The State Administration Database

Egeberg, Morten ; Trondal, Jarle (2009):

Political Leadership and Bureaucratic Autonomy: Effects of Agencification

Wiley-Blackwell: Governance, 22(4), 673-688

Please note: This page may contain data in Norwegian that is not translated to English.

Type of publication:

Tidsskriftsartikkel

Link to publication:

http://brage.bibsys.no/xmlui/bitstream/handle/11250/136561/Trondal_2009_Political.pdf

Link to review:

http://hdl.handle.net/11250/136561

Number of pages:

28

ISSN:

1468-0491

Language of publication:

Engelsk

Country of publication:

Norge

NSD-reference:

3160

This page was last updated:

2/6 2015

Affiliations related to this publication:

Summary:

Previous studies have shown that agencification tends to reduce political control within a government portfolio. However, doubts have been raised as regards the robustness of these findings. In this article we document that agency officials pay significantly less attention to signals from executive politicians than their counterparts within ministerial (cabinet-level) departments. This finding holds when we control for variation in tasks, the political salience of issue areas and officials’ rank. Simultaneously we observe that the three control variables all have an independent effect on officials’ attentiveness to a steer from above. In addition we find that the more organizational capacity available within the respective ministerial departments, the more agency personnel tend to assign weight to signals from the political leadership. We apply large-N questionnaire data at three points in time; spanning two decades and shifting administrative doctrines.