The Bureaucracy Chapter 15

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The Bureaucracy Chapter 15

What are examples of bureaucracy in your own life?

What is a Bureaucracy? A large, complex organization composed of appointed officials. The Bureaucracy puts policy through Authority is divided among several managers ex. of private: McDonald’s, MTV, Mission Hills high School, Catholic Church Government agencies: The IRS, The DMV, The Post Office, San Marcos City Council

Three Features of a Bureaucracy 1) Hierarchical Authority- Pyramid with a chain of command running from the top to the bottom, with the most power at the top 2) Job Specialization- Each person, or bureaucrat, has certain defined duties and responsibilities 3) Formalized Rules- Set of established regulations and procedures *Bureaucrats are unelected public policy makers

The Bureaucracy’s Character Political authority over the bureaucracy is not in one set of hands- shared among several institutions Most bureaucratic agencies share their responsibilities with local/state gov’t Dep’t of Education gives money to local schools Dep’t of Housing and Urban Development gives money to community development/improvement

The Growth of the Bureaucracy Jefferson created state dept- Dept heads/secretaries were to be approved by the senate The dept head could then chose people to work for him that were not elected by the people or approved by the senate In 1861-1901, new agencies were created to handle policy Pension office Independent regulatory commissions- created by Congress to regulate important aspects of the nation’s economy (SEC, The Fed, FTC) Commissioners serve about 5-14 years – can be fired by President

The Federal Bureaucracy Today No president wants to admit that he has increased the size of the bureaucracy (will state what they cut, rarely what they created) Approx 3 million persons in these positions- but 13 million who work indirectly for these positions I.e., federal employment has remained the same, employment among state and federal contractors/consultants has mushroomed Growth: population, technology (FCC, FAA), intern’l crisis (War on Terror), responsibility of welfare of nation, agencies fight to survive (constituents)

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The Bureaucrats (what do you see? Growth in Civilian Government Employees

Civil Service Replaces Patronage Patronage: Job given for political reasons Civil Service: System of hiring and promotion based on merit and nonpartisanship (1883- Pendleton Civil Service Act- assasination of President Garfield) Merit Principle: Entrance exams and promotion ratings to find people with talent and skill Office of Personnel Management (OPM): The federal office in charge of most of the government’s hiring (since 1979)

What power does it have? Discretionary authority: The ability to make policies that are not spelled out in advance by laws The power of interpretation The power of the bureaucracy should be measured by its discretionary power, not its size Ex: OHSA work regulations, drafting legislation, advice to White House, settling disputes among agencies

The Bureaucrats Who They Are and How They Got There Most demographically representative part of government Diversity of jobs mirrors the private sector Figure 15.2

Why is everyone so negative about it? Slow, can be inefficient Red tape Lobbying Revolving door- who do they really work for (future employers) Iron triangle- the relationship between a committee, interest group, and agency. Client groups- diary groups and Ag Dept) Issue network- a network of people in DC that advocate policy Think tanks Interest groups Universities Mass media Congressional staffs Very difficult to fire a bureaucrat Too centralized, excessive regulations

Figure 15.5

Good things about the Bureaucracy Needed to enact policy There are checks on the system Congressional oversight, media (whistleblowers), courts, confirmations/nominations Multiple minds = multiple ideas Characteristic of life, not just government (more representative of American people) Is controlled (Hatch Act (political activity), Freedom of Information Act (public scrutiny), hiring guidelines, size and appropriation available

Some thoughts to ponder Laws of Bureaucracy “When in doubt, mumble, when in trouble delegate, when in charge, ponder” “Never do anything for the first time” “Expenditures rise to meet income” “Never blame your policies, blame the person before you” “Bureaucracy is the art of making the possible impossible” “If it jams, force it. If it breaks it needed replacement anyway.”

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Wrapping it up Review the following Pork per Capita sheet What does the sheet say about federal spending? Why is this important to the states? How is this spending even allowed? Explain in as much detail within your group about what you have just reviewed. Website: www.cagw.com