Title: Federalism: An Overview
1Federalism An Overview
- Sujit Choudhry
- Faculty of Law, University of Toronto
- April 2007
2Credits
- George Anderson, Forum of Federations
- Professor Yash Ghai, UNDP
- Dr. Jill Cottrell, UNDP
- Sheri Meyerhoffer, CBA
3Federalisms increasing importance
- 40 of the worlds people live in federations
- 25 federations
- Federations from coming together of separate
units (e.g. Canada, United States, Australia) - Federations from coming apart of unitary states
(e.g. Belgium, Ethiopia, Spain, United Kingdom) - Federalism adopted in post-conflict environments
(Bosnia, Iraq and Sudan) proposed in other
post-conflict cases (e.g. Cyprus, Sri Lanka)
4The Worlds Federations
- Argentina, Australia, Austria, Belgium,
Bosnia/Herzegovina, Brazil, Canada, Comoros,
Ethiopia, Germany, India, Iraq, Malaysia, Mexico,
Micronesia, Nigeria, Pakistan, Russia, St
Kitts/Nevis, South Africa, Spain, Sudan,
Switzerland, United Arab Emirates, United States
of America, Venezuela
5Common Features of Federations I
- 2 orders of government, national government for
entire country and territorially defined
governments for regions - Written constitution formally allocates
legislative fiscal powers to both orders of
government - Each level of government possesses legislative
executive powers - Each level of government has independent
relationship with electorate federal
legislature executive not entirely chosen by
regions and vice versa - Constitutional provisions on federalism cannot be
amended without substantial consent from
constituent units as well as central government
6Common Features of Federations II
- Institutions or representation of regional views
(as opposed to simple representation by
population) within the central government - Umpire or procedure (involving courts or
referendums or an upper house) to rule on
constitutional disputes between governments - Processes and institutions for facilitating or
conducting relations between governments.
7Federation vs. Confederation
- Confederation
- central government has no independent
constitutional authority, derives powers from
constituent units - central government appointed by constituent units
- USA and Switzerland originally weak unstable
- Federation
- federal government derives power from
constitution - federal government direct relationship with
electorate
8Federation vs. Decentralization
- Decentralization in unitary states (e.g. U.K.)
- central government creates, and delegates power
to, regional authorities - regional governments can be directly elected
- regional government have substantial
responsibilities - can be abolished/powers modified through ordinary
legislation - Federation
- Regional authorities derive status powers from
constitution, not from federal government - Constitution cannot be amended by federal
government with simple majority in legislature
9Why Federalism?
- Democratic rationales
- Participation
- easier to participate in democratic politics in
smaller communities - Accountability
- greater control because regional government
directly accountable to regional majority, which
may be a minority at the national level - officials more likely to live in localities where
impact of policies felt - Responsiveness
- regional majorities can tailor public policies to
meet their needs and circumstances vs. uniform
national policy - Policy experimentation
- Policy experiments at regional level
- If successful, can be applied by other regions
- If unsuccessful, costs of error limited to one
province - Accommodating ethnic, linguistic or religious
minorities - Regional minorities may be local majorities
- Issues language, education, legal systems,
religious rights - NB internal minorities territorially dispersed
minorities
10Who Does What and How I
- Two different models to distributing powers
- Classical Australia, Canada, United States
- exclusive areas of competence
- each establishes and administers own programs
- some concurrent jurisdiction ? paramountcy rules
- Inter-locking Germany, South Africa
- many shared competences
- Germany federal legislature enacts framework,
regional legislature fleshes out detail, OR - South Africa concurrent jurisdiction with
provincial paramountcy except when the national
interest is at stake - regional governments administer federal
legislated programs
11Who Does What and How II
- Practical effect of distribution of power between
strongly influenced by who controls government
revenues - Own source revenues key to autonomy
- Federal revenue raising capacity gt expenditure
needs, so fiscal transfers, conditional or
unconditional
12Who Does What and How III
- Distribution of legislative, fiscal powers
normally set out in Constitution - BUT powers of individual constituent unit
governments can be substantially determined
through bilateral negotiations with the federal
government (Russia, Spain) - BUT some federations permit delegation of
legislative responsibility between orders of
government (South Africa, India)
13Who Does What and How IV
- Every federation allocates power differently, but
some commonalities - Always federal
- Currency
- Defence
- Treaty implementation
- Usually federal
- External trade (occasionally concurrent)
- Inter-state trade (occasionally concurrent)
- Major infrastructure (sometimes
concurrent/regional) - Customs/excise taxes
14Who Does What and How V
- Usually Regional
- Intra-state trade (sometimes concurrent)
- Primary Secondary education (sometimes
concurrent) - Health care (sometimes concurrent)
- Public health (sometimes concurrent)
- Municipal affairs
- Usually Concurrent or Joint
- Environment
- Courts
- Police
- Corporate and personal taxes
- No Clear Pattern
