The Federal Bureaucracy
Feb 26, 2016
The Federal Bureaucracy
The Federal BureaucracyMax Weber Bureaucracy Characteristics • Hierarchical authority structure – chain of command• Task specialization –
individuals have unique jobs, division of labor
• Extensive rules – clear policies for the organization to follow
• Clear goals – clearly defined mission
• Merit principle – hiring and promotion based on qualities, no jobs for favors
• Impersonality – performance judged on productivity
Is this a good thing or a bad thing?
The Department of Motor Vehicles; a good example of
impersonality
Large, complex organization of appointed, not elected, officials
• “bureau” – French for small desks, referring to the king’s traveling business men who set up small desks in town squares
• Bureaucracy = “government of small desks”
The Federal Bureaucracy
The Federal BureaucracyMax Weber• Famous early 20th
century German economist
• Bureaucracy – well organized, complex machine that is a “rational” way for society to organize its business
The Growth of The Federal Bureaucracy
The Federal Bureaucracy has only one task—to faithfully execute all the laws
The Framers believed that the bureaucracy would be relatively small and left most of the details up to the
president and Congress
The Spoils System• Federal bureaucracy
was originally drawn from an elite group of upper-class white males
• Proclaiming “to the victor belongs the spoils,” Andrew Jackson awarded federal posts to party loyalists• Known as patronage
The Growth of The Federal Bureaucracy
The Growth of The Federal BureaucracyThe Civil Service• The Pendleton Act (1883)
created the federal civil service • Civil Service system --
workers are selected according to merit, not party loyalty
• The 0ffice of Personnel Management (OPM)• Administers civil service laws
and regulations• Is in charge of hiring for most
federal agencies
The Growth of The Federal BureaucracyEffects of Civil Service Reform• Govt. employees are much more competent• Creating nonpartisan civil service means insulating
workers from risk of being fired when new party comes into power; this means it’s pretty hard to fire anyone
• Hatch Act (written 1939; renewed 1993): employees are prohibited from active participation in partisan politics
The Growth of The Federal BureaucracyWhy? Society has become increasingly complex• Science and technology• (NASA) is an example
• Business regulation• think -- The Jungle
• Social welfare• Civil War (veteran pensions)• Great Depression• income security and social services to
Americans in need • Ambitious administrators• top agency officials look for new ways to serve
clients, which in turn leads to new programs, larger staffs, and larger budgets
The Growth of The Federal BureaucracyConstraints• Typical govt. bureau can’t hire, fire, build, or sell w/o
going through statutory procedures• Administrative Procedures Act (1946): agency must
give notice, solicit feedback, hold hearing before adopting new rule/policy
• Freedom of Information Act (1966): agency must allow all citizens to inspect their records
• National Environmental Policy Act (1969): agencies must issue environ. impact statements
• Privacy Act (1974): keeps citizens’ records confidential• Open Meeting Law (1976): all parts of all meetings
must be open to public• Biggest constraint: Congress rarely gives any single job
to any single agency
Federal and State EmployeesThe federal bureaucracy includes all of the agencies, people, and procedures through which the federal government operates• There are
approximately 2.7 million civilian and 1.4 million military federal employees
• Half of all the civilian federal employees work for the department of defense and an additional 28 percent work for the postal service
Federal and State Employees• Federal government employees currently account
for 3 percent of all civilian jobs• Number of federal government employees has
remained constant since 1950• The number for state and local government
employees has steadily increased since 1950• Block grants have contributed to the widening
gap between the number of federal and state employees by shifting resources from the federal government to state and local government
• Federal mandates have also shifted more responsibility to states, causing an increase in the number of their public employees
Not So Big by Comparison
The Federal Bureaucracy: Organization and Key Functions
Cabinet Departments• There are 15 cabinet departments• Exception of Justice (headed by the Attorney
General), each department is headed by a secretary
• All 15 heads are chosen by the president and approved by the Senate
• Treasury Department has authority over the printing of currency
• Cabinet secretaries often develop a strong loyalty to their departments• Cabinet members are often not close
presidential advisors
The Federal Bureaucracy: Organization and Key Functions
Independent Regulatory Agencies• Created to protect the public by regulating key
sectors of the economy• Best known independent regulatory agencies• Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC)• Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)• National Labor Relations Board (NLRB)• Federal Reserve Board (FRB)
