ABSTRACT

After two decades of dominating the public sector reform agenda, privatization is on the wane as states gradually reassert themselves in many formerly privatized sectors. The change of direction is a response to the realization that privatization is not working as intended, especially in public service sectors.

This landmark volume brings together leading social scientists, including B. Guy Peters, Anthony Cheung and Jon Pierre, to systematically discuss the emerging patterns of the reassertion of the state in the delivery of essential public services. The state under these emerging arrangements assumes overall responsibility for and control over essential public service delivery, yet allows scope for market incentives and competition when they are known to work. The recent reforms thus display a more pragmatic and nuanced understanding of how markets work in public services .

The first part of the book provides the theoretical context while the second provides sectoral studies of recent reforms in healthcare, education, transportation, electricity and water supply. It includes case studies from a range of countries: Brazil, China, South Korea, Singapore, Thailand, Vietnam, USA, Hong Kong and the UK.

This book will be of interest to students and scholars in Political Science, Public Administration, Public Policy, Geography, Political Economy, Sociology, and Urban Planning.

chapter 1|16 pages

Introduction: Reasserting the role of the state in public services

ByM . RAMESH AND EDUARDO ARARAL J R

chapter 2|13 pages

The role of the State in governing: Governance and metagovernance

ByB . GUY PETERS

chapter 4|14 pages

Why legality cannot be contracted out: Exploring the limits of New Public Management

ByJON PIERRE, MARTIN PAINTER

chapter 8|24 pages

Reassertions of the state in Viet Nam’s health sector

ByJONATHAN D . LONDON