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The Price of Progress

Public Services, Taxation, and the American Corporate State, 1877 to 1929

R. Rudy Higgens-Evenson

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Between the Civil War and the Great Depression, twin revolutions swept through American business and government. In business, large corporations came to dominate entire sectors and markets. In government, new services and agencies, especially at the city and state levels, sprang up to ameliorate a broad spectrum of social problems. In The Price of Progress, R. Rudy Higgens-Evenson offers a fresh analysis of therelationship between those two revolutions.

Using previously unexploited data from the annual reports of state treasurers and comptrollers, he provides a detailed, empirical assessment...

Between the Civil War and the Great Depression, twin revolutions swept through American business and government. In business, large corporations came to dominate entire sectors and markets. In government, new services and agencies, especially at the city and state levels, sprang up to ameliorate a broad spectrum of social problems. In The Price of Progress, R. Rudy Higgens-Evenson offers a fresh analysis of therelationship between those two revolutions.

Using previously unexploited data from the annual reports of state treasurers and comptrollers, he provides a detailed, empirical assessment of the goods and services provided to citizens, as well as the resources extracted from them, by state governments during the Gilded Age and Progressive Era.Focusing on New York, Massachusetts, California, and Kansas, but including data on 13 other states, his comparative study suggests that the "corporate state" originated in tax policies designed to finance new and innovative government services.

Business and government grew together in a surprising and complex fashion. In the late nineteenth century, services such as mental health care for the needy and free elementary education for all children created new strains on the states' old property tax systems. In order to pay for newly constructed state asylums and schools, states experimented for the first time with corporate taxation as a source of revenue, linking state revenues to the profitability of industries such as railroads and utilities. To control their tax bills, big businessesintensified lobbying efforts in state legislatures, captured important positions in state tax bureaus, and sponsored a variety of government-efficiency reform organizations. The unintended result of corporate taxation—imposed to allow states to fulfill their responsibilities to their citizens—was the creation of increasingly intimate ties between politicians, bureaucrats, corporate leaders, and progressive citizens. By the 1920s, a variety of "corporate states" had proliferated across the nation, each shaped by a particular mix of taxation and public services, each offering a case study in how the business of America, as President Calvin Coolidge put it, became business.

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Reviews

This fine study contributes to our understanding of the growth of centralized authority and government bureaucracy in a nation often described as hostile to such things.

A very welcome addition to scholarship on the history of public finance.

The author documents the evolution, often controversial, of state revenue sources and the eventual emergence of state income and wealth taxes as the principal source of revenue for state expenditures.

The nature of Higgens-Evenson's achievement is to set the terms of the scholarly debate on the relationship between tax policy and the construction of the modern administrative state.

Joseph Schumpeter observed that taxation offers a way into the drama of history, for those who are willing to make the effort. This short book by Higgens-Evenson bears out the claim, for the issues touched on are of great interest and importance.

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Book Details

Publication Date
Status
Available
Trim Size
6
x
9
Pages
184
ISBN
9780801870545
Illustration Description
45 line drawings
Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction.
Chapter 1. Compromise, Corruption, and Confrontation
Chapter 2. Progress, Bit by Bit
Chapter 3. From Charter-Mongering to Catching Corporate Freeloaders
Chapter 4. The

Acknowledgements
Introduction.
Chapter 1. Compromise, Corruption, and Confrontation
Chapter 2. Progress, Bit by Bit
Chapter 3. From Charter-Mongering to Catching Corporate Freeloaders
Chapter 4. The Second Era of Internal Improvements
Chapter 5. Consent, Control, and Centralization
Chapter 6. Giants of History
Chapter 7. The Test of Democracy
Conclusion
Appendix
Notes
Essay on Methods and Sources
Index

Author Bio
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R. Rudy Higgens-Evenson

R. Rudy Higgens-Evenson works for the National Park Service at the Golden Gate National Recreation Area in San Francisco.Tonya K. Flesher, Journal of the American Taxation Association