• Independent regulatory agencies are led by small commissions appointed by the president and confirmed by the Senate• Note commissioners cannot be removed by
the Senate during their terms of office
The Federal Bureaucracy: Organization and Key Functions
The Federal Reserve Board• Federal Reserve Board’s Primary responsibility is to
set monetary policy• Monetary policy includes setting bank interest
rates, controlling inflation, regulating the money supply, and adjusting bank reserve requirements
• Federal Reserve Board has great independence• This freedom removes monetary policy from
politics• As a result, the Federal Reserve Board is
usually able to use its economic expertise to develop monetary policies without undue interference from political parties and interest groups
The Federal Bureaucracy: Organization and Key Functions
The Government Corporations• Government corporations provide a service that
could be provided by the private sector• Best Known --• Corporation for Public Broadcasting• Tennessee Valley Authority• Amtrak• U.S. Postal Service
The Federal Bureaucracy: Organization and Key Functions
Independent Executive Agencies• Independent Executive Agencies include most of
the non-cabinet departments• Examples –• National Aeronautics
and Space Administration (NASA)
• Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)
Implementation and RegulationImplementation• Implementation is translation of policy goals
into rules and standard operating procedures• Break down• conflicting goals• faulty program design• lack financial resources• fragmentation of responsibilities• 46 agencies for counterterrorism ==
Office of Homeland Security (2001) • Congress provides federal agencies with general
mandates• Discretion to set specific guidelines for a
given problem or situation
Regulation• Regulation is the use of governmental authority
to control or change practices in the private sector
• Supreme Court first upheld the right of government to regulate businesses in Munn v. Illinois (1877)
• Reagan / Bush1 federal government deregulated or lifted a number of restrictions on business• Civil Aeronautics Board (CAB)
Implementation and Regulation
Implementation and RegulationRegulation v. Deregulation• Conservatives say: regulation has become too
burdensome, inhibits business, personal freedom• Regulation raises prices!• Regulation hurts our competitiveness overseas!• Regulation doesn’t always work; gov’t can be
dumb!• Liberals say: regulation is vital to prevent abuse,
corruption, public fraud• There is often environmental damage due to
deregulation!• Remember the savings and loan bailout, mid-
1980s? Deregulation caused that!• Remember the financial meltdown of 2009?
Deregulation!
The President and The Bureaucracy Appointments• Presidents have power to appoint senior agency
heads and subheads• Enables president to exercise influence over
an agency• President’s power limited• Senate has power to approve president’s
appointments• Agency heads often develop a strong loyalty
to their departments / do not aggressively purse a president’s policy agenda
The President and The Bureaucracy Executive Orders• Directive, order, or regulation issued by
president• Based on constitutional or statutory authority
and have force of law• 9066 -- Interment
Economic Powers• President may use Office of Management and
Budget to cut or add to an agency’s budget• REMEMBER -- Congress has the sole power to
appropriate funds to an agency
Congress and the BureaucracyDivided Authority• Divided supervision in which both president /
Congress exercise authority over the federal bureaucracy• Creates checks and balances while at the
same time often encouraging agencies to play one branch of government against the other• Defense appropriations
Congress and the BureaucracyOversight• Congress responsibility to exercise legislative
oversight over the federal bureaucracy• Oversight methods:• Budgetary control • Holding hearings and conducting
investigations• Reorganizing an agency• Setting new guidelines for an agency
Interest Groups and The BureaucracyIron Triangles• Alliance among an administrative agency, an
interest group, and a congressional committee to make or preserve policies that benefit their respective interests• Each member provides key services,
information, or policy for the others• So pervasive and powerful often called
subgovernments
BUREAUCRACY
CONGRESS
INTEREST GROUPS
Interest Groups and The BureaucracyIssue Networks• Coalition of interest groups and people who join
together to advocate for a specific problem and for changing a government policy that pertains to that problem
• Alliances created through an issue network make it possible for people to join together on their issue to create change in government policies that pertain to that issue
Interest Groups and The BureaucracyIssue Networks• Members of issue networks usually are political
executives, government officials, public servants, scholarly analysts, reporters, members of foundations and White House staff members
• Need for different professions is essential for an issue network to function, because many types of expertise are needed to change existing policy