CHAPTER 9 BUREAUCRACY: WHAT NOBODY WANTS BUT EVERYBODY NEEDS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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CHAPTER 9 BUREAUCRACY: WHAT NOBODY WANTS BUT EVERYBODY NEEDS

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Management of public programs and institutions. Develop and implement public policy ... Rationalism: Policy as Maximum Social Gain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: CHAPTER 9 BUREAUCRACY: WHAT NOBODY WANTS BUT EVERYBODY NEEDS


1
CHAPTER 9BUREAUCRACYWHAT NOBODY WANTS BUT
EVERYBODY NEEDS
  • A necessary evil

2
Why should we care?
  • Pervasive
  • Do you exist without bureaucracy?
  • All levels of government
  • Knowledge of affairs of state
  • Unelected officials making decisions regarding
    everyday behavior

3
Why should we care? (contd)
  • Evaluative purposes
  • Judge efficiency of public programs
  • Influence public policy

4
What is public administration/bureaucracy?
  • All government activity
  • Management of public programs and institutions
  • Develop and implement public policy
  • Government agencies responding to citizen demands
  • Who gets what, when, and how
  • Allocation of societal resources

5
Bureaucracy
  • Concentrated government authority ensures neutral
    competency
  • Departments and agencies called bureaus
  • Hierarchical
  • Division of labor
  • Formal rules and procedures (SOPs)
  • Professionalization
  • Maintenance of files and records
  • Career-oriented staff
  • Provide expertise

6
Bureaucratic politics
  • Public administration concerns political decision
    making i.e. who gets what
  • Bureaucratic interaction creates an inherently
    political context
  • Ambiguous goals
  • Value-laden environment
  • Competition over autonomy and resources

7
Bureaucratic politics (contd)
  • Policy process is political
  • Conflicting goals
  • Competing values
  • Differing beliefs regarding role of public
    agencies

8
Bureaucracy and the policy process
  • Agenda-setting
  • Define alternatives
  • Provide feedback
  • Implementation of policy

9
Policy implementation
  • Agencies respond to citizen and governmental
    demands by issuing grants and contracts,
    enforcing rules and regulations, and managing
    public programs.
  • The process of policy implementation is made
    difficult due to competing demands and vague
    goals.

10
Policymaking
  • Due to vague laws, street-level bureaucrats
    exercise an enormous amount of discretion.
  • Rulemaking provides a direct means for
    influencing the shape of public policy.
  • The bureaucracy also is able to wield policy
    influence by taking an active role in politics.

11
Too much or too little?
  • Bureaucracies reflect geographic and societal
    differences.
  • A comparative approach to bureaucracy suggests
    bureaucratic expenditures and employees vary
    according to the needs of their constituencies.

12
The great debate efficiency vs. responsiveness
  • Efficiency (Competence)
  • Optimal allocation of resources to maximize
    utility.
  • Produce service/good with minimal expense
  • Danger of under-responsiveness
  • Responsiveness
  • Public policy reflects citizen demands
  • Danger of over-responsiveness

13
Its not what you know, but who you know
  • The merit system is a reaction to the political
    corruption and patronage of the spoils system.
  • While reducing agency flexibility in the hiring
    and firing process, the merit system ensures
    neutral competence.

14
Conclusion
  • Public perception of the bureaucracy is generally
    misguided.
  • The bureaucracy performs quite well in responding
    to citizen and governmental demands.

15
Conclusion (contd)
  • Beyond implementing public policy, the
    bureaucracy serves an important role in the
    shaping of public policy.
  • Although the merit system attempts to ensure
    neutral competence, the bureaucracy remains a
    highly political institution.

16
The Policy-Making Process
  • Public policy is government action or inaction
    taken to deal with problems and concerns.

Policy Adoption
Problem Recognition
Budgeting
Agenda Setting
Policy Implementation
Policy Formulation
Policy Evaluation
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19
Making Agencies Accountable
  • Is the bureaucracy accountable and if so to whom?

The governor has the authority to appoint and
remove agency heads reorganize the
bureaucracy make changes in budget
proposals ignore initiatives from the
bureaucracy issue executive orders reduce an
agency's budget
The legislature has the authority to pass
legislation that alters an agency's
functions abolish existing programs investigate
bureaucratic activities influence presidential
appointments write legislation to limit
bureaucratic discretion
The judiciary has the power to rule on whether
the bureaucracy has acted within the law rule on
constitutionality force respect for the rights of
individuals through hearings
20
Public Administration
  • People not directly involved in politics but who
    are involved in the construction and
    implementation of the policies that carry out
    those decisions.

21
The Bureaucracy
  • A method of organizing public administration

22
Policy is what the government says and does about
perceived problems. Policy making is how the
government decides what will be done about
perceived problems. Policy making is a process
of interaction among governmental and
nongovernmental actors policy is the outcome of
that interaction.
23
The Players Institutional and Noninstitutional
Actors in the Policy Process
  • Institutional Actors (Legislature, Executive,
    Bureaucracy, Courts etc.)
  • Noninstitutional Actors (Media, Parties, Interest
    Groups, Consultants etc.)

