What is it about?

How are governments politically able to contract-out public services, or otherwise engage in public-private partnerships? To offer an answer, this articles looks at a simple service in the UK, cleaning government buildings and offices. It shows the somewhat counter-intuitive fact that contracting-out of cleaning services was less pronounced under the Conservative governments of Margaret Thatcher and John Major than under the Labour government of Tony Blair. The reason is two-fold. The Conservatives made contracting-out easy to resist by framing it as a reduction in public services, and they faced unions that had a great deal to lose from contracting-out. New Labour made contracting-out hard to resist by framing it as part-and-parcel of modernizing and shoring up the UK welfare state, and it faced unions that had low stakes in contracting-out of government cleaners.

Featured Image

Why is it important?

This paper challenges key theories of contracting-out, ranging from the dominant economic paradigm, Transaction Cost Economics, to key political science theories that explain new public management reforms like contracting-out as products of partisanship or of national economic institutions. It marshals the powerful notions of issue framing and sector-level interest organization to show that in combination, these factors can explain why public services move from in-house to contracted production.

Perspectives

The article grew out of a chapter in my Ph.D. dissertation in political science at the University of California. The dissertation also studied cleaning services in Sweden and Denmark, and government real estate management and data management in the UK, Sweden and Denmark. The period studied was primarily 1985 to 2005. I have included a link to my dissertation on ProQuest for those who are interested in the wider and deeper analysis (under Resources).

Dr Erik Baekkeskov
University of Melbourne

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: ISSUE FRAMING AND SECTOR CHARACTER AS CRITICAL PARAMETERS FOR GOVERNMENT CONTRACTING-OUT IN THE UK, Public Administration, August 2011, Wiley,
DOI: 10.1111/j.1467-9299.2011.01948.x.
You can read the full text:

Read

Resources

Contributors

The following have contributed to this page