“…Therefore, our attention is more likely to be put on the process than on the actual effects (Gormley, 1987: 153). It is well known that the net effects of government restructuring or function adjustments among organizations are not as high as expected, considering the time and efforts, and political and administrative costs (Caiden, 1988). The reason that many Korean governments in the past actively pursued restructuring in spite of the relative ineffectiveness is the value of an expression in the will to reform, means of power redistribution, or measures to induce changes in policies.…”
“…Therefore, our attention is more likely to be put on the process than on the actual effects (Gormley, 1987: 153). It is well known that the net effects of government restructuring or function adjustments among organizations are not as high as expected, considering the time and efforts, and political and administrative costs (Caiden, 1988). The reason that many Korean governments in the past actively pursued restructuring in spite of the relative ineffectiveness is the value of an expression in the will to reform, means of power redistribution, or measures to induce changes in policies.…”
“…The movement has been widespread, observable at once at the national, subnational, and international levels. One aspect of this break with long-established patterns is a deliberate effort, through training, education and other means, to change certain habits of minds, standards of work and behavior, and to assimilate them to those of private enterprise (Caiden 1988:341, Dwivedi et al 2007. Another is diversity and flexibility in matters of selection, recruitment and promotion of public servants.…”
“…The policies developed and implemented included, for example, privatization, decentralization, deregulations, reduced taxation, performance-oriented management, and the streamlining of public business. Facing different economic and political problems, other developed countries, such as Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and Sweden, also adopted various reform policies to improve effective and efficient management of their financial and administrative systems (Caiden, 1988).…”
This symposium examines issues related to the links between administrative reform policy and economic development policy. The symposium introduction paper consists of two parts. First, it offers an overview of the background of theoretical and conceptual issues that are important to the connection between administrative reform and economic development. The issues reviewed include the role of government in economic development, the importance of public policy and management to economic development, the contribution of development administration, and the need of administrative reform to remove bureaucratic problems and promote efficiency. Next, the introduction paper provides a brief summary of the research arguments and findings addressed in the following six articles. They include an evaluation of administrative reform in Arab world economic growth, an examination of administrative reform and economic development in Latin America and the Caribbean, a political economy analysis of policy reform in Korea, a study of the implementation of privatization strategies in India's public sector reform, a discussion of the concerns between efficiency and ethics in China's economic development, and the study of administrative and economic development in Mongolia. The implications of the research findings and the need for further study of the linkage between administrative reform and economic development are emphasized in the conclusion. Copyright 1999 by The Policy Studies Organization.
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