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The Federal Bureaucracy. What is a bureaucracy?  Organization by which things get done in government  Bureaucracies: Have a hierarchical authority structure.

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Presentation on theme: "The Federal Bureaucracy. What is a bureaucracy?  Organization by which things get done in government  Bureaucracies: Have a hierarchical authority structure."— Presentation transcript:

1 The Federal Bureaucracy

2 What is a bureaucracy?  Organization by which things get done in government  Bureaucracies: Have a hierarchical authority structure Use task specialization Develop extensive rules Operate on the merit of the people Behave with impersonality

3 Myths and Realities  Americans hate B. (Myth)  They grow bigger each year (Half ‘n Half)  Most work in D.C. (Myth)  Ineffective, inefficient, and mired in red tape (Half ‘n Half)

4 Who They Are and How They Got There  Patronage Hiring and promotion based upon knowing the right people  “It’s not what you know, it’s who you know”-Hayman’s mom  Pendleton Civil Service Act Created the federal civil service  System based on merit and desire to create a non-partisan gov’t service

5 More…  Merit Principal Uses entrance exams and promotional ratings to reward qualified applicants  Hatch Act Prohibits civil service employees from active participation in partisan politics while on duty

6 OPM  Office of Personnel Management In charge of hiring for most federal agencies  Each civil service job is assigned a GS (General Schedule) rating Very top of the c.s. is the Senior Executive Service

7 Plum Book  Lists top federal jobs available for direct presidential appointment

8 Organization of B.  Cabinet Departments (Manage specific policy areas)  Independent Regulatory Commissions (Federal Reserve Board, Federal Communications Commission, Social Security Admin.) Each I.R.C. is responsible for some sector of the economy Interest groups are closely involved with I.R.C.s

9 More Organization  Government Corporations (Amtrak, Post Office, T.V.A.) Provide a service that could be provided by the private sector Charge for a service

10 Still More Organization  Independent Executive Agencies (NASA, General Service Admin., National Science Foundation) Make up the rest

11 B.’s as Implementers  Policy implementation Stage of policymaking between establishment of policy and its consequences

12 Some policies fail. Why?  Program Design Some tasks are impossible  Lack of Clarity Congress states broad goals while leaving the specifics up to the B.’s  Lack of Resources Lack of body armor in Iraq EPA has low staff and cannot enforce laws

13 Making it Fair  SOP’s help make b.’s everyday decisions  May become “red tape” and obstacles to action

14 Privatization  Private contractors used to do the work of the gov’t  Fourth Branch of the Gov’t Leads to less scrutiny

15 Regulation  Use of gov’t authority to control or change some practice in the private sector FDA, CPSC, OSHA  Gov’t tells businesses how to reach certain goals, checks on progress, and punishes offenders

16 Trend Towards Deregulation  Regulation: Raises prices Hurts America’s competitive position abroad Doesn’t always work well

17 Understanding B.’s  Presidents try to control B.’s Appoint heads of agencies Issue executive orders Alter agency’s budget Reorganize the agency

18 More understanding  Congress tries to control B.’s Influence appointments Alter budgets Hold hearings Rewrite legislation for more detail and clarity

19 The Iron Triangle Iron Triangles and Issue Networks  Iron Triangles: a mutually dependent relationship between bureaucratic agencies, interest groups, and congressional committees or subcommittees  Exist independently of each other  They are tough, but not impossible, to get rid of  Some argue they are being replaced by wider issue networks that focus on more than one policy.

20 Figure 15.5 Understanding Bureaucracies

21 Summary  Bureaucrats shape policy as administrators, implementers, and regulators.  Bureaucracy’s primary responsibility is the implementation of public policy.  Federal bureaucracy has not grown but has in fact shrunk of late.


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