This article explores the patterned variations in the references in election manifestos of political parties in OECD countries to marketoriented reforms of the public sector, irrespective whether these references are in favour of these reforms or not. It is expected that these variations are structured by institutional features which are related to national, partisan and sectoral differences. The empirical analysis shows that the national differences between parties are influenced by their membership of 'families of nations' since the adoption of market principles is expected to be ideologically more acceptable in, for example, the Anglo-Saxon world than in Scandinavia. The recent differences between the main party groups are modest, which ...
The paper emphasises the role of the market-type mechanisms within the activity of the organisations...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, to...
Despite all the criticisms levelled against New Public Management (NPM) and the arguments raised in ...
peer reviewedDuring the past 50 years, European public sectors have undergone a profound process of ...
This study analyses the determinants of dispersion of economic issue mentions in European party mani...
ABSTRACT: We propose theoretically that the government partisan effect on institutional welfare stat...
Are governing parties able to shape social and labor market policies according to their ideological ...
This article analyses the impact of government prospects and government participation on party polic...
The dominant ideas in development economics have changed considerably over the four decades of...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
Many scholars have argued that partisan differences have disappeared since the 1980s due to ever inc...
Abstract: This paper examines how political institutions and election outcomes have affected the eco...
‘Party politics as we knew it?’ is an investigation of welfare state reforms in Austria, Germany and...
This paper starts from a major contradiction in the literature on recent public sector development. ...
The paper emphasises the role of the market-type mechanisms within the activity of the organisations...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, to...
Despite all the criticisms levelled against New Public Management (NPM) and the arguments raised in ...
peer reviewedDuring the past 50 years, European public sectors have undergone a profound process of ...
This study analyses the determinants of dispersion of economic issue mentions in European party mani...
ABSTRACT: We propose theoretically that the government partisan effect on institutional welfare stat...
Are governing parties able to shape social and labor market policies according to their ideological ...
This article analyses the impact of government prospects and government participation on party polic...
The dominant ideas in development economics have changed considerably over the four decades of...
Based on empirical findings from a comparative study on welfare state responses to the four major ec...
Many scholars have argued that partisan differences have disappeared since the 1980s due to ever inc...
Abstract: This paper examines how political institutions and election outcomes have affected the eco...
‘Party politics as we knew it?’ is an investigation of welfare state reforms in Austria, Germany and...
This paper starts from a major contradiction in the literature on recent public sector development. ...
The paper emphasises the role of the market-type mechanisms within the activity of the organisations...
At the beginning of each parliamentary session, almost all European governments give a speech in whi...
The public sector has grown substantially in the last fifty years. In the euro area, for example, to...