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7/29/2012




     BUREAUCRACY




     Reported by: Ruth B. Nimo
                  PSHSS-OED




I.     UNDERSTANDING
       BUREAUCRACY




                                        1
7/29/2012




is the collective organizational
structure, procedures, protocols, and
set of regulations in place to manage
activity, usually in large organizations
and government. It is represented by
standardized procedure (rule-following)
that guides the execution of most or all
processes within the body; formal
division of powers; hierarchy; and
relationships, intended to anticipate
needs and improve efficiency.




A bureaucracy traditionally does not
create policy but, rather, enacts it.
Law, policy and regulation normally
originates from a leadership, which
creates the bureaucracy to put them
into practice. In reality, the
interpretation and execution of policy,
etc. can lead to informal influence.




                                                  2
7/29/2012




Four structural concepts are central to any
definition of bureaucracy:
1. a well-defined division of administrative
     labor among persons and offices,
2. a personnel system with consistent patterns
     of recruitment and stable linear careers,
3. a hierarchy among offices, such that the
     authority and status are differentially
     distributed among actors, and
4.   formal and informal networks that connect
     organizational actors to one another through
     flows of information and patterns of
     cooperation.




1. A formal hierarchical structure
2. Management by rules
3. Organization by functional specialty
4. An “up-focused” or “in-focused”
   mission
5. Purposely impersonal
6. Employment based on technical
   qualifications




                                                           3
7/29/2012




   Governments
   Armed forces
   Corporations
   Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs)
   Hospitals
   Courts
   Ministries
   Social clubs
   Sports Leagues
   Professional associations
   Academic institutions




 Perhaps the early example of a
  bureaucrat is the scribe, who first
  arose as a professional on the early
  cities of Sumer. The Sumerian script
  was so complicated that it required
  specialists who has trained for their
  entire lives in the discipline of writing
  to manipulate it.
 In later, larger empires like
  Achaemenid Persia, bureaucracies
  quickly expanded as government
  expanded and increased its functions.




                                                     4
7/29/2012




 The most modernesque of all ancient
  bureaucracies, however, was the Chinese
  bureaucracy. During the chaos of the
  Spring and Autumn Period and the
  Warring States Period, Confucius
  recognized the need for a stable system
  of administrators to lend good
  governance even when the leaders were
  inept.
 Modern bureaucracies arose as
  government of states grew larger during
  the modern period, and especially
  following the Industrial Revolution.




 Along with this expansion, though, came
  the recognition of the corruption and
  nepotism often inherent with the
  managerial system, leading to civil service
  reform on the large scale in many
  countries towards the end of the 19th
  century.




                                                       5
7/29/2012




II. BUREAUCRACY IN THE
    PHILIPPINES




 BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES
 Bureaucracy refers to administrative instrument or
 organization which exists in each modern political
 community for the attainment of the community’s
 social objectives (public policies). Broadly viewed, the
 bureaucracy is equivalent
 to the entire governmental
 institution.
 More restrictively
 interpreted, the following
 current usage, it refers to
 the civil service.




                                                                   6
7/29/2012




IMPORTANT PHASES IN THE EVOLUTION OF
THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES
A. The Pre-Spanish period – a period of cultural inadequacy, during
   which the social and economic foundations for bureaucratic
   organization and bureaucratic action had not been developed.

B. The Spanish Regime centralized the political life of the numerous
   native communities in the archipelago.
     Introduced a system of public
      revenues and public expenditures
     Introduced a social institution: the
      bureaucracy
    The paramount, and ultimately fatal, defect
    of the Spanish bureaucracy, was the fact that
    the private interests and personal behavior of
    its members effectively subverted the
    declared principles of the colonial
    administration.




… EVOLUTION OF THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE
PHILIPPINES (continuation)
C. The Philippine Revolution of 1896 – an attempt by the leaders of
   the Filipinos to practice the principles of government which the
   Spanish regime consistently professed but could not execute.
D. The American Regime continued what the Philippine Revolution
   started. Thorough reorganization of the bureaucracy was in fact
   easily accomplished.
     There was much room for innovation
     For the first time, the principle that
      public office was a public trust was
      practiced
    The principal concern of the American
    colonial administration was the protection
    of the civil service from the spoils system of
    party politics, and not the training of
    Filipinos for technical and administrative
    positions.




