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The autonomy -- control balance in Flemish arm's length public agencies

Bram Verschuere

Public Management Review, 2007, vol. 9, issue 1, 107-133

Abstract: This article aims at contributing to the study of arm's length agencies by focusing on what are considered to be core concepts of agencification: autonomy and control of public agencies. The balance between autonomy and control is studied for a set of Flemish public agencies, from three angles: (1) To what extent can we observe the practitioner model of disaggregation, managerial freedom and results based control in Flanders?; (2) Which autonomy-control balances do we find empirically? Departing from two extreme cases -- control loss and false autonomy -- I conclude that there is a lot of variation amongst Flemish public agencies as to their autonomy-control balances; and (3) Based on a third set of empirical conclusions, I try to broaden the normative discussion on the accountability debate that surrounds arm's length agencies, by proposing a broader concept of steering and control. I conclude the article by proposing four directions for future research on this specific topic of agency research.

Date: 2007
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (2)

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DOI: 10.1080/14719030601181266

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