24
The Players Institutional and Noninstitutional
Actors in the Policy Process
  • Institutional Actors (Congress, Executive,
    Bureaucracy, Courts etc.)
  • Noninstitutional Actors (Media, Parties, Interest
    Groups, Consultants etc.)

25
Models of Policy Analysis
  • Simply and clarify
  • Identify important aspects of policy problems
  • Help us to communicate
  • Direct efforts to understand public policy better
  • Suggest explanations and predict consequences

26
Selected Policy Models
  • Process Model
  • Rational Model
  • Incremental Model
  • Group Model
  • Elite Model
  • Public Choice Model
  • Institutional Model
  • Each model provides a separate focus on political
    life and helps to understand different things
    about public policy.

27
Institutional Model Public Policy is
Institutional Output.
  • Public Policy is determined, implemented, and
    enforced by government institutions.
  • The Constitution of the U.S. and state
    constitutions establish the fundamental
    institutional structure for policy making.
  • Separation of powers, checks and balances, and
    federalism have effects on public policy.

28
Process Model
  • Political activities may be groups according to
    their relationship with public policy the
    result is a set of policy processes including
  • Problem Identification/Recognition
  • Agenda Setting
  • Policy Formulation
  • Policy Adoption
  • Policy Implementation
  • Policy Evaluation

29
Rationalism Policy as Maximum Social Gain
  • Rational policies are defined as those that
    achieve maximum social gain.
  • Policy results in gains to society that exceed
    costs and that governments refrain from policies
    if costs exceed benefits.
  • There are many barriers to rationality, and the
    model helps us to identify such barriers.
  • Obstacles to rationality are many and varied.

30
Public Choice/Public Opinion
  • Debate continues as to whether public opinion
    should be an important independent influence over
    public policy
  • Opinion-Policy Linkage - V.O. Key

31
Incrementalism Policy as Variations on the
Past.(Charles Lindblom)
  • Incrementalism occurs due to constrains of time,
    information, and costs, leading policy makers to
    make adjustments to the base policy rather than
    embarking upon a full reconsideration of
    alternatives.
  • Incrementalism predicts that the legitimacy of
    previous policies will be accepted because the
    consequences of new programs cannot be predicted
  • Incrementalism is politically expedient.
  • Incrementalism reduces conflicts, maintains
    stability, and preserves the political system.

32
Elite Theory Policy as Elite Preference
  • Society is divided into the few who have power
    and the many who do not.
  • The many who do not have power do not decide
    public policy.
  • Public policy reflects the prevailing values of
    the elite, changes will therefore be incremental
    rather than revolutionary.
  • Elites influence masses more than masses
    influence elites.

33
Models How to Tell if They are Helping or Not
  • Models should order and simplify reality
  • Models should identify what is significant
  • Models should provide meaningful communication
  • Models should direct inquiry and research
  • Models should suggest explanations

34
The Policy Process How Policies are Made
  • In the real world policymaking activities often
    occur simultaneously and political actors and
    institutions may be engaged in different
    processes at the same time, even in the same
    policy area.
  • Despite the fact that policymaking is seldom as
    neat as a process model, it is useful to break
    policymaking into component units to enhance
    understanding

35
Agenda Setting and Nondecisions
  • Agenda setting, or defining the problems of
    society and suggesting alternative solutions, is
    the most important stage of the policy making
    process.
  • Nondecision making occurs when dominant elites
    act either openly or covertly to suppress an
    issue.

36
Agenda setting and mobilizing Opinion The Mass
Media
  • Media effects include
  • Identifying issues and setting the agenda
  • Influencing attitudes and values toward policy
    issues
  • Changing the behavior of voters and decision
    makers

37
Formulating Policy
  • The Governor
  • Bureaucracy
  • Interest Groups
  • Legislative Staff
  • Think Tanks
  • Legislatures
  • National Organizations (professional)

38
Policy Legitimation/Adoption
  • Formal lawmaking
  • Party Influence
  • Governor Influence
  • Constitituency Influence
  • Contributor Influence

39
Policy Implementation The Bureaucracy
  • Implementation and Policymaking
  • Regulation and Policymaking
  • Adjudication and Policymaking
  • Bureaucratic Discretion and Policymaking
  • Policy Bias of Bureaucrats

40
Policy Evaluation Impressionistic Versus
Systematic
  • Although the policy process model implies that
    evaluation is the final step, an evaluation of
    the current policy may identify new problems and
    set in motion the policymaking process once
    again.
  • Most policy evaluations are unsystematic and
    impressionistic
  • Systematic policy evaluation the careful,
    objective, scientific assessment f the current
    and long-term effects of policies on target and
    nontarget situations or groups, and the
    assessment of the ratio of current and long-term
    costs to benefits is relatively rare.
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