                                                                              7
7/29/2012




… EVOLUTION OF THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE
PHILIPPINES (continuation)
D. Japanese Wartime Occupation – conditions during this time
   disrupted and corrupted the bureaucracy.
E.   The Philippine Republic, 1946-1972
      A strong president, a bicameral legislature and an independent
       judiciary comprised the tripartite democratic structure ordained
       by the Philippine Constitution of 1935, and carried over into the
       new Philippine Republic of 1946.
      The US continued to intervene in Philippine affairs.
       The bureaucracy assumed the major responsibility for these
       programs; the civil service continued to regard itself as an
       arsenal of means and not the articulator of values.
      The Philippine civil service could be characterized as highly
       trained and professionalized even though it continued to be
       inefficient and ineffective.




CHARACTERISTICS OF PHILIPPINE BUREAUCRACY
1.   Vulnerability to Nepotism
2.   Perpetuation of the Spoils System
3.   Apathetic Public Reaction to Bureaucratic Misconduct
4.   Availability of External Peaceful Means of Correcting Bureaucratic
     Weaknesses
5.   Survival of Historical Experience
6.   Non-special Typing of Bureaucracies
7.   Lack of Independence from Politics
8.   An Instrument of Social Change and Innovation




                                                                                  8
7/29/2012




III. BUREAUCRACY FOR
     DEMOCRACY




  The inevitable friction between
   the new political leadership and
   the holdovers of the past
   government, especially the
   permanent bureaucracy.
   Nevertheless, the success or failure
   of the new ruling group rests, to a
   significant extent, on how this
   underestimated relationship with
   the career service is resolved.




                                                 9
7/29/2012




Two Main Forms of the Struggle:
1. Executive Ascendancy (or Bureaucratic Subordination)
   The political leadership bases its claim to supremacy on
   the mandate of God or of the people, or on some notion
   of the public interest. This might be legitimated by
   elections, force, or de facto acceptance by
   the citizenry. Under the liberal model,
   control runs through a single line from the
   supreme authority through its
   representatives (the political leadership)
   to the bureaucracy. Where power is derived
   from the people, this is called “overhead
   democracy”.




2. Bureaucratic Sublation of, or Co-equality with, the
   Executive
   The bureaucracy of any country is not merely an
   implementing mechanism and have power apart from
   that delegated by the political leadership.
   A bureaucracy that recognized its power may
   attempt to be on an equal footing with the
   executive by expecting its ready-made policy
   proposals to be accepted without question
   and its demands for recognition and benefits
   supported generously by its formal superiors.




                                                                    10
7/29/2012




The basic distinguishing factor of the democratic-
authoritarian axis is power concentration.
1. Democracy – Power is supposed to reside in the citizenry
   in a democracy. Those designated as “power-holders”
   are accountable to the people and govern in their name.
   Power is thus distributed in a democracy;
   those who want to exercise power
   compete freely and openly for it. Transfer
   of power to others outside the incumbent’s
   circle is supposed to take place peacefully
   and according to accepted rules.




2. Authoritarianism – While democracy tends toward
   openness and alternation, authoritarianism “is excluding”,
   concentrating power in one person or clique. The
   government is inaccessible to groups outside of the
   dominant clique except when it mobilizes the
   citizenry for its own ends. Power relations
   are organized in favor of the executive.
   Authoritarianism puts repression in the
   front of the cart, relying on state violence
   to control dissent. Such display of state
   power is justified in the name of stability
   and order, which in that system are values
   prized over individual liberty.




                                                                      11
7/29/2012




   Administrative development recognizes the civil service as
    a political body which not only has its own values and
    commitments but also acts on them. However, not all of
    its political activities are necessarily developmental: it is
    developed only to the extent that it husbands its
    resources and actively seeks to bring what it
    considers to be the public good.

   Administrative development must also involve the delicate
    job for maintaining the balance of power between
    bureaucracy and other political actors. Normally, this
    would refer control by the political leadership which is its
    legal and institutional superior.




 is the turnover of power which is peaceful and without any
  untoward incident. The civil service was transferred from one
  president to the next with little upheaval.
The first move of the political leadership is to deal with its bureaucracy,
and the usual first option is to try to change it.
Each president put his stamp on the bureaucracy through
    Personnel and organizational changes (the executive appointed
     agency heads and aides)
    Summarily remove political transients and casuals (the vacancies
     created become convenient openings for followers of the new gods)
    Other recourse was to restructure the bureaucracy (created offices
     directly under their supervision to identify what would be their main
     thrusts)
    Reorganization commissions (to inject some order into the government
     corporate sector)




