Who Gets Hired? Political Patronage and Bureaucratic Favoritism

IF 5.9 1区 社会学 Q1 POLITICAL SCIENCE
Mai Hassan, Horacio Larreguy, Stuart Russell
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Most research on biased public sector hiring highlights local politicians’ incentives to distribute government positions to partisan supporters. Other studies instead point to the role of bureaucratic managers in allocating government jobs to close contacts. We jointly consider the relative importance of each source of biased hiring as an allocation problem between managers and politicians who have different preferences regarding public sector hiring and different abilities to realize those preferences. We develop a theoretical model of each actor’s relative leverage and relative preferences for different types of public sector positions. We empirically examine our theory using the universe of payroll data in Kenyan local governments from 2004 to 2013. We find evidence of both patronage and bureaucratic favoritism, but with different types of bias concentrated in different types of government jobs, as our theory predicts. Our results highlight the inadequacy of examining political patronage alone without incorporating the preferences and leverage of the bureaucratic managers who are intricately involved in hiring processes.
谁会被聘用?政治庇护和官僚偏袒
关于公共部门用人偏见的大多数研究都强调了地方政客将政府职位分配给党派支持者的动机。其他研究则指出了官僚管理者在将政府职位分配给关系密切者时所起的作用。我们将偏向性招聘的每种来源的相对重要性作为管理者和政治家之间的分配问题来共同考虑,因为管理者和政治家在公共部门招聘方面有着不同的偏好,实现这些偏好的能力也各不相同。我们建立了一个理论模型,说明每个行为者的相对杠杆作用和对不同类型公共部门职位的相对偏好。我们利用肯尼亚地方政府 2004 年至 2013 年的工资单数据对我们的理论进行了实证检验。我们发现了庇护和官僚偏袒的证据,但正如我们的理论所预测的那样,不同类型的偏袒集中在不同类型的政府职位上。我们的研究结果凸显出,如果只研究政治庇护,而不考虑与招聘过程密切相关的官僚管理人员的偏好和影响力,是不够的。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
9.80
自引率
5.90%
发文量
119
期刊介绍: American Political Science Review is political science''s premier scholarly research journal, providing peer-reviewed articles and review essays from subfields throughout the discipline. Areas covered include political theory, American politics, public policy, public administration, comparative politics, and international relations. APSR has published continuously since 1906. American Political Science Review is sold ONLY as part of a joint subscription with Perspectives on Politics and PS: Political Science & Politics.
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