1999
DOI: 10.1177/003231879905000209
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Trends in Local Government: Efficiency, Functions and Democracy

Abstract: Renewed interest in local government reform in New Zealand can be viewed as the continuation of a yet-to-be-completed process that commenced in 1989.' Calls for further rationalisation of the sector (fewer units of government) come from a number of quarters and reflect several motives. First, there is a perception that local government continues to be inefficient.? As local government divests or reorganises its traditional infrastructure services, so this argument goes, its overheads should also be reduced. Se… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(9 citation statements)
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“…The findings by McDermott and Forgie (1999) about shifts in the real value, relative size, and functional composition of New Zealand local government spending are shown in tables 6.9, 6.10, and 6.11. These findings are representative of the empirical background against which both minimalists and activists have sought to evaluate the effect of the 1989 reforms.…”
Section: Lessons For Developing Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 2 more Smart Citations
“…The findings by McDermott and Forgie (1999) about shifts in the real value, relative size, and functional composition of New Zealand local government spending are shown in tables 6.9, 6.10, and 6.11. These findings are representative of the empirical background against which both minimalists and activists have sought to evaluate the effect of the 1989 reforms.…”
Section: Lessons For Developing Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…McDermott and Forgie (1999) provided a detailed empirical analysis of the effect of these structural reforms on the real value, relative size, and functional composition of New Zealand local government spending as well as on the democratic functions. The statistical material produced by McDermott and Forgie (1999) seems to suggest a trend toward greater activism in the 1990s as local authorities reallocated spending from a services to property approach to a services to the people approach, while substantially absorbing the costs of complying with the accountability requirements of the 1989 reforms and the increased statutory responsibilities for environmental regulation imposed by the Resource Management Act 1991, without significantly increasing their spending or the burden on ratepayers. Although McDermott and Forgie (1999) view these trends as an achievement, those same trends have also been seen as a source of concern by a minimalist advocacy coalition, which largely took its lead from the New Zealand Business Roundtable (NZBR).…”
Section: Lessons For Developing Countriesmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…McDermott and Forgie's (1999) findings about shifts in the real value, relative size and functional composition of New Zealand local government spending as shown in tables 5 to 7 are representative of the empirical background against which both minimalists and activists have sought to evaluate the impact of the 1989 reforms. Table 5 indicates that while public sector reforms appear to have induced a downward (albeit modest) trend in the rate of increase of central government expenditure, the same cannot be said of local government in respect of which spending increased by 2.7 per cent in real terms over the 1990s after falling 0.9 per cent in the period immediately preceding the reform GDP, 1978GDP, -97 1978GDP, 1984GDP, 1990GDP, 1997 Lower North Island 1993/4-1997 McDermott and Forgie (1999) 'this supports the view that reform carries with it significant and unpredictable costs that take some time to work through the sector' (p. 251). Table 6 nevertheless shows that the impact of these trends on the relative size of local government has been negligible, with local government's share of GDP rising 0.4 per cent between 1978 and 1984 and remaining stable at around 2.4 per cent thereafter.…”
Section: The Activist Policy Linementioning
confidence: 98%
“…Secondly, minimalists view the trend toward a functional realignment of local government spending in a way that is diametrically opposed to that of activists. On the one hand, McDermott and Forgie (1999) suggest that the impact of the 1989 reforms should be positively evaluated more in terms of the way they enhanced the capacity of local authorities to take on more functions and thereby play a more activist role in the social and economic development of their communities rather than in terms of any overall contraction in the size of this sector. On the other hand, the NZBR has become increasingly concerned that this trend could place more publicly funded services outside the control of the centre and diminish the capacity for activist councils to meet the demand for 'traditional' local public goods.…”
Section: Minimalist Vs Activist Perspectives On Expenditure Trendsmentioning
confidence: 99%