                                                                                    12
7/29/2012




The bureaucracy has its own means of fighting back.
   First, it draws on its institutional memory and expertise to make
    itself useful and indispensable to the new team
   The bureaucracy may use the same sources of its strength against
    fledging leaders (the higher civil service may not provide the
    political leadership the information it needed for policy
    formulation)
   A bureaucracy may become more active in looking out for itself
    (Other civil servants find in the entry of a new regime the
    opportunity to legislate proposals to protect their turf and enlarge
    their powers)
   Holding back on performance may also be seen as another
    bureaucratic strategy




REFLECTING DEMOCRACY
   Undemocratic means for democratic ends
    Many leadership taking over from defeated democrats or
    delegitimated dictators have used short cuts to improve the
    bureaucracy.
    Clear guidelines, procedures in good-faith, a just and effective
    appeal machinery, and fair compensation packages can help to
    quiet the critics and validate a government’s claim to democracy.
   Social justice for the rank-and-file and for the poor
    As the state authoritatively allocates values in society, so does it
    create and maintain an internal structure of rewards and benefits
    to the people in the government service. An executive that takes
    power-pledging justice to everyone is expected not to exploit its
    partners in the endeavor.




                                                                                 13
7/29/2012




REFLECTING DEMOCRACY (continuation)
    Dispersing power
     A democracy by definition is a government that disperses power, or
     more accurately, one that encourages, nurtures and allows many
     people to wield power.




The advocate of bureaucracy find in its increasing strength vis-à-vis the
leadership a hope that it can serve as guardian of the public interest.
The model is the bureaucratic reformer who charges forth to bring
democracy to the people – with or against the leadership.
However, this reformist bureaucracy stance presents certain danger:
1.   Weakening the link between the leadership and the bureaucracy
     will not necessarily push the latter to seek guidance from popular
     groups.
2.   The implicit assumption seems to be that the bureaucracy can lead
     in the transformation of society because of its expertise and good
     knowledge of development issues.
3.   The problem of accountability is not solved by allowing one group
     to make unrestrained decisions, no matter how well meaning.




                                                                                  14
7/29/2012




The bureaucracy is a problem-solving system; it
has a whole arsenal of technology for every
imaginable problem. Its development along
technical lines has been the usual prescription of
administrative reformers.


The best bureaucracy is one whose
expertise is utilized and tamed for
higher democratic purposes.




The best imaginable system is one
where an executive with the will to
substantiate democracy is assisted by
a bureaucracy that believes in this
goal and does all it can to achieve it.
Therefore it must develop the
democratic means that will enable the
bureaucracy to fulfill its mission, even
as the latter from its own view tries to
modify its policies.




