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David Good
It has been a generation
since Canada
has had a minority government and much has changed in the way that public
administration and the business of government is carried out. This article
examines some of the implications of the new Liberal minority government for
the public service and what it means for how public servants do their work.
What challenges emerge for the public service, what opportunities?
During the last 30 years majority governments have been the
norm with seven majority parliaments and only one, short-lived nine-month
minority government – the Conservative Clark government of 1979. In stark
contrast, during the previous 17 years – from June 1957 to July 1974 – there
were five minority parliaments, interspersed by just two majority governments.1
Since confederation there have
now been ten minority governments. Their tenure has varied significantly
depending in large measure on whether the governing party secured willing
partners among the opposition parties. All five minority Liberal governments
sought and found partners, with the closest collaboration occurring in the 1972
Trudeau minority government. The NDP formed an alliance (not a coalition) with
the Liberals and the government’s policy agenda moved to the left. Every policy
proposal and all legislation was discussed between the two parties, and only
when agreement was reached did the Liberal government introduce the bill
confident that with NDP support it would pass. As a result the House operated
for a year and half in a fairly predictable manner. The accommodation collapsed
when the NDP voted against John Turner’s 1974 budget, with the Liberal
government seeking defeat over a budget it had deliberately crafted to sell in
an election.
In one of the two Mackenzie
King minority governments (1922-25) and in the two Pearson minority governments
(1963-65 and 1966-68) the relationships with the opposition parties were not as
close as the Trudeau alliance with the NDP in 1972. Nonetheless, these King and
Pearson governments were relatively dependable. In the 1920s the opposition
Progressives had a certain affinity with the King Liberals (they eventually
joined them) so the Liberal government could tailor its policies to gain
support. In the 1960s the two Pearson governments proved to be relatively
stable and productive. Only the 1926 King minority government was unstable with
the Governor General denying Prime Minister King’s request for dissolution of
the House of Commons in June thereby leading to the so-called “King-Byng
constitutional crisis”.
The other four minority
governments were short-lived for a variety of reasons. The 1957-58 minority
government lasted just nine months with Prime Minister Diefenbaker calling an
election as soon as he was satisfied he could achieve a majority. The demise of
the second Diefenbaker minority government in 1963 after 8 months was the
result of sharp divisions within Cabinet over whether to accept nuclear
warheads on Bomarc defence missiles, with the Liberals accepting the warheads
and several Conservative ministers joining the Liberals in voting to defeat a
supply motion. The minority government of Joe Clark (1979) lasted just nine
months, largely because he decided, “to govern as if we had a majority”.
Meighen’s government of 1926 was defeated in three days since he had to appoint
acting ministers (under rules of House at that time), a practice which King
used to discredit the new government.
Our Tenth Minority
Government
What do we make of this our
tenth minority government? How stable it will be and how long it will last no
one can say for sure. Experience suggests that the degree of stability and
predictability of a minority depends upon a number of factors:
- The
relative number of seats held by the government party and the opposition
parties;
- The
relative size of the national vote for the government party and the opposition
parties;
- The
leverage that opposition parties can secure in supporting the governing party;
- The
ideological differences and relationships between the parties; and
- An
assessment by each party about how well it would fare in a new election.
Applying these factors to the
current situation and in light of the nine other minority governments, I would
conclude that overall this minority government is relatively stable, although
not necessarily highly predictable. There is an underlying fragility because
the government does not have an arrangement of support from a single opposition
party. Instead, it will be depending on varying degrees of support at various
times from various parties. Even if Mr. Martin’s previously proposed democratic
reforms are implemented to restrict votes of confidence to debates on the
Speech from the Throne, the Budget, and the Estimates they will not appreciably
increase the stability of the minority government. Much therefore will depend on
the skill, good will, and cooperation of the leaders and their parties.
The electorate appears to have
given Paul Martin a second chance after his dismal failure to govern and the
significant inadequacies of his election campaign in the face of deep public
concerns about the sponsorship scandal. But the electorate have put the
government on a very tight leash. The Liberals have 135 seats (36.7 % of the
popular vote) compared to 99 seats (29.6 % of the popular vote) for the
Conservatives. The Liberals have representation in all regions of the country,
although their western representation continues to be slim. Combined with the
NDP (which has 19 seats with 15.7% of the vote), there are only 154 seats,
which is 1 shy of the number necessary to command a majority in the House of
Commons. The Bloc has 54 seats with 12.4% of the national popular vote and 50%
of the Quebec
vote. There is 1 independent MP. To command a majority the government will need
support from the Bloc, the Conservatives, a combination of the NDP with the
independent MP or with another party, or any combination of 20 MPs.
