The federal system of government in the U.S. divides powers among national and state governments through delegated, concurrent, and reserved powers. Delegated powers are specifically granted to the federal government by the Constitution, such as regulating interstate commerce and conducting foreign affairs. Concurrent powers are shared by both federal and state governments, including the ability to tax and enforce laws. Reserved powers, on the other hand, are those not explicitly granted to the federal government and are retained by the states, such as regulating education and local governance.
reserved powers are powers reserved to the state Delegated powers are powers reserved to the federal government and Concurrent powers are powers reserved to both state and federal government
What are concurrent, delegated and reserved powers and how do they apply to the relationship between state and federal government?
In the US government, the power of coining money is delegated or expressed.
The difference is that Delegated is when powers are given only to national government by the constitution. Reserved is when powers are given to only the states by the constitution, and Concurrent is when power are shared by states and national government according to the constitution.
Delegated powers are powers the government has. One example of a delegated power is making peace treaties. Reserved powers are powers states have. One example of a reserved power is laws concerning marriage. Concurrent powers are powers the Government and the state have together. One example of this is public schools.
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A delegated power is given by the national government. A reserved power is reserved specifically for a state. And a concurrent power is given by both a state and the national government. I'm pretty sure this is right.
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Is it concurrent, delegated, or reserved?? The power to build roads is a concurrent power.