                                                           15

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Bureaucracy handouts

  • 1. 7/29/2012 BUREAUCRACY Reported by: Ruth B. Nimo PSHSS-OED I. UNDERSTANDING BUREAUCRACY 1
  • 2. 7/29/2012 is the collective organizational structure, procedures, protocols, and set of regulations in place to manage activity, usually in large organizations and government. It is represented by standardized procedure (rule-following) that guides the execution of most or all processes within the body; formal division of powers; hierarchy; and relationships, intended to anticipate needs and improve efficiency. A bureaucracy traditionally does not create policy but, rather, enacts it. Law, policy and regulation normally originates from a leadership, which creates the bureaucracy to put them into practice. In reality, the interpretation and execution of policy, etc. can lead to informal influence. 2
  • 3. 7/29/2012 Four structural concepts are central to any definition of bureaucracy: 1. a well-defined division of administrative labor among persons and offices, 2. a personnel system with consistent patterns of recruitment and stable linear careers, 3. a hierarchy among offices, such that the authority and status are differentially distributed among actors, and 4. formal and informal networks that connect organizational actors to one another through flows of information and patterns of cooperation. 1. A formal hierarchical structure 2. Management by rules 3. Organization by functional specialty 4. An “up-focused” or “in-focused” mission 5. Purposely impersonal 6. Employment based on technical qualifications 3
  • 4. 7/29/2012  Governments  Armed forces  Corporations  Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs)  Hospitals  Courts  Ministries  Social clubs  Sports Leagues  Professional associations  Academic institutions  Perhaps the early example of a bureaucrat is the scribe, who first arose as a professional on the early cities of Sumer. The Sumerian script was so complicated that it required specialists who has trained for their entire lives in the discipline of writing to manipulate it.  In later, larger empires like Achaemenid Persia, bureaucracies quickly expanded as government expanded and increased its functions. 4
  • 5. 7/29/2012  The most modernesque of all ancient bureaucracies, however, was the Chinese bureaucracy. During the chaos of the Spring and Autumn Period and the Warring States Period, Confucius recognized the need for a stable system of administrators to lend good governance even when the leaders were inept.  Modern bureaucracies arose as government of states grew larger during the modern period, and especially following the Industrial Revolution.  Along with this expansion, though, came the recognition of the corruption and nepotism often inherent with the managerial system, leading to civil service reform on the large scale in many countries towards the end of the 19th century. 5
  • 6. 7/29/2012 II. BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES Bureaucracy refers to administrative instrument or organization which exists in each modern political community for the attainment of the community’s social objectives (public policies). Broadly viewed, the bureaucracy is equivalent to the entire governmental institution. More restrictively interpreted, the following current usage, it refers to the civil service. 6
  • 7. 7/29/2012 IMPORTANT PHASES IN THE EVOLUTION OF THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES A. The Pre-Spanish period – a period of cultural inadequacy, during which the social and economic foundations for bureaucratic organization and bureaucratic action had not been developed. B. The Spanish Regime centralized the political life of the numerous native communities in the archipelago.  Introduced a system of public revenues and public expenditures  Introduced a social institution: the bureaucracy The paramount, and ultimately fatal, defect of the Spanish bureaucracy, was the fact that the private interests and personal behavior of its members effectively subverted the declared principles of the colonial administration. … EVOLUTION OF THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES (continuation) C. The Philippine Revolution of 1896 – an attempt by the leaders of the Filipinos to practice the principles of government which the Spanish regime consistently professed but could not execute. D. The American Regime continued what the Philippine Revolution started. Thorough reorganization of the bureaucracy was in fact easily accomplished.  There was much room for innovation  For the first time, the principle that public office was a public trust was practiced The principal concern of the American colonial administration was the protection of the civil service from the spoils system of party politics, and not the training of Filipinos for technical and administrative positions. 7
  • 8. 7/29/2012 … EVOLUTION OF THE BUREAUCRACY IN THE PHILIPPINES (continuation) D. Japanese Wartime Occupation – conditions during this time disrupted and corrupted the bureaucracy. E. The Philippine Republic, 1946-1972  A strong president, a bicameral legislature and an independent judiciary comprised the tripartite democratic structure ordained by the Philippine Constitution of 1935, and carried over into the new Philippine Republic of 1946.  The US continued to intervene in Philippine affairs. The bureaucracy assumed the major responsibility for these programs; the civil service continued to regard itself as an arsenal of means and not the articulator of values.  The Philippine civil service could be characterized as highly trained and professionalized even though it continued to be inefficient and ineffective. CHARACTERISTICS OF PHILIPPINE BUREAUCRACY 1. Vulnerability to Nepotism 2. Perpetuation of the Spoils System 3. Apathetic Public Reaction to Bureaucratic Misconduct 4. Availability of External Peaceful Means of Correcting Bureaucratic Weaknesses 5. Survival of Historical Experience 6. Non-special Typing of Bureaucracies 7. Lack of Independence from Politics 8. An Instrument of Social Change and Innovation 8
  • 9. 7/29/2012 III. BUREAUCRACY FOR DEMOCRACY  The inevitable friction between the new political leadership and the holdovers of the past government, especially the permanent bureaucracy. Nevertheless, the success or failure of the new ruling group rests, to a significant extent, on how this underestimated relationship with the career service is resolved. 9
