1 / 39

Bureaucracy Chapter 10

Bureaucracy Chapter 10. Examining the “Fourth Branch” of Federal Government. Essential Questions. What is the importance of the Federal Bureaucracy?. I CAN:. Define the concept of Bureaucracy and describe its characteristics, structure, and functions.

kolya
Download Presentation

Bureaucracy Chapter 10

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. BureaucracyChapter 10 Examining the “Fourth Branch” of Federal Government

  2. Essential Questions • What is the importance of the Federal Bureaucracy?

  3. I CAN: • Define the concept of Bureaucracy and describe its characteristics, structure, and functions. • Explain the concept of a Bureaucrat and their functions within the government

  4. Bureaucracy - • A professional corps of unelected officials organized in a pyramid hierarchy, functioning under impersonal uniform rules and procedures.

  5. Bureaucracy • Offices have specified missions and employees are assigned responsibility based on merit, knowledge, and experience.

  6. Organization Cont.

  7. bureaucracy Definition:an administrative system, especially in a government, that divides work into specific categories carried out by special departments of nonelected officials

  8. bureaucracy • literally means “rule by desks” • government by clerks

  9. Duty of Bureaucracy • Most Important duty: Carry out the Day-to-Day business of the government

  10. Bureaucrat A Civil servant • Permanent employee of the government. Hired on basis of competitive examination and merit.

  11. The Federal Bureaucracy is: • 4 million employees; 2.9 million are civilians or “civil servants” • President only appoints 3% (patronage or political appointments) • 15 cabinet level departments • 200+ independent agencies with 2,000+ bureaus, divisions, branches, etc. • Biggest - Dept. of Defense, U.S. Postal Service, Veterans Administration

  12. 97% are career government employees Only 10% live in the D.C. area 30% work for the D.O.D. Less than 15% work for social welfare agencies Most are white collar workers: secretaries, clerks, lawyers, inspectors & engineers Civil employees more diverse demographically than Congress Who are the “Bureaucrats?”

  13. Demographics of Federal Employees

  14. Bureaucratic Statistics • 2.9 million civilians • 1.4 million military • 4.2 million state • 11.4 million local • Total: 19.8 million people work for government

  15. Where do Federal Employees Work? Source: www.edmonds.wednet.edu/mths/ClassActivities/ Brzovic/policeymakersChapters12-16/

  16. What Jobs Do Bureaucrats Do? Source: www.edmonds.wednet.edu/mths/ClassActivities/ Brzovic/policeymakersChapters12-16/

  17. Functions of the Federal Bureaucracy Implementation- carry out laws of Congress, executive orders of the President Administration- routine administrative work; provide services (ex: SSA sends social security checks to beneficiaries) Regulation- issue rules and regulations that impact the public (ex: EPA sets clean air standards) Source:http://www.pinkmonkey.com/studyguides/subjects/am_gov/chap6/a0606401.asp

  18. Federal Bureaucracy Federal Bureaucracy President Congress Executive Office of the President (Ex: OMB, NSC) Independent Regulatory Commissions (Ex: FCC, SEC) Independent Executive Agencies (Ex: CIA, NASA) Cabinet Departments (Ex: State, Defense) Government Corporations (Ex: Amtrack, Postal Service)

  19. The Cabinet Departments • The 15 cabinet departments headed by a cabinet secretary appointed by the president and approved by the Senate • Each department “expert” in specific policy area • Each department has its own budget • Department of Homeland Security, created in 2002, is newest department

  20. Independent Executive Agencies • Established by Congress with separate status outside the executive branch • Given a specific mandate and generally perform a service function, not a regulatory one. • Some examples include: Social Security Administration, CIA, NASA, EPA.

  21. Independent Agencies • Similar to cabinet departments but usually have a narrower area of responsibility • Ex: NASA, CIA • Perform services for the executive branch

  22. Independent Regulatory Commissions • IRCs exist to regulate a specific economic activity or interest such as the Federal Communications Commission (public air waves) or Federal Reserve Board (banking system, money supply) • IRCs operate independently from Congress and the President • Once appointed and seated, members cannot be removed without cause

  23. Regulatory Commissions • Administrative units that have responsibility for the monitoring and regulation of ongoing economic activities • Created to make rules for large industries and businesses that affect public interest • Under intense pressure from lobbyists • Ex: EPA (environment), SEC (stocks and bonds)

  24. Government Corporations • Government owned businesses created by Congress • May or may not be profitable, but serve a public need • Ex: U.S. Postal Service, Amtrak, Tennessee Valley Authority, Corporation for Public Broadcasting

  25. Government Corporations • Are similar to private organizations in that they can charge for their services but differ in that they receive federal funding • Ex: TVA, USPS, Amtrak

  26. Organization of the Federal Bureaucracy Source: www.edmonds.wednet.edu/mths/ClassActivities/ Brzovic/policeymakersChapters12-16/

  27. Characteristics of a Bureaucracy • administration of government through departments • consists of unelected often highly trained professionals • task specialization • hierarchical authority

  28. Public Perceptionsof Bureaucracies • impersonal • inclined to follow rigid or complex procedures • may stifle effectiveness and innovation • “red tape”

  29. Title: The Damages of the Bureaucracy Artist: unknown, La Presna, Panama Date: May, 2006 Source:http://www.politicalcartoons.com

  30. Criticism of Bureaucracy I. RED TAPE • too many rigid procedures • too many policies with no flexibility for special circumstances • too many forms to fill out, lines to wait II.INEFFICIENCY • lack of incentive to be productive III. DUPLICATION OF SERVICES • bureaucracy is so complicated • agencies are performing similar or sometimes the same functions (Dept. of Commerce overlaps with Dept. of Agriculture, GSA overlaps with Dept. of Interior, etc.) • federalism makes this more complicated--many services are provided at both the state and national levels.

  31. Criticisms Continued IV. BUREAUCRACY IS LAW MAKER • regulations end up having the effect of law. • duty of implementing laws often allows bureaucrats to interpret those laws. V. BUREAUCRACY IS TOO BIG • privatization would be more effective VI. BUREAUCRACY MAY BE CORRUPT • iron triangle -the relationship between the Executive branch, Congress, and interest groups can lead to policy-making decisions which benefit private interests at the expense of the public good.

  32. Title: Federal Employees Self Esteem Class Artist: Chip Bok Date: unknown Source: http://www.reason.com/9602/bok.gif

  33. The President Supervises the Bureaucracy The President can: • appoint & remove agency heads • reorganize the bureaucracy • issue executive orders • reduce an agency's budget President Bush speaks about his budget priorities for FY 2007

  34. Congress Oversees the Bureaucracy Congress can: • create or abolish agencies & departments • cut or reduce funding • investigate agency activities • hold committee hearings • pass legislation that alters an agency's functions • influence or even fail to confirm presidential appointments Former FEMA Chie Michael Brown testifies before House committee investigating Hurricane Katrina

  35. Federal Courts Check the Bureaucracy Federal courts can: • through judicial review rule on whether the bureaucracy has acted within the law and the U.S. Constitution • provide due process for individuals affected by a bureaucratic action Supreme Court of the United States

  36. Question • Why do you think that the organization of Bureaucracies are so confusing?

  37. Essential Questions • What is the major importance of the Federal Bureaucracy?

  38. Works Cited Page • http://www.federalbudget.com/chartinfo.html • www.youthleadership.net • The Federal Bureaucracy: Examining the Fourth Branch

More Related