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Administration & Society
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Presidential Policy Initiatives and Agency Compliance

Organizational Adaptation to A-76

M. Ernita Joaquin1 and Thomas J. Greitens2

1 University of Nevada, Las Vegas
2 Central Michigan University, Mount Pleasant

Correspondence: M. Ernita Joaquin, Department of Public Administration, University of Nevada, Las Vegas, NV 89154 Email: ernita.joaquin{at}unlv.edu

Adding to a long line of bureaucratic reforms, the Bush administration launched an invigorated competitive sourcing policy known as A-76. In the A-76 process, government commercial activities were subjected to regular cost comparisons with other potential providers, especially from the private sector, and awarded to the most efficient provider. Many agencies had trouble complying with the policy without hurting organizational interests. This article examines the bureaucracy’s reaction to this important presidential initiative. The authors find that agency responses to this initiative fell along a continuum and that bureaucratic power was exercised in complex ways as agencies adapted to competition and greater hollowing out.

Key Words: competitive sourcing • A-76 • budget strategies • adaptation • contracting • bureaucratic power

Administration & Society, Vol. 41, No. 7, 815-849 (2009)
DOI: 10.1177/0095399709344057


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