Deregulating the Public Service

Deregulating the Public Service

Author: John J. DiIulio

Publisher: Brookings Institution Press

Published: 2011-02-01

Total Pages: 327

ISBN-13: 0815707193

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The nation's federal, state, and local public service is in deep trouble. Not even the most talented, dedicated, well-compensated, well-trained, and well-led public servants can serve the public well if they must operate under perverse personnel and procurement regulations that punish innovation and promote inefficiency. Many attempts have been made to determine administrative problems in the public service and come up with viable solutions. Two of the most important—the 1990 report of the National Commission on the Public Service, led by former Federal Reserve chairman Paul A. Volcker, and the 1993 report of the National Commission on the State and Local Public Service, led by former Mississippi Governor William F. Winter—recommended "deregulating the public service." Deregulating the public service essentially means altering or abolishing personnel and procurement regulations that deplete government workers' creativity, reduce their productivity, and make a career in public service unattractive to many talented, energetic, and public-spirited citizens. But will it work? With the benefit of a historical perspective on the development of American public service from the days of the progressives to the present, the contributors to this book argue that deregulating the public service is a necessary but insufficient condition for much of the needed improvement in governmental administration. Avoiding simple solutions and quick fixes for long-standing ills, they recommend new and large-scale experiments with deregulating the public service at all levels of government. In addition to editor John DiIulio, the contributors are Paul A. Volcker, former chairman of the Federal Reserve, now at Princeton University; former Mississippi Governor William F. Winter; Gerald J. Garvey, Princeton; John P. Burke, University of Vermont; Melvin J. Dubnick, Rutgers; Constance Horner, former director of the Federal Office of Personnel Management, now at Brookings; Mark


Deregulating the Public Service

Deregulating the Public Service

Author: John J. DiIulio

Publisher: Brookings Inst Press

Published: 1994

Total Pages: 308

ISBN-13: 9780815718543

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With the benefit of a historical perspective on the development of American public service from the days of the progressives to the present, the contributors to this book argue that deregulating the public service is a necessary but insufficient condition for much of the needed improvement in governmental administration.


The Politics of Deregulation

The Politics of Deregulation

Author: Martha Derthick

Publisher: Brookings Institution Press

Published: 1985

Total Pages: 296

ISBN-13:

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The authors discuss deregulation in contemporary politics and government.


Letting Go

Letting Go

Author: Alfred Edward Kahn

Publisher: Institute of Public Utilities and Network Industries

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 160

ISBN-13:

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Whom the Gods Would Destroy, Or, how Not to Deregulate

Whom the Gods Would Destroy, Or, how Not to Deregulate

Author: Alfred Edward Kahn

Publisher: American Enterprise Institute

Published: 2001

Total Pages: 100

ISBN-13: 9780844771564

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This work assesses the status of the public utility deregulation movement in the USA. It focuses on the continuation of releasing competitive forces in the revolutionary deregulation of a large portion of the public utilities industries since 1980.


Regulatory Bargaining and Public Law

Regulatory Bargaining and Public Law

Author: Jim Rossi

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2005-06-06

Total Pages: 298

ISBN-13: 113944414X

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This text explores the implications of a bargaining perspective for institutional governance and public law in deregulated industries such as electric power and telecommunications. Leading media accounts blame deregulated markets for failures in competitive restructuring policies. However, the author argues that governmental institutions, often influenced by private stakeholders, share blame for the defects in deregulated markets. The first part of the book explores the minimal role that judicial intervention played for much of the twentieth century in public utility industries and how deregulation presents fresh opportunities and challenges for public law. The second part of the book explores the role of public law in a deregulatory environment, focusing on the positive and negative incentives it creates for the behavior of private stakeholders and public institutions in a bargaining-focused political process.