1 / 16

Introduction to the Federal Bureaucracy

Learn about the role and functions of the federal bureaucracy in the US government. Understand its structure, responsibilities, and the challenges it faces.

mcgurk
Télécharger la présentation

Introduction to the Federal Bureaucracy

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Introduction to the Federal Bureaucracy Chapter 15, Theme A

  2. What did you learn? • In an organized fashion, tell me about 3 things you learned from Tuesday’s primary election. • This quick write is a 10-point daily grade.

  3. Agency Review Match the agency to its Jurisdiction. Workplace accidents Over-the-counter cold remedies recalls False advertising claims Clean Water Act violations Offensive content on TV Marijuana growing operations • EPA • OSHA • FDA • FCC • DEA • FTC

  4. Why study the bureaucracy as a separate institution? • The Bureaucracy does the day-to-day work of the federal government • No agency specifically mentioned in Constitution • Congress given the power to create & define • President appoints leaders to oversee w/ Senate adv. • Carry out laws made by Congress. These are often vague, so bureaucrats have a great deal of discretionary authority. • To understand the bureaucracy is to understand how the government operates & decisions are made.

  5. A bureaucracy is any large organization that has: Internal division of labor and specialization by function Employees recruited & promoted based on relevant expertise & merit Clear hierarchy (lines of authority) Established rules & SOPs Emphasis on establishing goals efficiently & effectively Examples include corporation, school systems & governments Defining the term

  6. The American Bureaucracy • Is a slave to all three branches • Congress makes laws, creates agencies, and has legislative oversight powers • President appoints heads of agencies (can remove in many cases thanks to Madison) & recommends budget for government • Supreme Court interprets laws and mediate disputes in implementation of laws by the bureaucracy

  7. The American Bureaucracy • Federalism causes overlap and similar bureaucratic agencies at the state and local level to exist: • US IRS • NC Dept. of Revenue • Currituck Co. Tax Department • Public perception is negative. • Wasteful • Oppressive • Slow

  8. The American Bureaucracy • The adversary culture has led to a scrutiny of every action of the bureaucracy. • Decisions are challenged in the courts • The media publicizes abuses as common • Privatization is American way but citizens demand regulation & oversight.

  9. The American Bureaucracy • Government by proxy has become the norm in the US. • Pros: Flexibility, embodiment of federalism • Cons: Wasteful, inefficient • Each branches is a bureaucracy unto themselves outside of the bureaucratic institution.

  10. Homeland Security

  11. Types of Departments and Agencies Federal Bureaucracy as an institution is composed of 5 components: • Executive Departments- Cabinet departments (15 of them) Secretaries work for the President & his agenda. • Independent Agencies- all heads are nominated by President, approved by Senate, but cannot be fired by President due to fixed terms. (CIA, FBI)

  12. Types of Departments and Agencies • Executive Agencies- refer to any dept. of gov’t that is created by Congress that is outside the Cabinet. President appoints and can remove head. (EPA, NASA) • Regulatory Commissions- charged with controlling nation’s business activities and economy. Has punishment powers (FCC, FTC) Set terms, independent of Cabinet. • Corporations- conduct business-like activities for gov’t because it wouldn’t be profitable for private industry (Post Office, TVA, Amtrak, FDIC) Appointments vary.

  13. Duties of the Bureaucracy • Implement policy & enforce laws • Ex: EPA carries out Clean Air Act • Regulate specific, defined areas • Ex: FAA inspects airlines for safety • Provide Information • Ex: USDA developed food pyramid • Data collection • Ex: Census Bureau collects demographics • Write rules, SOPs & regulations • Ex: FCC’s 7 word rule for public airwaves

  14. Limited Growth of Bureaucracy to 1900 • First major growth came with increasing population…What agency? Why? • Second wave of growth came after Civil War…What agency? Why? • Third wave came over the issue of industrialization…What agency? Why? • Still the bureaucracy was small: • Laissez-faire, States controlled most regulation, fear of discretionary authority, & SC said “no to regulatory purposes.”

  15. Growth of Bureaucracy Grown exponentially since the New Deal…Why? (Depression, Wars, 9/11) • Society more complex • Business regulation • Attitude towards social welfare • Attitude towards national security • Times change- new functions and responsibilities

  16. Assignment • Read pp. 414-424. Take notes by headings and focus on discretionary authority and other key concepts as to how the bureaucracy functions and implements policy today. • Due Tuesday! • Assign “You are the Bureaucrat” search. • Draw number • Use website and internet searches. • Due Thursday, March 26th!

More Related