This makes the situation
different from the Trudeau minority of 1972 were there was a relatively stable
alliance with the NDP lasting 18 months. The large size of the separatist Bloc
support, equal to its high-water mark immediately following the failure of the
Meech Lake Accord increases significantly the uncertainty and will likely
elevate regional tensions. The Prime Minister has clearly indicated that
he will not form an alliance or coalition with any one party or group of
parties, but will cooperate with all parties seeking support from parties and
members depending upon the specific issue at hand. The public does not seem
anxious for another election. Many voters who wanted and voted for a minority
government now want to see it work.
What does this mean for the
public service and for how public servants go about doing the business of
government?
The Public Service in
Minority Government
The role of the public service
is, of course, to support the government of the day, to carry out and implement
its agreed program and to tender professional non-partisan policy advice. In
short, the job is “to speak truth to power” – to be fearless in policy advice
and loyal in implementation. In minority governments this does not change, but
the political and Parliamentary environment within which policy advice is
considered and programs are implemented has changed significantly. The
implications for the public service are best considered in terms of four
dynamics or interactions:
- The
dynamics within the governing party;
- The
interactions between the governing party and its supporting party or parties;
- The
dynamics within the major opposition party; and
- The
interaction between ministers and Members of Parliament, including government,
supporting, and opposition members.
Minority governments lack the
predictability and stability that comes with majority governments and therefore
they are constantly sniffing out the mood of the electorate and assessing
public opinion. The possibly of an election is always just around the corner
and therefore the views of the electorate are of immediate importance. For
public servants this means that in general they are in pre-election mode with
governments shaping their policies and programs in terms of how they will be
perceived by voters in an upcoming election. The government will be looking
more than ever for “error free government”. They do not want mistakes. This places
a premium on prudent and sound advice in matters of both administration and
policy. The Liberal minority government will feel more vulnerable than previous
minority governments to opposition and media attacks that find their origins in
reports of the Auditor General whose credibility with the public is very high
in the aftermath of the sponsorship scandal. When it comes to the management
and administration of government programs the focus will be on avoiding and
minimizing risk rather than pursuing innovation and creativity.
The government will be anxious to deliver on a
number of priorities early in its mandate so that it has in place a record of
accomplishment to distinguish itself from its principal opposition. There will
be much focus on implementation.
The premium for
public servants will be on speedy but thorough implementation of programs and
projects, timely follow-up, flawless execution, and effective and smooth
delivery of key priorities.
There is also expected to be
some greater discipline within the governing party itself. (Recall in
Diefenbaker’s second minority government it was rancour and dissension from
within his own cabinet that brought down his government). Government MPs
recognize that the fate of government depends upon their support leading them
to adhere more closely to the party line. Similarly ministers aware of the
consequences of ignoring government MPs tend to be more attentive to their
concerns. The result can lead to a greater coherence within the governing
party, with the government caucus being an important vehicle for cementing
views rather than fermenting internal opposition.
All this has important
implications for the public service. The requirement for public policy that is,
popular with the electorate, can be quickly delivered, and readily
distinguishable from the opposition may not always be consistent with the
necessity for “error free government”. In the face of a multiplicity of
pressures, it will be even more important that public servants “speak
administrative truth to political power”. Pointing out to Ministers the policy
and administrative problems associated with a seemingly popular initiative and
coming up with practical solutions will be important work for public servants.
In a minority world where Ministers already feel the heavy weight of major
constraints, public servants will need to be particularly skilful in tendering
advice that may not always be popular and devising solutions that are not easy
and readily apparent.
Policy and legislation will be
the subject of extensive private discussion and negotiation between the
designated minister(s) of the governing party and the designated MP(s) of the
supporting party or parties before it is introduced in the House of Commons and
announced publicly. In a fluid environment with several floating arrangements
of possible support, the prospects for surprise and uncertainty will increase.
