Literature DB >> 21057096

Programmatic actors and the transformation of European health care States.

Patrick Hassenteufel1, Marc Smyrl, William Genieys, Francisco Javier Moreno-Fuentes.   

Abstract

In France, Germany, Spain, and the United Kingdom, the decades from the late 1980s to the present have witnessed significant change in health policy. Although this has included the spread of internal competition and growing autonomy for certain nonstate and parastate actors, it does not follow that the mechanism at work is a "neoliberal convergence." Rather, the translation into diverse national settings of quasi-market mechanisms is accompanied by a reassertion of regulatory authority and strengthening of statist, as opposed to corporatist, management of national insurance systems. Thus the use of quasi-market tools brings state-strengthening reform. The proximate and necessary cause of this dual transformation is found in the work of small, closely integrated groups of policy professionals, whom we label "programmatic actors." While their identity differs across cases, these actors are strikingly similar in functional role and motivation. Motivated by a desire to wield authority through the promotion of programmatic ideas, rather than by material or careerist interests, these elite groups act both as importers and translators of ideas and as architects of policy. The resulting elite-driven model of policy change integrates ideational and institutionalist elements to explain programmatically coherent change despite institutional resistance and partisan instability.

Mesh:

Year:  2010        PMID: 21057096     DOI: 10.1215/03616878-2010-015

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Health Polit Policy Law        ISSN: 0361-6878            Impact factor:   2.265


  1 in total

1.  Public Policy Research-Born in the USA, at Home in the World?

Authors:  Nils C Bandelow; Nicole Herweg; Johanna Hornung; Reimut Zohlnhöfer
Journal:  Polit Vierteljahresschr       Date:  2022-05-02
  1 in total

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