Even the experts can't agree on the total number of federal government agencies, commissions, and departments.
Most estimates suggest there are probably more than 2,000 of these. They each have an area of specialization — some much broader than others — but their duties often overlap, making administration more difficult. To complicate things even more, many agencies have counterparts at the state and local level. Its size, complexity, and overlapping responsibilities leave the federal bureaucracy open to constant attempts to reorganize and streamline.
Congress has the power to create, organize, and disband all federal agencies. Most of them are under the control of the President, although few of them actually have direct contact with the White House. So, the bureaucracy has two masters — Congress and the President. The bureaucracy generally falls into four broad types: Cabinet departments, government corporations, independent agencies, and regulatory commissions
This can either be Louis Thurstone's Primary Mental Abilities or Howard Gardner's Multiple Intelligence. Both can support this premise because it illustrates that intelligence is not general unlike the theory proposed by Charles Spearman. In Thurstone's and Gardner's theories, a person can e intelligent in one aspect and not on another. This is because there are multiple areas of intelligence and it is not rarely possible for a person to excel in every area.
<span>The correct answer is limited.
A limited government is that in which everyone including the ruling class are subject to the law of the state. The Philippines is a democratic country where the leader and people's representatives are elected through popular vote. </span>