The Liberal government will be seeking out different arrangements and alliances
with different parties and MPs for different policy and legislative
initiatives. For example, it will turn to the NDP for support on such
initiatives as health care, early child development, and the cities agenda, to
the Bloc and the NDP on climate change and it could turn to the Conservatives
for support on defence and the missile shield. How these specific arrangements
work or do not work on any one issue will determine how they are used or not
used on future issues.
For public servants this will
increase the likelihood of surprise and significantly increase the demands for
quick and immediate response and adjustment to policy proposals and
legislation. The possibility for surprise will occur before policy is debated
or legislation is introduced in the House and before and during consideration
of proposals at Federal-Provincial and First Ministers meetings. Surprise will
also occur when legislative proposals are amended in Committees of the House in
which a majority coalition of support will be required for passage. The
increasing influence of MPs in Committees that emerged in the last two
Parliaments will be given greater focus and momentum in this Parliament. All
this will require a public service that can offer a combination of anticipatory
analysis, the generation of more than the normal number of options, and
considerably more sophisticated contingency planning. This must be done under
the intense scrutiny of the media with its skill in accessing critical
government information and in transforming daily events into sensational
stories. It will also require a fast-footed and flexible public service that
can quickly react and adjust to the changes and pressures that could not be
anticipated. In short, public servants will need to think creatively, act
flexibly, but be prudent.
Facilitating agreement and compromise
between the Liberal government and NDP and the Bloc on specific initiatives
will be facilitated and smoothed through increased fiscal resources. On a
number of social policy issues, such as health care, children, cities, same sex
marriage, and other human rights issues, the Liberals and the NDP share common
ground. There will be increased pressures on the fiscal framework for new and
increased expenditures. The oft-repeated Liberal election commitment to “fix”
medicare and the window of opportunity for the provinces and territories to
push Ottawa to take on costly program responsibilities such as pharmacare and
to seek dramatic increases in transfer payments will be the focus of much of
the fiscal woes of the Liberal government. Not wanting to run the risk of going
back into deficit and being unwilling to expand an already tight fiscal
framework the Liberal minority government will put the public service under
considerable pressure to find new sources of funds through difficult and tricky
expenditure reallocation. Cuts will need to be made somewhere to provide
new funding for something else. Mr. Martin’s high-profile promise for “a
continuous culture of reallocation”, previously conceived under different and
more stable circumstances will be sharply put to the test under the pressures
of minority government.
In this minority government we
can expect to see budgeting by reallocation, which is fundamentally different
than budgeting by addition or budgeting by subtraction. The basic concepts of
“fair share” in budgeting by addition and “equal sacrifice” in budgeting by
subtraction, both critical in “making life tolerable for politicians” go out
the window. Winners and losers sit side by side. The wins are big and the
losses even bigger. Because so much goes on in one place or close to one place,
and because cuts and increases need to be linked, there is little opportunity
for the healing effects of distance and time. This is budgeting for the tough
and strong, not for the meek and mild. This is budgeting that is “in your face,
up front, and personal”. This is budgeting that is open for all to see. Budget
conflict inevitably increases and its corrosive effects will need to be managed
with great skill and care. A good part of the job of providing comfort and
support to the losers in the reallocation game might by default fall to a
number of senior public servants.
The key question in
reallocation is what resources go to the centre and what stay within
departments. When the centre puts “everything under the microscope” it takes
what it sees and also some of what it imagines. In minority government don’t
expect savings to stay with departments. Savings will come to the centre to
help underwrite the costs of priorities – health, child development, cities, etc.
Similarly do not expect new funding to be provided to the public service to
underwrite the costs of its personnel, capital, information technology, policy
analysis, program delivery, and administration. The experience in 1999-2001
with reallocation in the form of the Treasury Board-led “program integrity” and
“departmental assessment” exercises was unsuccessful. The reviews identified
expenditure shortfalls in critical areas of government operations (e.g.,
capital and information technology), yet securing funds for these shortfalls
through visible reallocations resulted in increased budget conflict and proved
impossible. A system of continuous expenditure reallocation in minority
government will only add to the under-funding of government operations over the
long run.
