Respuesta :

Answer:

B.) Reduced.

Explanation:

The Reagan administration is sometimes thought to have reversed the  growth of the welfare state by eliminating or shrinking welfare programs at all  levels of government and by removing new re-distributional initiatives from  the national agenda. This assault on the welfare state was motivated at least in  part by philosophical considerations. Leaving aside questions of cost and efficacy, the new administration aimed to confine welfare payments to the “deserving poor” (the aged, children, the permanently disabled, and others who  could not be expected to enter the work force) in order to reduce the distorting  effects of welfare both in labor markets and on the moral character of recipients. In practice, the administration sought to reduce payments to those with  relatively high incomes by tightening eligibility standards and by reducing  benefit levels on various programs (Palmer and Sawhill 1982).

Answer:

a) expanded

Explanation:

AIDS, Abortion, Drug Abuse, Education, Urban Crisis, Equal Rights