Understanding the waves of agencification and the governance problems they have raised in Central and Eastern European Countries

Author: OECD Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

Source: OECD Journal on Budgeting, Volume 2, Number 1, July 2002 , pp. 145-170(26)

Publisher: OECD - Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development

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Abstract:

The goal of this paper is to provide tools to understand and analyse waves of "agencification" in transition countries of Central and Eastern Europe. Agencification is a shorthand for the process of delegation and devolution, in which more autonomy, particularly in personnel and financial issues, is granted to public bodies, which either remain legally part of the state or acquire their own legal personality. It can also mean creating or moving functions to bodies, which are subsidiary or separate from ministries/departments (Gill, 2002). In transition countries, most public organisations inherited a legal personality already from communism, with consequences which are both procedural and substantive. Therefore, agencification in transition countries usually means the creation of new autonomous bodies for new functions or a significant increase in the autonomy of existing legally separate bodies either on an individual or a collective basis.

Page Count: 26

Document Type: Review article

Publication date: 2002-07-01

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