2019
DOI: 10.1111/puar.13133
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Does Administrative Burden Influence Public Support for Government Programs? Evidence from a Survey Experiment

Abstract: Research indicates that administrative burden influences the behaviors and views of clients and potential clients of government programs. However, administrative burden may also shape mass attitudes toward government programs. Taking a behavioral public administration approach, the authors consider whether and how exposure to information about administrative burden embedded within eligibility-based programs influences citizen favorability toward those programs. It is hypothesized that if information about the … Show more

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Cited by 70 publications
(43 citation statements)
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References 89 publications
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“…An example of the former is the estimation of smokers’ willingness to pay for the elimination of tobacco addiction to identify cigarette demand in the absence of addiction (Weimer, Vining, and Thomas ); an example of the latter is the estimation of households’ willingness to pay to continue to receive HERs to estimate households’ net costs of achieving energy savings (Allcott and Kessler ). This line of research may benefit from the general increase in survey research capabilities among researchers, especially those who study behavioral public administration (see, e.g., Hollibaugh, Miles, and Newswander ; Keiser and Miller ), as well as within administrative agencies that routinely survey those who receive their services. However, stated preference methods require special attention to the challenges of reliability eliciting willingness to pay, especially in light of the cognitive limitations and biases of respondents.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…An example of the former is the estimation of smokers’ willingness to pay for the elimination of tobacco addiction to identify cigarette demand in the absence of addiction (Weimer, Vining, and Thomas ); an example of the latter is the estimation of households’ willingness to pay to continue to receive HERs to estimate households’ net costs of achieving energy savings (Allcott and Kessler ). This line of research may benefit from the general increase in survey research capabilities among researchers, especially those who study behavioral public administration (see, e.g., Hollibaugh, Miles, and Newswander ; Keiser and Miller ), as well as within administrative agencies that routinely survey those who receive their services. However, stated preference methods require special attention to the challenges of reliability eliciting willingness to pay, especially in light of the cognitive limitations and biases of respondents.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Additionally, as these biases also appear to be relevant to public perceptions of performance (Marvel ; Walker et al ), they may have efficiency impacts beyond human resource management. They may also have political impacts: although reducing the red tape for participation in welfare programs may reduce barriers to access (Christensen et al ), it may also reduce public support for those programs (Keiser and Miller ).…”
Section: Implications For Public Administratorsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…DeHart‐Davis () has pointed out that public managers need to invest time in explaining the purpose of a given rule in order to enhance cooperative rule behavior by citizens. Likewise, Keiser and Miller () have evidenced how attitudes toward welfare programs improve when providing information about the program to the public. However, given the similarity of emotional responses to treatments with and without information, it might rather depend on how public servants convey the message of purpose.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a broader sense, the articles in this symposium point to meaningful avenues for future research in BPA. The manner in which rules are communicated (Hattke, Hensel, and Lalucza ), the amount of administrative burden they place on recipients of program benefits (Keiser and Miller ), and recipients' levels of cognitive resources (Christensen et al ) influence public evaluations of the legitimacy and value of public programs and policies. It is likely that public employees engage in similar processes when evaluating directives from their superiors.…”
Section: Administrative Lessonsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As other articles in this symposium (e.g., Christensen et al ; Hattke, Hensel, and Laucza ; Keiser and Miller ; Linos and Riesch ) illustrate, the scope of possible behavioral microfoundations is quite broad, and to address all possible ones is beyond the scope of any single article. To begin the process of parsing out administrative behavior, we focus on O'Leary's insights into how guerrilla government action is processed through bureaucratic politics, ethics, and organization and management.…”
mentioning
confidence: 98%