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Organizations in the Public Sector in Hong Kong: Core Government, Quasi-Government and Private Bodies with Public Functions
Authors:Ian Scott
Institution:(1) School of Politics and International Studies, Murdoch University, and Department of Politics and Public Administration, University of Hong Kong, China
Abstract:Twenty-five years ago, the Hong Kong government was lauded as the model of a small, restricted government which was most suited to capitalist economic growth. Since that time, the government and the organizations which it has created have expanded to such an extent that there has been widespread concern that the public sector has grown too large. This article examines the reasons for the rapid growth in the size of the public sector, reflects on the organizational forms outside the traditional civil service that have been adopted, and analyzes the attempts that have been made to reduce the public bureaucracy by corporatizing and privatizing some of the services that it provides. Central to the argument presented is the question of whether an ideological commitment to small government or other functional and political factors have been the critical determinants of organizational change.
Keywords:public sector organizations  civil service  small government  public sector reform
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