Money and Good Intentions Are Not Enough: Or, Why a Liberal Democrat Thinks States Need Both Competition and Community

Przednia okładka
Brookings Institution Press, 1 gru 2010 - 177

State governments are spending a lot, accomplishing too little, and failing to meet their responsibilities to the public. In this book, John Brandl argues that the usual remedies for ineffective government bureaucracy--cutting or adding to budgets, urging civil servants to become more entrepreneurial, hiring tougher managers, or appointing smarter bureaucrats--won't provide substantial, long-term improvement. Examining public schools Brandl points out that although real spending per student has tripled in the last 30 years and the average class size has shrunk from 27 to 17, educational performance "has become a national disgrace." He provides alternative policies that rely on harnessing self-interest through competition and incentives and encouraging affiliations that inspire community to forge a strong connection between spending and results.

 

Spis treści

An Agenda for the States
What State Governments Do Now and Will Do in the Future
6
Do State Taxpayers Get Their Moneys Worth?
19
Why State Governments Are Unacceptably Ineffective
36
Toward State Government
66
Beyond Incentives Community as Policy
82
Competition and Community Policies for the States
105
Reprise
124
Notes
133
Index
163
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Informacje o autorze (2010)

John E. Brandl, previously Deputy Assistant of the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and a Minnesota state legislator, is interim dean of the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs, University of Minnesota.

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