  • 10. 7/29/2012 Two Main Forms of the Struggle: 1. Executive Ascendancy (or Bureaucratic Subordination) The political leadership bases its claim to supremacy on the mandate of God or of the people, or on some notion of the public interest. This might be legitimated by elections, force, or de facto acceptance by the citizenry. Under the liberal model, control runs through a single line from the supreme authority through its representatives (the political leadership) to the bureaucracy. Where power is derived from the people, this is called “overhead democracy”. 2. Bureaucratic Sublation of, or Co-equality with, the Executive The bureaucracy of any country is not merely an implementing mechanism and have power apart from that delegated by the political leadership. A bureaucracy that recognized its power may attempt to be on an equal footing with the executive by expecting its ready-made policy proposals to be accepted without question and its demands for recognition and benefits supported generously by its formal superiors. 10
  • 11. 7/29/2012 The basic distinguishing factor of the democratic- authoritarian axis is power concentration. 1. Democracy – Power is supposed to reside in the citizenry in a democracy. Those designated as “power-holders” are accountable to the people and govern in their name. Power is thus distributed in a democracy; those who want to exercise power compete freely and openly for it. Transfer of power to others outside the incumbent’s circle is supposed to take place peacefully and according to accepted rules. 2. Authoritarianism – While democracy tends toward openness and alternation, authoritarianism “is excluding”, concentrating power in one person or clique. The government is inaccessible to groups outside of the dominant clique except when it mobilizes the citizenry for its own ends. Power relations are organized in favor of the executive. Authoritarianism puts repression in the front of the cart, relying on state violence to control dissent. Such display of state power is justified in the name of stability and order, which in that system are values prized over individual liberty. 11
  • 12. 7/29/2012  Administrative development recognizes the civil service as a political body which not only has its own values and commitments but also acts on them. However, not all of its political activities are necessarily developmental: it is developed only to the extent that it husbands its resources and actively seeks to bring what it considers to be the public good.  Administrative development must also involve the delicate job for maintaining the balance of power between bureaucracy and other political actors. Normally, this would refer control by the political leadership which is its legal and institutional superior.  is the turnover of power which is peaceful and without any untoward incident. The civil service was transferred from one president to the next with little upheaval. The first move of the political leadership is to deal with its bureaucracy, and the usual first option is to try to change it. Each president put his stamp on the bureaucracy through  Personnel and organizational changes (the executive appointed agency heads and aides)  Summarily remove political transients and casuals (the vacancies created become convenient openings for followers of the new gods)  Other recourse was to restructure the bureaucracy (created offices directly under their supervision to identify what would be their main thrusts)  Reorganization commissions (to inject some order into the government corporate sector) 12
  • 13. 7/29/2012 The bureaucracy has its own means of fighting back.  First, it draws on its institutional memory and expertise to make itself useful and indispensable to the new team  The bureaucracy may use the same sources of its strength against fledging leaders (the higher civil service may not provide the political leadership the information it needed for policy formulation)  A bureaucracy may become more active in looking out for itself (Other civil servants find in the entry of a new regime the opportunity to legislate proposals to protect their turf and enlarge their powers)  Holding back on performance may also be seen as another bureaucratic strategy REFLECTING DEMOCRACY  Undemocratic means for democratic ends Many leadership taking over from defeated democrats or delegitimated dictators have used short cuts to improve the bureaucracy. Clear guidelines, procedures in good-faith, a just and effective appeal machinery, and fair compensation packages can help to quiet the critics and validate a government’s claim to democracy.  Social justice for the rank-and-file and for the poor As the state authoritatively allocates values in society, so does it create and maintain an internal structure of rewards and benefits to the people in the government service. An executive that takes power-pledging justice to everyone is expected not to exploit its partners in the endeavor. 13
  • 14. 7/29/2012 REFLECTING DEMOCRACY (continuation)  Dispersing power A democracy by definition is a government that disperses power, or more accurately, one that encourages, nurtures and allows many people to wield power. The advocate of bureaucracy find in its increasing strength vis-à-vis the leadership a hope that it can serve as guardian of the public interest. The model is the bureaucratic reformer who charges forth to bring democracy to the people – with or against the leadership. However, this reformist bureaucracy stance presents certain danger: 1. Weakening the link between the leadership and the bureaucracy will not necessarily push the latter to seek guidance from popular groups. 2. The implicit assumption seems to be that the bureaucracy can lead in the transformation of society because of its expertise and good knowledge of development issues. 3. The problem of accountability is not solved by allowing one group to make unrestrained decisions, no matter how well meaning. 14
  • 15. 7/29/2012 The bureaucracy is a problem-solving system; it has a whole arsenal of technology for every imaginable problem. Its development along technical lines has been the usual prescription of administrative reformers. The best bureaucracy is one whose expertise is utilized and tamed for higher democratic purposes. The best imaginable system is one where an executive with the will to substantiate democracy is assisted by a bureaucracy that believes in this goal and does all it can to achieve it. Therefore it must develop the democratic means that will enable the bureaucracy to fulfill its mission, even as the latter from its own view tries to modify its policies. 15