The Liberal minority
government may find that reallocation is simply too painful to implement. It
may also find that a time-limited minority parliament unleashes an onslaught of
big demands from a host of spenders who are determined to capitalize on a
narrow window of opportunity in the aftermath of restraint and downloading. At
the top of any such list will be disgruntled Premiers who want large increases
for health care in the form of escalating multi-year funding; social policy
advocates who have faced a decade of expenditure restraint despite new and
pressing social needs; a military with strong claims that it is under-equipped,
under-staffed, and under-funded; the NDP which is committed to large
expenditure programs despite a previous suggestion that it would balance the
budget; and the Bloc who will argue single-mindedly for expenditures for Quebec
and seek out provincial support to reduce fiscal imbalance within the
federation.
An alternative scenario
therefore might be to expand the fiscal framework in order to underwrite the
costs of new initiatives sufficient for maintaining political support. This
would avoid the divisiveness and conflict inherent in reallocation. It would
however provide the opposition Conservatives with the combustible fuel
necessary to ignite and fire a subsequent election and extinguish a general
perception that Mr. Martin has had a good record of fiscal management.
Money will not be the only
means for facilitating agreements between the government and various opposition
parties. There will be pressure on the public service for increased
administrative flexibility. More than other countries Canadian federal
ministers and MPs have always taken great interest in how programs are
implemented and administered. In minority government this interest is likely to
increase as governments and opposition parties seek out more political space
and territory on which they can negotiate and cut deals. In minority government
there is risk that the traditional administrative space of public servants,
which is already in a state of flux, confusion, and uncertainty will be under
increased and accelerated pressure through the incursions of politicians.
In the early mandate of a
majority government, there is little or no prospect of the opposition
immediately forming government. Opposition parties can develop policy positions
and undertake tactics confident that they will not suddenly be called upon to
take responsibility for their words and actions. This is not the case in a
minority government, with the result that the official opposition party tends
to be more prudent and less extreme. Depending on the particular circumstances,
this natural inclination for prudence by the opposition could well be very
useful for Mr. Harper and parts of his Conservative Party who may want to
fashion an image for the electorate of a leader and a party that is moderate
and responsible. In addition, the NDP may soon learn that the cost of directly
influencing the policies and legislation of the government comes at a price, as
they must temper their positions and behaviour in the House, in the committees,
and in the media. Although these dynamics should not be overestimated they can
contribute to stability in minority governments.
Public servants will
need to accurately assess the administrative and managerial risks that could
lead to public embarrassment and to ensure they have in place effective
administration and carefully crafted strategies to deal with them.
The most significant attacks
on government can be expected to focus on where the opposition and the public
perceive it to be most vulnerable. It is likely to continue to be less in the
area of policy and more in terms of accountability, mismanagement, and
allegations of corruption. With the ongoing judicial inquiry and investigations
of the sponsorship scandal the opposition will be left with a number of
high-profile opportunities to pursue these issues. There will also be
considerable effort by the opposition, surrounded by a probing press, an attentive
public, and a publicly credible Auditor General to attempt to uncover more
scandals. In this environment there is increased risk that minor administrative
mistakes internal to government are cast as major public scandals. Experience
has indicated that first impressions usually become lasting impressions.
Ministers in minority
government understand instinctively that their success is fundamentally
predicated on sustaining good working relationships with MPs, both government
and opposition. Minority governments are one way to reduce the democratic
deficit. MPs are no longer simply “backbenchers”. All MPs count and they are
always being counted. MPs have an interest in supporting their own parties but
they also have an interest and an expectation in securing benefits for, and
meeting the needs of, their local constituents. The public expects minority
governments to serve citizens and for MPs that means attending to their ridings
and their constituents.
This has several implications
for the public service. The regional and local aspects of public policies and
programs will be of increased concerned to government and opposition MPs.
MPs as individuals and as members of regional caucuses can be expected to
press hard for tailoring policies and programs to address the unique concerns
and needs of their constituents. This can result in vigorous attempts to
configure and shape national programs to accommodate regional interests and to
ensure that constituents and regions receive their fair share of regional programs.
In addition, there may also be pressure to increase the role of individual MPs
in the formal decision-making process of regional programs and projects in an
attempt to make these initiatives more sensitive and responsive to the unique
needs of constituents.
