ABSTRACT

In the public sector at the moment resources are scarce - or at the very least finite and limited - how they are allocated is therefore of crucial importance.
This book analyses this process and examines the competing values that underlie the public service ethic, including the role of markets and quasi-markets, in the delivery of public services.
Topics discussed include:
* whether people should be denied the public services they need because public bodies are short of money
* what balance we should strike between markets and public organisations to provide public services
* whether the use of markets has gone too far and whether we need to return to a public service ethic

chapter 2|38 pages

The Heuristics of Resource Allocation

How people determine priorities

chapter |15 pages

Addendum Monksbane and Feverfew

A diagnostic instrument about values in public sector resource allocation

chapter 4|48 pages

The Rhetoric of Resource Allocation

Arguments about how priorities should be set and resources allocated

chapter 7|17 pages

A Polemic

Conclusions about resource allocation and public services