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Journal ArticleDOI

Control and Feedback in Economic Regulation: The Case of the NLRB

Terry M. Moe
- 01 Dec 1985 - 
- Vol. 79, Iss: 4, pp 1094-1116
TLDR
In this paper, the authors present an empirical analysis of the National Labor Relations Board, focusing on the balance the agency strikes between the interests of business and labor, and show that the core regulatory actors engage in mutually adaptive adjustment: each is responsive to the decisions of each of the others.
Abstract
This article presents an empirical analysis of the National Labor Relations Board, focusing on the balance the agency strikes between the interests of business and labor. It is oriented by a theoretical framework that, relative to popular models, takes a broader view of the causal structure of regulatory performance—one that simultaneously allows for presidents, congressional committees, the courts, agency staff, constituents, and economic conditions. The empirical results are instructive. All of these factors prove to have significant impacts on NLRB decisions. In addition, the core regulatory actors —Board members, staff, and constituents—are shown to engage in mutually adaptive adjustment: each is responsive to the decisions of each of the others, and their reciprocal relationships impart equilibrating properties to the system as a whole. Thus, the evidence points to a varied set of important determinants and to the dynamic nature of their interconnection. To the extent that these findings are at all characteristic of other regulatory agencies, simple popular models of regulation are likely to give anemic explanations, if not highly distorted accounts, of why agencies behave as they do.

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Citations
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The Political Economy of Federalism

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors introduce a theoretical framework and an econometric methodology for analyzing the increasingly important effects of the national government on the federal system, which is a synthesis of the dominant political and economic approaches to this issue.
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The Industrial Organization of Congress; or, Why Legislatures, Like Firms, Are Not Organized as Markets

TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a theory of legislative institutions that parallels the theory of the firm and contract theory of contractual institutions, and explain why, given the peculiar form of bargaining problems found in legislatures, specific forms of nonmarket exchange prove superior to market exchange.
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The political evolution of principal-agent models

TL;DR: The principal-agent theory has been used to model the role of information asymmetry and incentives in political relationships as discussed by the authors, and it has been applied to the problem of credible commitment.
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The Dynamics of Political Control of the Bureaucracy.

TL;DR: The authors examine output time series from seven different public bureaucracies for responsiveness to political tools applied in the late Carter and early Reagan administrations and find responsiveness in all seven cases, indicating that political appointments are the most important instrument of political control; changing budgets, legislation, congressional signals, and administrative reorganizations are less important.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Theory of the firm: Managerial behavior, agency costs and ownership structure

TL;DR: In this article, the authors draw on recent progress in the theory of property rights, agency, and finance to develop a theory of ownership structure for the firm, which casts new light on and has implications for a variety of issues in the professional and popular literature.
Book

The Theory of Economic Regulation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors argue that regulation is acquired by the industry and is designed and operated primarily for its benefit, and that the state has one basic resource which in pure principle is not shared with even the mightiest of its citizens.
Journal ArticleDOI

A Garbage Can Model of Organizational Choice.

TL;DR: In this paper, an explicit computer simulation model of a garbage can decision process is presented, with the general implications of such a model described in terms of five major measures on the process.
Posted Content

A Behavioral Theory of the Firm

TL;DR: In this article, the authors advocate a theory based on empirical observation of actual firm decision-making, which provides a theory of decision making within business organizations, contrary to the economic theory of the firm, which sees firms as profit-maximizing entities.
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