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Toward a theory of behavioral public administration

By: Kasdan, David Oliver.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: International Review of Administrative Sciences Description: 86(4), Dec, 2020: p.605-621.Subject(s): Administrative theory, Behavioral economics, Bounded rationality, Compliance, Nudge, Paternalism In: International Review of Administrative SciencesSummary: The connection between public administration and behavioral economics goes back to Herbert Simon, who recognized the tension between the institutional demands of rational efficiency and the reality of individuals’ alternate objectives. There is now a concentrated research push at the intersection of behavioral economics and governance, following recently publicized evidence of favorable synergies. Public administration can use behavioral economics in a variety of implementations, from boosting public service motivation to improving policy compliance. This article reviews the current discourse on the development of behavioral public administration, describes some dominant concepts currently being applied, and then offers a framework with propositions for a theory of behavioral public administration in order to enable further experimental inquiry and inform better governance. – Reproduced
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
86(4), Dec, 2020: p.605-621 Available AR124726

The connection between public administration and behavioral economics goes back to Herbert Simon, who recognized the tension between the institutional demands of rational efficiency and the reality of individuals’ alternate objectives. There is now a concentrated research push at the intersection of behavioral economics and governance, following recently publicized evidence of favorable synergies. Public administration can use behavioral economics in a variety of implementations, from boosting public service motivation to improving policy compliance. This article reviews the current discourse on the development of behavioral public administration, describes some dominant concepts currently being applied, and then offers a framework with propositions for a theory of behavioral public administration in order to enable further experimental inquiry and inform better governance. – Reproduced

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