01211pab a2200133 454500008004000000100002000040245006800060260000900128300001400137362000800151520086100159650002601020773003101046180718b2005 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aTerry, Larry D. aThe thinning of administrative institutions in the hollow state c2005 ap.426-44. aSep aDuring the past 20 years or so, governments worldwide have embarked on an ambitious journey to improve government performance. Relying on multitude of administrative technologies broadly classified under the heading of the New Public Management (NPM), reformers have sought to radically change the manner in which the public's business is conducted. Although the verdict is still out, evidence is accumulating that NPM philosophy and practices may have produced unintended consequences. The author argues that in addition to contributing to an increasingly hollow state, NPM philosophy and practices have contributed to a phenomenon described as the thinning of administrative institutions. Thin institutions are weak; they lack the capacity for good administration-a requirement for maintaining the American people's confidence in governance. -Reproduced. aPublic administration aAdministration and Society