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Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

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Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles. Regulated. The use of gov’t authority to control the private sector Occurs everyday in your lives EPA: require pollution control FTC: unfair advertising claims. Why can they do this?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

Bureaucracies Explained and Iron

Triangles

Page 2: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

The use of gov’t authority to control the

private sector

Occurs everyday in your lives EPA: require pollution control FTC: unfair advertising claims

Regulated

Page 3: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

Munn v. Illinois (1877): upheld Congress’s right

to regulate business. Issue: Can Congress regulate warehouse prices

of a Chicago warehouse Reasoning: Congress could regulate business

practices as they are a part of commerce

Why can they do this?

Page 4: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

3 elements all regulations have

1) A grant of power/direction from Congress

2) A set of rules and guidelines for the agency itself

3) Some means of enforcing compliance with the regulation

What makes a regulation

Page 5: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

Deregulation: lifting of government

restrictions. Why? (allegedly)

Raising prices: regulations make goods cost more

Hurting America’s competitive position: Other nations have fewer(less expensive)

regulations

Failure to work well: may be hard to enforce, or just too cumbersome.

Get out of here Regulation

Page 6: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

Bureaucracies/bureaucrats spend about $3

trillion of American GDP Unelected policymakers

Due to how influential they are, Presidents attempt to control bureaucracies

Policy makers

Page 7: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

1. Appoint the head of the agency to achieve

means 2. Issue orders

Executive Order: Presidential order that carries the weight of law.

3. Alter an agencies budget 4. Reorganize the bureau

How?

Page 8: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles
Page 9: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles
Page 10: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

_____24.) ____ systems are designed to hire and

promote members of the bureaucracy on the basis of merit and to create a nonpartisan government service.

A.) Patronage B.) Civil service C.) Hatch D.) Civilian E.) Military

Page 11: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

_____22.) The authority of administrative actors to

select among various responses to a given problem is

called

A.) policy implementation. B.) selective management. C.) the merit principle. D.) the definition of alternatives. E.) administrative discretion.

Page 12: Bureaucracies Explained and Iron Triangles

2.) In the first half of United States history,

bureaucracies tended to act in a client-oriented role. However, since the early 1900s, the bureaucracy has become more of a regulator.

a.) Identify TWO agencies that serve in a regulatory capacity and give an example of a regulation each has made.

b.) Describe ONE complaint made about the federal bureaucracy acting in the role of a regulator.