Linkage Institutions of Institutions of Government
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Transcript of Linkage Institutions of Institutions of Government
Linkage Institutions of Institutions of Government
The Bureaucracy, PACS, Mass Media
Bureaucracy VocabularyBureaucracies -Iron triangle networkCabinet-level department -Pendleton ActCivil service reform -REGODivision of labor -Red tapeGovernment corporation -Regulatory policyHatch Act -Spoils system Independent executive agency
IntroModern bureaucracies play an important linkage role in government.
Primarily responsible for implementing policy of the branches of government
Some bureaucracies make policy as a result of regulations they issue.
IntroFocus on four types of governmental bureaucratic
agencies: cabinet, regulatory agencies, government corporations, independent executive agencies.
Constitutional Review of Bureaucracies:-Constitutional basis found in Article II of the Constitution in the reference to the creation of executive departments.-Bureaucracies developed as a result of custom, tradition, and precedent.
Functions of BureaucraciesDefined as large administrative agencies.
Reflect a hierarchical authority, there is job specialization, and there are rules and regulations that drive them.
Six primary functions of a bureaucracy.
Six FunctionsHave a recognizable division of labor where
skilled workers each have a specialized function so that productivity is increased.
There is an allocations of function where each task is assigned and defined
There is an allocation of responsibility where each task is understood by the worker and cannot be changed without approval of the supervisor.
Six FunctionsThere is direct and indirect supervision including
line authority and staff authority.There is control of the full-time employment of
the worker so that workers can be held on task.Workers make their careers synonymous with
the organization because the bureaucracy provides for benefits, and workers perceive that their future success depends on the organization.
Functions continuedApprox. 2 million government workers make up today’s federal bureaucracy.
Workers in federal bureaucracies have different ways of being held accountable. Must respond to: Constitution, federal laws, the dictates of the 3 branches of government, their superiors, the “public interest,” and interest groups.
Executive Level DepartmentsThe cabinet: 15 cabinet departments headed by
a secretary.Regulatory agencies: examples are ICC, FTC,
FDA, SEC, FCC, EPA, OSHA, FECGovernment corporations: such as TVA and
Resolution Trust Corporation.Independent executive agencies: such as the
General Services Administration, which handles government purchasing, NASA
OrganizationExist in virtually every part of our livesFrom religious organizations, to schools, they each have a distinctive way they operate based on theories of bureaucratic organization.
Father of bureaucratic theory is German sociologist Max Weber.
Relations with Other Branches
Bureaucracies linked to the president by appointment and direction
Linked to Congress through oversightAgency operations highly publicized through the media when they have an impact on the public
Interest groups and public opinion try to influence
Relations cont.President influences bureaucracies through appointment
processEPA and Resolution Trust Corporation have come under
executive scrutiny in 1980’s and 90’s.Presidents also issue executive orders that agencies must
abide by.EX: President Clinton issued executive order to start
importing abortion bill RU486, FDA had to set up guidelines for testing.
EX: President Reagan attempted to abolish the Departments of Energy and Education but failed to get Congress approval.
Congressional oversightThrough process of congressional oversight, agency heads are called before congressional committees to testify about issues related to the workings of the agency.
Congressional oversight refers to “the review, monitoring, and supervision of federal agencies, programs, activates, and policy implementation.”
OversightImproves the efficiency, economy, and effectiveness of governmental operations
Evaluates programs and performanceDetects and prevents poor administration, waste, abuse, illegal and unconstitutional conduct
Protects civil liberties and constitutional rights
OversightOversight is a way for Congress to check on, and
check, the executive branch of government.Best example of the interrelationship among
bureaucracies, the government, interest groups, and the public is the iron triangle concept.
Iron triangle=pattern of relationships between an agency in the executive branch, Congress, and one or more outside clients of that agency.
Oversight ExampleExample of relationship was the often-criticized military-industrial complex.
During height of the Vietnam War, this relationship between defense-related government agencies and private industry that profited from the war became the antiwar rallying cry of governmental misuse of funds.
Oversight ExampleIf EPA has too close relationship with the industry heads of factories that they are regulating, the potential for abuse exists.
Public PolicyMajor impact of the federal bureaucracy has been in the area of public policy-its implementation and regulation.
Supreme Court decision of Munn v. Illinois in 1877 is landmark regulatory case.
Munn v. IllinoisDispute over whether Illinois had the power to regulate the
railroad haulage rates of grain.Illinois passed Grange laws forcing railroad to abide by
state rates.Court determined that because it was in the public
interest, the state had the right to regulate this private industry.
This ruling influenced the passage of the Interstate Commerce Act and establishment of Interstate Commerce Commission.
Agency came under fire by Congress in 1994, railroad and trucking industry were critical of Congress’ budget cutbacks of the first agency to be created.
Regulatory AgenciesRegulatory agencies are examples of linkage
institutions.They were motivated by presidential direction,
acts of Congress, and court decisions.The public, interest groups, and the media have
reacted to the regulatory and policymaking process.
Fear of overregulated society is still debated.
Reform