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The bureaucracy

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Chapter 13 * Bernie Madoff and the SEC Bernie Madoff s Ponzi scheme may have cost investors up to $65 million Many organizations failed after Madoff s crimes ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The bureaucracy


1
The bureaucracy
  • Chapter 13

2
(No Transcript)
3
Bernie Madoff and the SEC
  • Bernie Madoffs Ponzi scheme may have cost
    investors up to 65 million
  • Many organizations failed after Madoff s crimes
    discovered
  • Securities and Exchange Commission had numerous
    complaints that it failed to follow up on
    properly
  • Subsequent SEC analysis claimed errors due to
    inexperienced staff
  • A painful reminder that we depend on regulatory
    agencies to protect us

4
Bernard Madoff
5
Organization Matters
  • Laws passed by Congress are implemented by the
    governments bureaucracy
  • Bureaucracies play central role in todays
    governments and society as a whole
  • Organization of a particular bureaucracy depends
    on its political demands and needs of its clients
  • Organization also affects a bureaucracys ability
    to accomplish its work

6
The Development of the Bureaucratic State
  • American public concerned with size of
    bureaucracy
  • Government at all levels grow enormously during
    20th century
  • Society increasingly more complex
  • Attitudes towards regulation of business and
    governments role in social welfare changed
  • Ambitious bureaucrats have expanded organizations
    to add responsibilities

7
Not So Big by Comparison
  • Compared with other Western democracies, U.S.
    government relatively small
  • Most of these countries offer more welfare and
    social service benefits to citizens
  • Taxes in these countries proportionately higher

8
Can We Reduce the Size of Government?
  • Even incumbents run against the government
  • Many Americans lack confidence in government and
    believe it wastes money
  • Serious budget cuts require significant
    reductions in programs
  • Proposed reductions of specific programs face
    opposition and are politically risky

9
Can We Reduce the Size of Government?
  • Debate on reductions in bureaucracy shaped by
    ideology and size of budget deficit
  • Reagan saw small government as enhancing personal
    freedom
  • Obama sees government as a way to promote
    equality and protect citizens
  • Not always good politics to downsize government
  • An upside to providing a benefit to citizens

10
The Organization of Government
  • Bureaucracy in Washington actually a collection
    of smaller bureaucracies
  • Departments cover broad areas of government
    responsibility
  • Independent Agencies stand alone, some controlled
    by president and some self-governed regulatory
    commissions
  • Government Corporations perform services that
    could be provided by private sector but Congress
    believes should be done by government

11
Figure 13.1Bureaucrats at Work
12
The Civil Service
  • National bureaucracy almost 2.8 million civilian
    employees
  • Diverse jobs make up 2 of U.S. workforce
  • Senior Executive Service top level
  • Most hired under civil service
  • Pendleton Act (1883) designed to reduce patronage
    with merit hiring
  • Pay and benefits of federal jobs compare
    favorably with private sector

13
Figure 13.2Diversity Lags
14
Figure 13.3Good Jobs, Good Benefits
15
Presidential Control over the Bureaucracy
  • Civil service and other reforms insulate
    government workers from party politics
  • Presidents appoint about 3,000 people to
    high-level positions
  • Around 1,000 require Senate confirmation
  • Pluralism can pull agencies in directions
    contrary to presidents wishes

16
Bureaucratic Policymaking
  • Agencies make policy when Congress authorizes
    them to administer a program
  • Regulations established to carry out laws create
    policy
  • Congress has prerogative to override regulations
    it dislikes
  • Congress can punish agencies by cutting budgets,
    altering programs, or holding up Senate
    confirmations

17
Administrative Discretion
  • Administrative regulations legally binding
  • Critics of bureaucracy complain agencies granted
    too much discretion
  • When agency directives from Congress vague,
    bureaucrats develop policy details
  • Greatest discretion to agencies involved in
    domestic and global security

18
Rule Making
  • Administrative process that results in issuance
    of regulations
  • Allows interested parties to comment on proposed
    rules
  • Regulations often require individuals and
    corporations to act against own self-interest
  • Freedom versus order

19
And Now for a Real ChallengeRegulate the World
  • Some scientists fear global warming an emergency
  • Debate exists over long-term implications
  • International cooperation needed because
    greenhouse gas emissions know no borders
  • U.S. concerned about fairness of any enforcement
  • China resistant to any regulation or enforcement

20
Land and Sea Yearly Mean Temperature, 1880-2000
21
Administrative PolicymakingInformal Policies
  • Difficult to define precise values and goals
    rationally
  • Many related goals incompatible
  • Best policy may be one on which most people can
    agree
  • Constraints of competing policy objectives,
    opposing political forces, incomplete
    information, and pressures of time sometimes
    result in incrementalism

22
The Culture of Bureaucracy
  • Interactions with bureaucrats sometimes
    frustrating because they are inflexible or lack
    authority to get things done
  • Sometimes flexibility limited by legal
    requirements and need to treat everyone equally
  • All bureaucracies have norms that guide behavior
  • Sense of mission affects decisions about agency
    objectives

23
Problems in Implementing Policy
  • Paper policies must be put into practice with
    processes
  • May not do what they were designed to do
  • Trial-and-error common
  • Difficulties emerge when policies unclear or
    involve many different agencies and layers of
    government
  • Implementation sometimes by contracts with
    private sector or not-for-profits

24
Los Angeles Smog
25
Mortgage Relief
26
Problems in Implementing Policy
  • The many obstacles to effective implementation
    mean patience and analysis essential ingredients
    to policymaking
  • So, implementation a gradual process where trial
    and error eventually lead to policies that work

27
Reforming the Bureaucracy More Control or Less?
  • Administrative reforms have taken many forms over
    the years
  • Deregulation
  • Competition
  • Performance standards
  • No magic bullet

28
Deregulation
  • Reduced government role lets market forces of
    supply and demand take over
  • Popular with conservatives
  • Considerable deregulation in 1970s and 1980s
  • Difficult with health and safety issues
  • One way is to allow companies flexibility in how
    to meet standards
  • Can also require more transparency and
    accountability

29
Competition and Outsourcing
  • Conservatives want government to act more like
    businesses
  • Some believe if agencies are not as efficient as
    private sector, service should be given to
    private sector
  • Competitive bidding for services to administer
    programs common

30
Performance Standards
  • Holding agencies accountable for reaching
    quantifiable goals
  • Government Performance and Results Act sets
    requirements
  • Concern that if agencies set own goals, will set
    them to easily achievable levels or that show
    agency in best light
  • What an agency thinks it can achieve versus what
    would be most valuable to achieve
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