New Public Management Reforms: Institutions matter!


Autoria(s): Rosta, Miklós
Data(s)

2012

Resumo

New Public Management (NPM) has played a decisive role and has had a radical effect on the productivity and efficiency of the public sector in the Anglo-Saxon countries. However, the effective introduction of the NPM reforms is not an easy task. The scientific community is zealously analyzing the experiences of the developing countries. The stories, they tell, are full of failures, and ineffective reforms. The goal of the current study is to uncover the factors that might influence the successful implementation of the NPM reforms. In our analysis, by relying on the theories of new institutional economics, we developed a model with which we wish to prove that in regards to the success of the reforms the informal and the formal institutions characteristic of the given country are the decisively determining factors. When answering the question, we introduced a new indicator based on public choice theory – the politicians’ interest index – by which we could measure the success of the NPM. We tested our hypothesis by a comparative statistical analysis using the data from 31 countries. Based on our results, we find that informal institutions, the culture shared by the members of society, fundamentally determine the probability of the successful implementation of the NPM reforms, these results having a significant practical relevance.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://unipub.lib.uni-corvinus.hu/1909/1/pmr_Rosta_wp_2012.pdf

Rosta, Miklós (2012) New Public Management Reforms: Institutions matter! Working Paper. Corvinus University of Budapest, Department of Comparative Economics, Budapest. (Unpublished)

Publicador

Corvinus University of Budapest, Department of Comparative Economics

Relação

http://unipub.lib.uni-corvinus.hu/1909/

Palavras-Chave #Public administration
Tipo

Monograph

NonPeerReviewed