3.6. Bureaucracy - Readings

Monday, March 23, 2020

Online Quarantine Lecture 1

Readings:

We now look at those individuals and organizations that actually implement the laws, collectively known as “the bureaucracy,” sometimes called “the fourth branch of government.” These are both executive-branch departments (e.g. Department of Commerce, Department of Education, Department of Transportation, etc.) and independent agencies created by Congress (e.g. Federal Communications Commission, Federal Trade Commission, Securities and Exchange Commission, etc.) that are staffed with individuals that collectively create rules about what private individuals and entities may or may not do, or must do, as directed by Congress or the President, colloquially known as “regulation.”

What do these organizations (we might call them “bureaus”, “agencies,” “departments”, etc) and the individuals that comprise them (“bureaucrats,” “government agents,” etc) do? How do they interact with other players in collective choice (voters, politicians, interest groups, legislatures, courts, etc)?

Your textbook (Holcombe) chapter gives a good overview of this area of research, and the optional section from Mises’ textbook gives a good overview of understanding the differences and similarities between organizations that produce for-profit in the market, and organizations (like bureaus) that produce politically.

Tips and Questions to Read For: