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Economic History of the Relationship Between Congress and NASA: A Case Study of the Apollo Program

In: Public Choice Analyses of American Economic History

Author

Listed:
  • Leonid Krasnozhon

    (Loyola University New Orleans)

  • William Maye

    (CoreData Research)

Abstract

We examine the principal-agent relationship between Congress and the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) during the Apollo program using an application of the congressional dominance theory. NASA received 4.4% of the federal budget, the highest share in its history, in 1966 but received approximately one percent less than a decade later. We consider how political incentives such as presidential favoritism and congressional jockeying affected NASA’s funding throughout the Space Race and up to the closure of the Apollo program in 1975. Using retention rates of the House Subcommittee on Manned Space Flight as a proxy for NASA’s political value, we find that the appropriation amount is an accurate measure of an agency’s political value but that the difference between an agency’s budget request and the congressional response is an inaccurate measure. We argue the congressional dominance model explains a general pattern in the relationship between Congress and NASA during the Space Race though one of the propositions of the model does not fit our historical analytical narrative.

Suggested Citation

  • Leonid Krasnozhon & William Maye, 2019. "Economic History of the Relationship Between Congress and NASA: A Case Study of the Apollo Program," Studies in Public Choice, in: Joshua Hall & Marcus Witcher (ed.), Public Choice Analyses of American Economic History, chapter 0, pages 103-116, Springer.
  • Handle: RePEc:spr:stpchp:978-3-030-11313-1_7
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-11313-1_7
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