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Comparative Public Management and Policy

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Title: Comparative Public Management and Policy


1
Comparative Public Management and Policy
  • PIA 3090

2
The Main Event
  • I. Golden Oldies
  • II. Literary Map
  • III. Grand Synthesis

3
Bureaucracies, Politicians and Clients
  • Overall Themes of the Week
  • The comparative advantage of the "Iron Triangle"
    model.
  • Legislature-Executive-Lobbyist
  • Corporatism as the Alternative

4
Three Models
  • 1. Japan- Johnson's perspective (State Centric
    Planning and one way movement)
  • 2. Europe- (Orwell, Greene, Heady (Pluralism
    vs. Corporatism)
  • 3. U.S.- (Truman vs. C. Wright Mills)
  • 4. Latin America Military Corporatism and
    Patron Client Relationships

5
LDCs
  • An absence of "clients" or Too many?
  • The Role of patronage, corruption and Crony
    capitalism.
  • -Indonesia
  • -Korea
  • -West Africa
  • -China

6
ISSUE
  • Public Interest vs. private interests (and the
    bureaucracy as an interest group)
  • Question Is there such a thing as a Public
    Interest Group? (PIG)
  • NGOs Public or Ideological?

7
Major themes in Comparative Public Administration-
  • Administrative Structures and Society-
  • 1. Individualist view of state-society
    relationships
  • a. Common law view of society
  • b. Anglo-Saxon model law and order as
    basic function of government
  • c. Society made up of individuals- liberalism

8
Administrative Structures and Society
  • 2. Statist view of Society- Collectivist
    (Frances FitzGerald- Fire in the Lake on
    Vietnam)- Three Views
  • a. Idea of an active, creative state,
    development oriented (Keynes)
  • b. Marxist-Leninist model- communitarian
  • c. Corporatist idea of society as groups-
    civil service as a group (Western Europe)

9
Political Structures and Public Management
  • 1. Issues of Governance, Interests and
    Political Development
  • 2. The Administrative State Concept Weak
    Political controls and a strong bureaucratic
    elite

10
Political Structures and Public Management
  • 3. Elite vs. egalitarian views of public
    service. (A Reminder)- Interests within the
    State)
  • a. Maximum Deferred Achievement (No
    pre-selection)
  • b. Maximum Ascriptive Model (Class based)
  • c. Progressive Equal Attrition Model
    Egalitarian- Professional- collectivist

11
Political Structures and Public Management
  • 4. Structure of Civil Service Systems The
    role of Mandarins and political penetration into
    the civil service
  • 5. Decayed and Transferred Institutions
    (Kings and Colonies)- The creation of an
    organizational bourgeoisie (Irving Markovitz)
  • 6. Corporatist Systems can be royalist,
    military, social (Spain, Argentina, Scandinavia)

12
Partisanship, Democracy and Bureaucracy
  • a. Fused vs. Separation of Powers Yes
    Minister (Britain)
  • b. Cabinet Government vs. Presidential
    Systems- Collective Responsibility (U.S. Latin
    America and France- Mixed)
  • c. Legislatures- Committee systems and
    bureaucratic authority

13
Authoritarianism
  • Authoritarian systems- Structures to protect
    citizens from fused state and bureaucracy
  • Non-Constitutional Systems Military Regimes
    and One Party States- Politicized bureaucracy
  • Rent Seeking, Nepotism and Corruption

14
The Myth Classical Non-Partisanism
  • The Politics/Administration Dichotomy The Role
    of Non-Partisan Movements and Generic Management
  • POSDECORB (Luther Gulick)
  • (Planning, Organizing, Staffing, Directing,
    Coordinating, Reporting, and Budgeting)
  • How Neutral?

15
Differences between the public and the private
sector- How much, or how little?
  • a. No significant differences between personnel
    in large private vs. public organizations
  • b. Differences in the structures within which
    the individual has to work
  • c. The bureaucracy is an institution of
    government

16
Government Differences from the private sector-
  • Difference in Product
  • a. Private- emphasis is on profit, economy and
    efficiency
  • b. Public- need to account for the political
    and social- not what is always efficient
  • c. Issue- motivation or its absence in the
    public sector

17
Recruitment
  • KEY The recruitment of professionals and
    specialists contradicts with the issue of
    political control
  • a. Problem- management, eg. the Department,
    often does not control recruitment
  • b. Legislation sets the rules- merit system
    with civil service commission overseeing the
    process
  • c. Civil Service Commission or Office of
    Personnel acts as an intermediary

18
THE PROBLEM
  • Management of the public sector organization is
    separated from the major management functions-
  • eg. promotion, firing, discipline, collective
    bargaining

19
The Bottom Line
  • Government Has THE Monopoly of Power
    (Ultimately Life and Death)

20
Basic Principles?
  • The Bureaucracy is an institution of government
  • a. The public bureaucrat has greater recourse
    to sanctions than the private
  • b. Only partly true- the credit card company
    and the collection agency

21
Origins of bureaucratic power
  • a. Bureaucracy is largely autonomous, only 10
    of actions controlled by politicos
  • b. Actions are seldom subjected to political or
    judicial review
  • c. Problem of bureaucratic lethargy- resists
    change

22
Origins of bureaucratic power-2
  • d. Bureaucracies are COMPLEX ORGANIZATIONS and
    are difficult to control
  • e. Bureaucrats have the market cornered on
    expertise
  • f. Bureaucrats play "bureaucratic politics"
    behind the politicians' backs

23
The political implications of role theory
  • ROLE SETS (Robert Merton)
  • Role Conflict in the bureaucracy
  • Role vs. Status vs. Individuals

24
Role Theory
  • The bureaucrat can have a complex set of
    interpersonal relationships
  • 1. Analyst and advocate
  • 2. Planner
  • 3. Managers and lobbyists
  • 4. Professional and employee
  • 5. Citizen


25
The Rights of the Bureaucrat
  • The role of Unions and strikes in the public
    service
  • Restrictions on political activity, eg. the
    Hatch Act in the U.S.
  • Secrecy, Clearance and Whistle Blowing
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