- Mineral resources
- Agriculture
- Criminal law
15Political Institutions of Federal Government I
- Federalism self-rule and shared rule
- Institutions of shared rule as important to
success of federalism as institutions of
self-rule - Federal government has control over policy files
which affect citizens in regions - Governments must interact because jurisdiction
overlaps, and federal government actions may
support/undermine regional governments
16Political Institutions of Federal Government II
- Federations usually offset representation by
population in legislatures through bicameralism - different representative principles
- lower house closer to representation by
population - upper house formula based on constituent units
varies - elected/appointed in different ways
- lower house elected
- upper house direct election (United States)
indirect election (India, South Africa) regional
governments (Germany) - quite similar/very distinct powers
- US, Argentina, Brazil, Switzerland, Canada
absolute vote - Germany absolute veto on provincial matters,
suspensive veto OW - India, Nigeria suspensive veto, override with
joint sitting - Austria, Malaysia, Spain suspensive veto
17Political Institutions of Federal Government III
- Method of selection, powers ? determines impact
of upper house - directly elected representatives usually vote
more along party than regional lines (though they
may represent regional parties) - in parliamentary regimes, the lower house is
usually the confidence chamber, which
determines who forms the government
18Political Institutions of Federal Government IV
- Political party system
- Will determine how federation will operate
- Enormous variation
- National parties
- Functionally connected to regional parties
- Functionally independent from regional parties
- Regional parties
- At national level
- At regional level
19The Legal Pillars of Federalism I
- federalism requires written constitution which
allocates power to each level of government - jurisdictional disputes will arise which turn on
conflicting interpretations of constitution - e.g. insurance regulation ? property and
contract or trade and commerce? - Need for process to settle jurisdictional
disputes federalism needs an umpire
20The Legal Pillars of Federalism II
- most federations judiciary is constitutional
arbiter - politically controversial position will be
accused of playing politics - conditions for judicial success
- courts, especially apex court viewed as
legitimate impartial - procedure for selecting judges competence
consultation with/consent of constituent units
legislative oversight - federal nature of country reflected in court
(e.g. Canada) - Judicial independence security of tenure,
financial security - broader commitment to rule of law
21The Legal Pillars of Federalism III
- Emergency Powers and Federalism
- some federations provide powers to central
government to override normal constitutional
arrangements in emergencies - can override federal division of powers
- abused to undermine constitutional government
- e.g. India and Presidents rule
- in more established federations with such
provisions, political evolution of country has
constrained their use or rendered them obsolete
22The Legal Pillars of Federalism IV
- Amendment
- constitutions entrenched typically require
special procedures and majorities for amendment - amendments affecting constituent units usually
require some measure of consent by their
legislatures and executives or populations - BUT degree of consent varies
- constitutions can be difficult to amend
alternatives to formal constitutional change
frequently sought to adapt federations to
changing circumstances
23Intergovernmental Relations I
- considerable interdependence b/w two orders of
government and between regions - Especially in inter-locking federations
- politicians, civil servants, public all try to
influence actions in other jurisdictions
intergovernmental relations fundamental feature
of politics in federation - Networks of officials
- courts not only body to settle intergovernmental
disputes - Many disputes within constitutionally accepted
boundaries - e.g. federal funding of provincial programs
- most issues in dispute between governments do not
turn on differences regarding constitution
24Intergovernmental Relations II
- major determinant of intergovernmental relations
power of executive relative to legislature - if governments dominated by the executive, then
executive federalism becomes key
intergovernmental process - e.g. regular meetings of heads of governments,
civil servants - if legislatures play more independent role, then
more diffuse pattern of intergovernmental
relations
25Intergovernmental Relations III
- Other determinants
- effectiveness of federal role for upper house
in central government - number of units
- Differing intergovernmental styles
- central government quite dominant can be
coercive in relations with regions, OR - more equality and greater emphasis on
consultation and negotiated agreements
26Federalism Conclusions
- federalism has proven itself in a number of
long-established and prosperous countries - BUT
- federalism cannot guarantee democracy or good
governance any more than unitary government can - federalism not inherently superior form of
democracy - value depends on circumstances
- Federalism has important place on menu of
constitutional options, but not only option
27The Relevance of Federalism
- Federalism works best where
- broad respect for rule of law
- culture of tolerance accommodation between
population groups - embracing diversity as what defines country
better than tolerance for stability of federation - significant elements of shared identity