Abstract

lated programs of federal assistance have attempted to close the gap between redevelopment areas and the economically flourishing parts of the nation in three ways: they offer technical expertise which distressed areas have proved unable to supply for themselves, and special incentives for firms to expand into areas which they have hitherto avoided or would otherwise find unappealing, and they augment financial aid to undertake urban renewal and manpower training efforts. The major deficiency in an otherwise creative piece of legislation was its failure to recognize that 1965 was not 1961. By the mid-1960's it had become apparent that national prosperity was helping in many redevelopment areas to reduce unemployment to the national rates of the late 1950's

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