0 national government from a single important city rather than local government
It is evident that a central government acquires immense power when united to administrative centralization.
It was thought by many that there should be some powerful central government to control all the States.
The central government exempted the Roman citizen who settled in a provincial town from the local taxes.
The central government is to bear twenty-five percent of the cost of equipment and lend another twenty-five percent to start the enterprise.
They are divided into several independent bands, united under no central government, and acknowledge no common head.
The central government also considered, but did not seriously pursue, measures to push more public sector responsibilities onto state and local governments.
The financial imbalance between central and local government requires the central government to guarantee financial resources to local governments.
More efficient steering of national grant programs has become a central strategy of the central government to reduce the high level of its deficit.