The UnPolitics of New Public Management in Ireland
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS AND DEMOCRATIC: GOVERNANCE, pp. 55-67, Jean-Michel Eymeri-Douzans and Jon Pierre eds., London: Routledge, 2010
23 Pages Posted: 28 Jan 2010 Last revised: 10 Dec 2011
Date Written: December 1, 2010
Abstract
Many of the principles and indeed the rhetoric of New Public Management proved attractive to both politicians and senior bureaucrats across the developed world as a remedy for problems in policy processes. Ireland shares many features of its constitutional structures and political practices with Britain, Canada, Australia, New Zealand, all of them early and enthusiastic adopters of NPM. Some of the organizational and procedural changes in Irish public administration do indeed bear similarities to those we would expect to see as a result of adopting principles of NPM. However, we contend that surface impressions are misleading. Drawing on a time-series database of Irish state institutions, we show that organizational changes were not necessarily driven by NPM. The absence of strong political drivers meant that reform initiatives did not fundamentally alter the configuration of the Irish public administration. Many of the problems that NPM was intended to address are only now coming under scrutiny.
Keywords: public Sector, Public Administration, State institutions, Ireland
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