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How policymakers should guide, manage, and oversee public bureaucracies is a question that lies at the heart of contemporary debates about government and public administration. In their search for better systems of public management, reformers have looked in particular at the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. These countries are exemplars of the New Public Management, a term used to describe distinctive new themes, styles, and patterns of public service management. Calling for public management to become a vibrant field of public policy, this valuable book consolidates recent work on the New Public Management and provides a basis for improving research and policy debate on managing public bureaucracies. A copublication with the Russell Sage Foundation
Public administration. --- Administration, Public --- Delivery of government services --- Government services, Delivery of --- Public management --- Public sector management --- Political science --- Administrative law --- Decentralization in government --- Local government --- Public officers --- accounting. --- auditing. --- australia. --- budget. --- bureaucracy. --- civil service. --- economics. --- financial management. --- government. --- labor administration. --- new zealand. --- nonfiction. --- personnel management. --- policy debate. --- political science. --- procurement. --- public administration. --- public management. --- public policy. --- public service management. --- public service. --- united kingdom.
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Labor allocation to its most efficient use, promoting employment and human capital investment as well as functioning labor markets can contribute to long-term economic growth, poverty reduction and to help workers manage their risks. A labor market policy framework includes both regulations and programs. However, the optimal framework is not standard and universal but varies country by country depending on the level of economic and financial development, culture and other structural characteristics. Labor market projects are equally concentrated in Latin America and the Caribbean and Eastern Europe and Central Asia regions and one is China. Interestingly, the number of projects having 'improving labor market' as the primary component has increased over time. All project development objectives in the cohort of projects reviewed focus on promoting higher employment and increasing economic opportunities as the main objective especially via training programs. About half of the projects also seek to reach specific vulnerable groups by improving targeting mechanisms and to improve the quality of social assistance services by reducing the cost of job search through access to enhanced employment services and by improving employability.
Adult Education --- Capacity Building --- Communities --- Employment Opportunities --- Gender --- Health Insurance --- Human Capital --- Human Resources --- Income Distribution --- Informal Sector --- Innovation --- Job Creation --- Labor Administration --- Labor Costs --- Labor Markets --- Labor Policies --- Labor Regulation --- Living Standards --- Malnutrition --- Means Testing --- Mortality --- Natural Disasters --- Needs Assessment --- Older Workers --- Poverty Monitoring & analysis --- Poverty Reduction --- Prenatal Care --- Private Sector --- Savings --- Services & Transfers to Poor --- Severance Pay --- Social Development --- Social Insurance --- Social Protections and Labor --- Technical Assistance --- Total Factor Productivity --- Unemployment --- Urban Areas --- Wages --- Working Hours --- Younger Workers --- Youth
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