Behavior of urban public authjorities operating in competitive markets : policy outcomes in mass transit
By: BOSHKEN, Herman L.
Material type: ArticlePublisher: Thousand Oaks : SAGE, January 2000Administration & Society 31, 6, p. 726-758Abstract: An old administrative adage has reemerged in public organizational studies that views government agencies as corptorate-like in behavior and policy making. The new twist in this enterprise thesis is the emphasis placed on competititve market conditions is determining how policy outcomes are patterned to favor some stakeholders over others. Applying regression analysis to a sample of 42 urban transit agencies, the study finds market conditions pose significant influence on skewing policy outcomes but do not necessarily cause a trade-off harmful to social-program clients. One implication is that introducing market conditions into the environment of public agencies may be a superior reform option to privatizationItem type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Periódico | Biblioteca Graciliano Ramos | Periódico | Not for loan |
An old administrative adage has reemerged in public organizational studies that views government agencies as corptorate-like in behavior and policy making. The new twist in this enterprise thesis is the emphasis placed on competititve market conditions is determining how policy outcomes are patterned to favor some stakeholders over others. Applying regression analysis to a sample of 42 urban transit agencies, the study finds market conditions pose significant influence on skewing policy outcomes but do not necessarily cause a trade-off harmful to social-program clients. One implication is that introducing market conditions into the environment of public agencies may be a superior reform option to privatization
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