Published online by Cambridge University Press: 04 August 2010
The twentieth century as a whole, and particularly the three decades after the Second World War, witnessed steady growth in government size and responsibility. States developed extensive social safety nets, actively managed aggregate demand, and regulated a widening swath of economic and social life. This trajectory of expansion was linked to powerful forces of economic development and demographic change, and anchored in a broad political consensus.
The 1980s and 1990s saw a sea change in the rate of public sector growth. British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and US President Ronald Reagan led the way with privatization, outsourcing, and load shedding of public responsibilities. But the shift in direction was not limited to radicals on the right. Country reports to the Public Management Committee (PUMA) of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) – itself an outspoken advocate of downsizing – point to widespread efforts to reduce the public sector. In 1995, for example, Denmark commercialized its railways and gave business autonomy to its postal service; Finland diminished the size of its Forestry Administration; France suppressed 7,400 public sector jobs; Greece froze new government appointments; Norway promoted competition between public agencies and private firms; Spain decentralized core government functions; and Sweden reduced public sector employment by 62,000.
During the same period, discourse on the appropriate size, role, and functioning of government underwent an even sharper transformation. On the left, O'Connor and Offe depicted state growth as driven by contradictory demands for accumulation and legitimation that were ultimately unsustainable.
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