Approaches PA
Approaches PA
Approaches PA
Public Administration = Bureaucratic Organization Max Weber Bureaucratic characteristics (Principles): Clear division of labor Clear hierarchy of authority Formal rules and procedures Impersonality Careers based on merit
In word of Dwight Waldo neither the study nor the practice of public administration was responding suitably to escalating turmoil and complications.
The Minnowbrook conference challenged the traditional public administration in a manner that it was anti-positivist, and Unrealistic (anti-technical and anti-hierarchical.
N.P.A - Significance
Change: It attacks on the status quo and deep rooted power in permanent institutions. It requires positive, proactive and responsive administrators rather than authoritarian and ivory tower bureaucrats. Equity: It focus more on democratic norms than operating in down top structure. Involvement: Involving orgs members and its clients in decision making process.
NPM, compared to other public management theories, is more oriented towards outcomes and efficiency through better management of public budget. It is considered to be achieved by applying competition, as it is known in the private sector, to organizations in the public sector, emphasizing economic and leadership principles. New public management addresses beneficiaries of
public services much like customers customers.
focus on achievement of results rather than on process Move away from classic bureaucracy to more flexible forms of organization Clear identification of objectives plus performance indicators that enable measurement Senior staff politically committed to government Government involvement need not always mean government provision/production A trend towards reducing the scope of government (privatization/decentralization)
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N.P.M. Criticism
Treating Americans as "customers" rather than "citizens" is an inappropriate borrowing from the private sector model, because businesses see customers are a means to an end (profit), rather than as the proprietors of government (the owners). people are viewed as economic units not democratic participants.
N.P.M.
Nevertheless, the model is still widely accepted at all levels of government and in many OECD nations.
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