This paper asks whether citizens judge public administration to be trustworthy using different criteria from other political institutions. Using survey data, we estimate ordered logistic and multivariate regressions to compare the determinants of trust in six different politicaladministrative institutions. Findings show that social trust, political interest, as well as other individual characteristics, have very similar effects on trust regardless of the institution. The evidence shows that people who are older and more educated, interested in politics, and employed in the public sector, are only slightly more likely to make some sort of distinction. Implications for non-discriminant judgement mechanisms are discussed.
This paper explores determinants of continuity and change of municipal organizations designed for service delivery. Focusing on the political and financial costs of termination, it addresses the question of what determines the process of voluntary closing of Portuguese municipal enterprisesa type of mixed firm with municipal control but an independent budget that operates under private labor lawfrom 1998 until 2012. The results suggest that the survivability of this type of organization relates with financial and economic aspects, as opposed to the structure of the local government that seems to be less important.
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