Mid Term Papers Home  |  Join  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy  |  Login  |  Logout
  Search Keywords:  


Acceptance Essays
American History
Anatomy
Animal Science
Anthropology
Arts
Astronomy
Aviation
Beauty
Biographies
Book Reports
Business
Computers
Creative Writing
Current Events
Economics
Education
Engineering
English
Environmental Science
Ethics
European History
Film
Foreign Languages
Geography
Government
Health
History
Human Sexuality
Legal Issues
Marketing
Mathematics
Medicine
Miscellaneous
Music
Mythology
Philosophy
Physiology
Poetry
Political Science
Politics
Psychology
Religion
Science
Shakespeare
Social Issues
Sociology
Speech
Sports
Supernatural
Television
Technology
Theater
Zoology

US Postal Service Monopoly

Below is a free term papers summary of the paper "US Postal Service Monopoly." If you sign up, you can be reading the rest of this term papers in under two minutes. Registered users should login to view this term paper.

Term Paper TitleUS Postal Service Monopoly
# of Words2804
# of Pages (250 words per page double spaced)11.22
US Postal Service Monopoly

     As many Federal departments and agencies lurch into an era of
running without funds, the leaders of both parties of Congress are
spending less and less time searching for a compromise to balance the
budget, and more and more time deciding how to use it to their
advantage on the campaign trail. Meanwhile money is easily borrowed to
pay for government overhead. In an attempt to change this, on June 29,
Congress voted in favor of HConRes67 that called for a 7 year plan to
balance the Federal Budget by the year 2002 (Hager 1899). This would
be done by incorporating $894 billion in spending cuts by 2002, with a
projected 7 year tax cut of $245 billion. If this plan were
implemented, in the year 2002, the U.S. Government would have the
first balanced budget since 1969.
      There is doubt by citizens that a balanced budget will become
reality.  A recent Gallop Poll from January, 1996 showed the budget as
the #1 concern among taxpayers, but 4/5 of those interviewed said they
doubt the GOP will do the job (Holding 14). Meanwhile, an ABC poll
from November reported that over 70% of those polled disapprove of the
current performance by Congress, and most blamed politicians for
failure to take action (Cloud 3709). These accusations of failure to
follow through come with historical proof that Congress and Clinton
have failed to compromise and resolve the issue. After all, current
budget plans are dependent on somewhat unrealistic predictions of
avoiding such catastrophes as recession, national disasters, etc., and
include minor loopholes. History has shown that every budget agreement
that has failed was too lax. One might remember the
Gramm-Rudman-Hollings bill that attempted to balance the budget, but
left too many exemptions, and was finally abandoned in 1990
(Weinberger 33).
      So after a pain-staking trial for GOP Republicans to create,
promote, and pass their budget, as promised on campaign trail 94,
Clinton rejected the very bill he demanded. This essentially brought
the federal budget back to square one. Clinton thought such a demand
on Republicans to produce a budget would produce inner-party quarrels
and cause the GOP to implode. Instead, they produced a fiscal budget
that passed both houses of Congress, only to be stalemated by a
stubborn Democratic President Clinton. Meanwhile, Clinton bounced back
with a CBO scored plan with lighter, less risky cuts t...

This is not the end of the termpaper! Register below to see the complete version of this term paper.

Membership Plans Credit Card Check
1 month membership
3 month membership
(You Save 50%)
6 month membership
(You Save 67%)

Home  |  Login  |  Logout  |  Join  |  Privacy Policy  |  Contact Us
Copyright © 2002-2007 Mid Term Papers. All rights reserved. This term papers website is used for research purposes only.
If you have forgotten your username or password, please click here.
If you like to cancel your account, please click here.

1 - 2 - 3 - 4 - 5 - 6 - 7 - 8 - 9 - 10 - 11 - 12 - 13 - 14 - 15 - 16 - 17 - 18 - 19 - 20 - 21 - 22