, 1989-1990, and was the Budget Committee's chief
economist from 1981 to 1988.
This work offers warnings about the problems that all countries
will face as their populations age and increasing globalisation
reduces the power of individual countries to insulate their
economies and their policies from the effects of their countries'
actions.
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