London School of Economics and Political
Science (LSE)
Modules
87
Public Choice and Public Management
Prerequisite – 80 Introduction
to politics
This subject introduces students to the
methods of public or rational choice theory and applies these methods
to public organisations. The syllabus is divided into two parts, though
both are closely inter-connected.
A. Rational Actors The first part
introduces the methods of rational actor analysis. It considers individualism,
the nature of rationality, different views of human nature in terms
of egoism and altruism. It explains those methods with regard to some
simple models – the Downs model of party competition and Olson’s
model of collective action – and introduces very simple game
theory. This part of the syllabus also examines the normative underpinnings
of different approaches to public choice; together with some of the
major criticisms of these theories.
B. Applications to Public Organisations.
The second part of the subject concentrates upon applying rational
choice to public sector organisations. It examines principal-agent
problems; moral hazards in the public sector; bureau-maximising and
bureau-shaping accounts of the civil service; local government structures
– particularly advantages of centralisation or of fragmentation
or of overlapping jurisdictions; privatisation and contracting out.
The latter part also examines common-pool problems such as centrally
directed versus communitarian approaches to problems, for example
over-fishing, water supply and public versus private modes of transportation.
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