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Full Description
This Element advances an agency-theoretic approach to public administration through comparative analysis of the United States, China, and EU. It examines how principals - such as legislatures, executives, or ruling parties - can align the actions of diverse agents, including civil servants, public agencies, street-level bureaucrats, and contractors, with the public interest. Drawing on an extensive review of 146 key studies and AI-assisted analysis of 8,400 articles from Public Administration Review, Part I outlines fundamental concepts: goal divergence, moral hazard, adverse selection, and information asymmetry and traces its history, debates, and criticisms. These concepts are then applied to key themes in public administration - performance management, federalism/decentralization, contracting, politics-administration, and institutional drift. Part II investigates how these problems manifest and tackled in the US, China, and Europe. Part III concludes with a synthesize of findings, debates, extensions, and future directions for theory and practice.
Contents
Part I. Conceptual foundations: 1. Setting the stage; 2. Theoretical foundations; 3. Solutions to agency problems; 4. Expanding the boundaries of agency theory; Part II. Comparative: 5. Agency theory in the United States; 6. Agency theory in China; 7. Agency theory in Germany; Part III. Conclusion; 8. Conclusion; References.