This will require a public
service that is closely attuned to regional and local issues so that these
issues, driven with greater force and determination by MPs can be effectively
managed in way that is coordinated, affordable, and respects the political
neutrality of public servants and their accountability to ministers. Calls for
increasing the decision-making role of MPs on individual programs and projects
are fraught with great risk and considerable problems. The recent experience of
the HRDC Canada Jobs Funds clearly demonstrates that formal decision-making
roles for MPs on programs and projects confuses accountability and ministerial
responsibility and can undercut the perceived political neutrality of public
servants. Such calls should be turned down and turned away.
Strengthening
Accountability
Minority government will
create new challenges for the public service, but it may also create new
opportunities. The strains and stresses of minority government may add to the
accountability pressures facing public servants, ministers, and Members of
Parliament. Indeed, it is increasingly argued that accountability in
government is one area most in need of reform.2 Interestingly a
minority government could provide a window of opportunity for change and the
occasion to strengthen accountability. It could also reinforce the demand and
the need for public servants to “speak truth to power”. Nick d’Ombrain, a
former senior official in the Privy Council Office and an expert in the field of
machinery of government and accountability has done great service in clarifying
the doctrine of ministerial responsibility. He writes, “It is now accepted by
many that it is unreasonable to hold a minister personally responsible for the
errors of administrative subordinates and that career officials can and should
answer to parliamentary committees for administrative matters, but not for
policy or politically controversial issues”.3 The key words
are the last seven and I will return to them in a moment.
This thinking in a minority
government context could provide the basis for the consideration of a new
concept in accountability in the Canadian government. I am speaking of the
concept of the principal accounting officer – a long established tradition in
Britain. The essential idea is to create some administrative space for public
servants while respecting the doctrine of ministerial responsibility. How would
it work? As principal accounting officers, Deputy Ministers would have personal
responsibility for the overall organization, management and staffing of their
departments. They would have to ensure that standards of financial management
are high, that financial systems promote efficient and economical conduct of
business and safeguard financial propriety and regularity, and that decisions
on policy fully take into account financial considerations.4
Accounting officers
therefore would have a particular responsibility to provide appropriate advice
to ministers on all matters of financial propriety and economical
administration.
If a minister considered an
action that would infringe on these matters, the principal accounting officer
would be required to object in writing to the minister. If a minister decided
to proceed with the action, the accounting officer would be obliged to obtain a
written instruction from the minister and then inform the Treasury Board, the
Comptroller General, and the Auditor General. If this procedure were followed
the Public Accounts Committee would hold that the officer bears no personal
responsibility. This is hardly a new proposal for the Canadian federal
government. The proposals for strengthening accountability by the Lambert
Commission in 1979 and in the McGrath report in 1985 were based on the UK
practice of designating Deputy Ministers as principal accounting officers. But,
of course, while the traditions and cultures in these two governments are
similar, they are not the same. Let us return to d’Ombrain’s seven key words:
“not for policy or politically controversial issues”.
For the principal accounting
officer concept to work in Canada there must be a minimal level of
understanding among ministers, parliamentarians, public servants and indeed the
media about what constitutes policy and what is administration. This is critical
because the Westminster model of ministerial responsibility has retained a
large scope of action that is politically- as opposed to administratively-
initiated. In the Canadian federal system separating administration from policy
is especially difficult and tricky in part because most ministers want to be,
and many are, directly involved in the management and delivery of programs.
Ministers and federal governments (whatever their political stripe) want
to reach out and touch Canadians.5 In the UK, the extensive use of
Executive Agencies within a unitary state has helped to more clearly define
institutionally at least, the semblance of a dividing line between policy and
administration. Even there, Lord Bridges, Secretary to the Cabinet (1938-45)
likened policy to an elephant – “not easy to define, but you’ll recognize it
when you see it”– albeit prior to the creation of Executive Agencies.
Michael Pitfield, former Clerk
of the Privy Council wrote that he did not see the tendency to blend policy and
administration as an insurmountable problem when it came to the question of
establishing the principal accounting officer. He felt that boundaries could be
drawn and ground rules established.6 The key question however is not
whether boundaries can be drawn but can they be drawn in a manner in which they
will be accepted and respected by all parties – ministers, senior public
servants, parliamentarians (opposition and government), and the media. This
acceptance should be a condition for instituting the accounting officer concept
and it should be a part of any “new bargain”. It will not be good enough and it
will likely be counterproductive if the accounting officer arrangement is
largely struck between ministers and public servants, leaving parliamentarians
to their own natural devices.
