That "efficiency (and related ideas like effectiveness and responsiveness) is
a viable goal" is a narrative element in many public administration texts as well as in other texts. Events where efficiency is a narrative element include personnel and performance reports, program evaluations, criticisms of governmental performance, administrative and programmatic studies, and attempts to implement Vice President Albert Gore's (1994) Report of the National Performance Review. "These are our twin missions: to make government work better and cost less" (Gore, 1994, p. i). Despite its relative decline in recent decades (Waldo, 1984), the efficiency narrative remains a significant aim in public administration practice and events. It is such a powerful modernist metaphor that surely it requires repeated deconstruction.
That "efficiency (and related ideas like effectiveness and responsiveness) isa viable goal" is a narrative element in many public administration texts as well as in other texts. Events where efficiency is a narrative element include personnel and performance reports, program evaluations, criticisms of governmental performance, administrative and programmatic studies, and attempts to implement Vice President Albert Gore's (1994) Report of the National Performance Review. "These are our twin missions: to make government work better and cost less" (Gore, 1994, p. i). Despite its relative decline in recent decades (Waldo, 1984), the efficiency narrative remains a significant aim in public administration practice and events. It is such a powerful modernist metaphor that surely it requires repeated deconstruction.
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