|
Product Description
In the flush of enthusiasm to make government work better, reformers from both left and right have urged government to turn as many functions as possible over to the private sector and to allow market competition instill efficiency and choice. In fact, government has been doing just this for years: every major policy initiative launched since World War II has been managed by public-private partnerships. Yet such privatization has not solved government's problems. While there have been some positive results, thee has been far less success than advocates of market competition have promised.
In a searching examination of why the "competition prescription" has not worked well, Donald F. Kettl finds that government has largely been a poor judge of private markets. Because government rarely operates in truly competitive markets contracting out has not so much solved the problems of inefficiency, but has aggravated them. Government has often not proved to be an intelligent consumer of the goods and services it has purchased. Kettl provides specific recommendations as to how government can become a "smart buyer," knowing what it wants and judging better what it has bought.
Through detailed case studies, Kettl shows that as market imperfections increase, so do problems in governance and management. He examines the A-76 program for buying goods and services, the FTS-2000 telecommunications system, the Superfund program, the Department of Energy's production of nuclear weapons, and contracting out by state and local governments. He argues that government must be more aggressive in managing contracts if it is to build successful partnerships with outside contractors.
Kettl maintains that the answer is not more government, but a smarter one, which requires strong political leadership to refocus the bureaucracy's mission and to change the bureaucratic culture.
Features
- Used Book in Good Condition
Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought
- Class, Tax, and Power: Municipal Budgeting in the United States (Public Administration and Public Policy)
- Policy and Politics in State Budgeting (Bureaucracies, Public Administration, and Public Policy)
- Boom and Bust: The Politics of the California Budget
- Politics, Position, and Power: The Dynamics of Federal Organization
- Public Personnel Management: Current Concerns, Future Problems (5th Edition)
- Writing for Social Scientists: How to Start and Finish Your Thesis, Book, or Article: Second Edition (Chicago Guides to Writing, Editing, and Publishing)
- Statistics for People Who (Think They) Hate Statistics: Excel 2010 Edition
- The Collaborative Public Manager: New Ideas for the Twenty-First Century (Public Management and Change)
- The Fifth Risk: Undoing Democracy
- Working with Culture: The Way the Job Gets Done in Public Programs (Public Affairs and Policy Administration Series)
*If this is not the "Sharing Power: Public Governance and Private Markets" product you were looking for, you can check the other results by clicking this link. Details were last updated on Nov 13, 2024 23:11 +08.