1 / 22

Federal Bureaucracy

Federal Bureaucracy. The “Fourth” Branch of the Government!!!. Introduction. Classic conception of bureaucracy (Max Weber) Hierarchical authority structure Uses task specialization Operate on the merit principle Behave with impersonality A well-organized machine with lots of working parts.

mavis
Download Presentation

Federal Bureaucracy

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. Federal Bureaucracy The “Fourth” Branch of the Government!!!

  2. Introduction • Classic conception of bureaucracy (Max Weber) • Hierarchical authority structure • Uses task specialization • Operate on the merit principle • Behave with impersonality • A well-organized machine with lots of working parts.

  3. The Bureaucrats • Who They Are and How They Got There • Civil Service: From Patronage to Protection. • Patronage: Job given for political reasons. • Civil Service: System of hiring and promotion based on merit and nonpartisanship (Pendleton Civil Service Act of 1883). • Merit Principle: Entrance exams and promotion ratings to find people with talent and skill. • Office of Personnel Management: The federal office in charge of most of the government’s hiring.

  4. The Bureaucrats

  5. 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)

  6. Four Types of Federal Agencies • 1. Executive Departments • Cabinet Heads appointed by the president • Confirmed by Senate with its advice & consent • 2. Independent Regulatory Commissions • Small commissions w/greater independence • Fix terms – can only be fired “for cause” (Ex. Federal Reserve Board, Federal Communication Commission, Federal Trade Commission) • 3. Government Corporations • Government companies that serve Public for fee • Suppose to be self supporting • Insurance (FDIC), Energy (TVA), Communication (PO), Trans (AMTRAC) • 4. Independent Agencies • Not part of Executive Department w/sub-cabinet rank • NASA, EPA, CIA • All heads serve at Pleasure of President 7

  7. How they are organized… • Hierarchical Authority Structure: • 15 Cabinets are headed by a secretary. • Each has its own budget, staff, and policy areas. • Those staffs determine how the policies will be implemented and monitored. • Work to expand their powers and programs across America.

  8. How Bureaucracies Are Organized • Organization of the Executive Branch (Figure 15.3)

  9. 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

  10. 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

  11. 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.

  12. Reasons: National growth Technology management (ex: ICC, FAA, FCC) Citizens demands! The will to survive (difficult for Congress to kill) Discussion: Why has the bureaucracy grown so much? Dept. of Housing and Urban Development

  13. The Bureaucracy’s Job • All federal organizations share one job: to implement laws and policies. • IMPLEMENTATION-the process of putting a law into practice through bureaucratic rules or spending. • Most agencies implement the law through 2 means: • REGULATIONS-formal instructions for either running an agency or for controlling the behavior of private citizens and organizations • SPENDING-which involves the transfer of money to and from government.

  14. Implementation • Most often, the bureaucracy is left to workout the details/administration of Congressional policy. • Includes 3 elements: • Creation of a new agency or assignment to an old agency • Translation of policy goals into operational rules and development of guidelines for the program. • Coordination of resources and personnel to achieve the intended goals

  15. Breakdown of Implementation Lack of clarity (read chapter for example of Title IX) Lack of resources: money, staff, facilities, authority, etc. Too many rules can frustrate citizens… “red tape”…time consuming Lack of coordination amongst agencies (9/11, services to poor)

  16. Regulation Examples: SEC, affirmative-action, EPA) A large majority of what we do is impacted by Federal Regulation History: farmers, railroads, and the Interstate Commerce Commission.

  17. Deregulation • Deregulation-the removal of government restrictions on business, industry, and professional activities. • Those opposed to massive government regulation claim it causes: 1. limits competitiveness for American business with other countries 2. lack of success of regulation and unintended consequences 3. increase in prices

  18. Control of the Bureaucracy President: appointment, executive orders, influence of OMB. Congress: Oversight, budget, holding hearings, rewrite laws, approval power

  19. Influences on Bureaucracies • “Iron Triangles”: Bureaucracies are often intertwined with private interest groups and congressional committees. • The President attempts to influence bureaucracies by appointing certain individuals, and if necessary, reorganizing agencies.

  20. Understanding Bureaucracies • Bureaucracy and Democracy • Iron Triangles and Issue Networks • Iron Triangles: A mutually dependent relationship between bureaucratic agencies, interest groups, and congressional committees or subcommittees. • Exist independently of each other. • They are tough, but not impossible, to get rid of.

  21. Iron Triangles 24

  22. Types of Bureaucratic Jobs • Examples: DMV, DOL, Health and Human Services, Child Protective Services, and county offices. • Concern is over the “red tape” that exists in the bureaucratic system-how much of the work is really necessary?

More Related