The other area, which is
considerably more difficult, centres on the phrase “politically controversial
issues”. As we know from first hand experience, some administrative issues can
and do become politically controversial, and the trend is on the rise.7
The Auditor General in her November 2003 report observed that parliamentary
culture may have to change if senior public servants are to be directly
accountable to Parliamentary Committees for the exercise of their (administrative)
duties. I agree. In the UK the Parliamentary Committee on Public Administration
has a longstanding tradition of thoughtful deliberation, non-partisanship, and
consensus reports as opposed to a raft of majority and minority reports. The
establishment of a single non-partisan committee in Canada dealing with public
administration may be one way to start, since changing culture is not like
changing underwear. It will take time. This, of course, moves us into the area
of Parliamentary reform, a subject which time does not permit me to deal with
here, but parts of which, I think will be necessary for the successful
implementation of the accounting officer concept.
In some sense the principal
players (public servants, ministers, and parliamentarians) are all caught in
the “prisoner’s dilemma” in which the benefits to each player from mutual
adjustment are not necessarily achieved. It is like “after you Alfonse”. No one
is prepared to adjust first because each fears that the others will be
unprepared to adjust later. For things to improve, everyone has to adjust a bit
if anyone is to adjust at all. Mutual adjustment is required. Each needs to be
confident the others will make the promised adjustment and that they will all
live up to their commitments.
One final question concerns
the scope of the administrative space that the principal accounting officer is
to occupy. I have no difficulty with something like the following: The officer
would be given a specific space from which he or she could take action if the
minister should propose a course of action counter to propriety and regularity
of public finances. I would however be very careful in extending it to such
matters as “economy, efficiency and effectiveness”. That is the language of
value for money audits (the 3-Es) and value for money puts everyone (ministers,
public servants and parliamentarians) on an especially slippery slope when it
comes to separating administration from policy (read politics). I know some may
see this as overly cautious, but I worry about giving Deputy Ministers specific
space in this area when matters, especially of effectiveness and efficiency
must so often trade-off with other important values and political
considerations. At a practical level when a minister and a government want to
contract for ships, planes or trains in a way that is clearly less efficient
and less effective because of important regional and industrial benefits, it is
not clear that the Deputy Minister should insist on a written instruction from
the Minister which if provided is made available to the Public Accounts
Committee.
Experience indicates that the
words, “economy, efficiency and effectiveness” are not the objective, clearly
defined terms that some auditors and economists would like us to believe. Out
of the mouths of politicians, ministers, public servants, and citizens they
take on new meanings that rub up against many other political values and
purposes. I vividly recall the rap against the HRDC Transitional Jobs Fund was
that the program was ineffective because no one could say for sure that the
jobs actually created in depressed areas of the county would be sustainable,
yet it was also criticized for being unfair because it was targeted to regions
of highest unemployment.
Conclusion
Minority government will test
the mettle of politicians and public servants. Making it work will require
skill, cooperation, good will, and solid thinking. There will be new and
different pressures on public servants. It will require that they walk on the
knife-edge of inherent contradictions in public administration, between
prudence and flexibility, responsiveness and consistency, and innovation and
certainty. It will present new and difficult challenges for the public service
but it may also present unique opportunities to tackle some old and difficult
problems.
Notes
1. For an elaboration see,
Peter Dobell, “What Could Canadians Expect from a Minority Government?” Policy
Matters, November 2000, vol.1, no. 6.
2. See Donald J. Savoie, Breaking
the Bargain: Public Servants, Ministers, and Parliament (Toronto:
University of Toronto Press, 2003).
3. Nicholas d’Ombrain,
“Alternative Service Delivery: Governance, Management, and Practice”, in Change,
Governance and Public Management (Ottawa and Toronto: KPMG and Public
Policy Forum, undated), 153.
4, United Kingdom, HM
Treasury, The Responsibilities of an Accounting Officer (London: HMSO,
1991, Annex # 4.1. (s.5), 2.
5. See for example, David A.
Good, The Politics of Public Management: The HRDC Audit of Grants and
Contributions (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2003), 198.
6. Michael Pitfield,
“Bureaucracy and Parliament” speech delivered to Ottawa Kiwanis Club (Ottawa:
Ottawa Kiwanis Club, 1983).
7. See Good, The Politics
of Public Management.
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