PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM ACCORDING TO THE NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT MODEL

During the last 30 years or even more many countries implemented certain programs in order to transform the public sector representing a consequence of generating economic- financial and fiscal pressures. In these countries various initiatives have successively been driven based on liberal principle...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ivan Petrović
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University Business Academy in Novi Sad Faculty of Law for Commerce and Judiciary 2014-03-01
Series:Pravo
Online Access:https://casopis.pravni-fakultet.edu.rs/index.php/ltp/article/view/145
Description
Summary:During the last 30 years or even more many countries implemented certain programs in order to transform the public sector representing a consequence of generating economic- financial and fiscal pressures. In these countries various initiatives have successively been driven based on liberal principles of the market economy, mainly motivated by similar reasons with a cumulative effect to realize the development goals of the new global environment. A number of these initiatives are based on the same assumptions, so we can talk about the reforms of programs being more or less coherent in their content. One of such programs is the New Public Management (New Public Management, NPM), which was, in the conceptual sense, initiated in the UK and other countries of the Anglo-Saxon tradition in early 1980s. Although in practical terms a particular manifestation of this model was, as the nucleus, firstly widespread through New Zealand and Australia and later through the Scandinavian countries, those reflections were very extensive, and acquired the form of a paradigm for contemporary changes in the sphere of public sector governance in many continental countries where they experienced an empirical verification.
ISSN:0352-3713
2683-5711