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The federal bureaucracy
“the fourth branch”
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Structure of the Bureaucracy
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Structure of the Bureaucracy
Definition: the agencies, departments, commissions, etc. within the executive branch Myths of the Bureaucracy Include Exec. Office of the President, the Cabinet (already covered)
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Independent regulatory agencies
Created by Congress to regulate important aspects of the nations economy Generally, decisions of these are beyond presidential control Quasi-legislative power. Policy implementation Quasi-judicial power
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Important regulatory commissions
Federal Reserve Board FCC FEC NLRB SEC FTC FAA
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Government corporations
Created by Congress to carry out various business operations Postal Service FDIC TVA Amtrak
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Independent agencies Organized like Cabinet depts., but lack status
NASA SBA
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Growth of the Bureaucracy
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Background Development of the civil service system Size
Pendleton Act (1881) Hatch Act (1993) Size Roughly 3 million (2.7 million currently) Power of the bureaucracy Discretionary authority—when Congress writes broadly-worded laws it allows for bureaucratic interpretation
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Reasons for growth of the bureaucracy
National growth Technology International crises Citizen demands Persistent nature of agencies
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Government Employment at Federal, State, and Local Levels
© 2004 Wadsworth Publishing / Thomson Learning™
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Federal Government: Money, People, and Regulations
just the bottom chart.
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Federal Government: Money, People, and Regulations
just the bottom chart.
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Influences on Bureaucratic Behavior
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Influences on the Bureaucracy
Recruitment & retention policies “buddy system” or a “good ol’ boys network” Very difficult to fire civil servants Effects: continuity, expertise in policies Personal attributes of bureaucrats More representative of the American people Legal constraints Organizational constraints
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Controlling the Bureaucracy
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Presidential influences
Powers Appointment/firing Propose budgets Reorganization—although difficult, it is possible Checks on presidential influence All the above must go through Congress
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Congressional influences
Powers Appropriations of agency budgets $$$ Standing oversight committees GAO Appointment confirmations Limits on congressional influence Congress may not want to interfere in bureaucracy
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Interest group influence
Lobbying Revolving door Iron triangles
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Other influences Media Courts Privatization
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