Democracy and Public Management Reform
Author
: Luiz Carlos Bresser-Pereira
Publisher
: Oxford University Press - New York
Summary :This book is about the new democratic state that is emerging and about the reform that leads in that direction: public
management reform. My central concerns will be, first, to understand how the modern state has transformed itself
from the absolute state of early capitalism into the social-democratic state of today, and possibly into the social-liberal
and republican state of the twenty-first century; second, to discuss the importance of the strong, legitimate, and
democratic state in the global system; and third, to propose a model of public management reform—a tool for
building this republican state.
The book takes an eclectic and ‘reasonable’ approach to the state and to the institutional reforms that are required
which proceeds from the assumption that the Western world-political experience has been one of steady progress.
Thus, despite the intense conflicts that have accompanied this progress, the best aspects of republicanism, liberalism,
democracy, and socialism are in one way or another present in the modern democracies.1 They are present in
‘reasonable’ terms. Unlike Aristotle in antiquity and John Rawls in the twentieth century, to whom ideas and
institutions should be primarily reasonable, most political theorists of the past have treated ideologies or political
doctrines in pure or radical terms. Such an unreasonable approach makes argumentation inoperative and compromise
impossible, even though argumentation and compromise are the two major tools with which democracy achieves
quasi-consensus and improves its institutions. The deliberately eclectic and reasonable approach in this book is coupled
with a distinctly republican view of politics, since I believe that our political and social system is the outcome of the
endeavour of self-interested citizens who are nevertheless able to perceive and promote the public interest. I do not
share the dominant view in the social sciences that the social world is regulated by natural laws. I agree that structural
constraints have to be taken into consideration, provided that this approach does not lead to moral cynicism or to
generalized pessimism. A republican approach is neither cynical nor voluntarist. It assumes that institutional reform is
possible, but that this process is the collective and often conflicting outcome of many minds, of all kinds of interests,
and of different technical and emotional competencies in formulating and implementing public policies. Reforms will
often be second-hand and biased towards the rich, leaving the poor unhappy and protesting. Republicanism has
traditionally
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