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The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS

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The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS. / Janke, Katharina; Propper, Carol; Sadun, Raffaella.
Washington, D.C.: National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019. (NBER Working Papers).

Research output: Working paper

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Janke, K, Propper, C & Sadun, R 2019 'The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS' NBER Working Papers, National Bureau of Economic Research, Washington, D.C. https://doi.org/10.3386/w25853

APA

Janke, K., Propper, C., & Sadun, R. (2019). The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS. (NBER Working Papers). National Bureau of Economic Research. https://doi.org/10.3386/w25853

Vancouver

Janke K, Propper C, Sadun R. The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS. Washington, D.C.: National Bureau of Economic Research. 2019 May 1. (NBER Working Papers). doi: 10.3386/w25853

Author

Janke, Katharina ; Propper, Carol ; Sadun, Raffaella. / The role of top managers in the public sector : Evidence from the English NHS. Washington, D.C. : National Bureau of Economic Research, 2019. (NBER Working Papers).

Bibtex

@techreport{761cf1529b9a41afa81c96f7a7b3a646,
title = "The role of top managers in the public sector: Evidence from the English NHS",
abstract = "Governments worldwide have sought to reform the delivery of public services by mimicking private sector governance models that grant top directors greater autonomy, give them responsibility for meeting key government targets and reward performance with respect to these targets. We examine a central plank of this approach–that directors can impact the organizations they run–in the context of English public hospitals, complex organizations with multi-million turnover. We find little evidence of top directors{\textquoteright} impact on hospital production, though estimated pay differentials suggest that the directors are perceived to be differentiated by the market. These findings are not driven by endogenous sorting of top directors to poorly performing hospitals. The results question the effectiveness of blindly mimicking the private sector to bring about improvements in public sector performance",
author = "Katharina Janke and Carol Propper and Raffaella Sadun",
year = "2019",
month = may,
day = "1",
doi = "10.3386/w25853",
language = "English",
volume = "25853",
series = "NBER Working Papers",
publisher = "National Bureau of Economic Research",
type = "WorkingPaper",
institution = "National Bureau of Economic Research",

}

RIS

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T1 - The role of top managers in the public sector

T2 - Evidence from the English NHS

AU - Janke, Katharina

AU - Propper, Carol

AU - Sadun, Raffaella

PY - 2019/5/1

Y1 - 2019/5/1

N2 - Governments worldwide have sought to reform the delivery of public services by mimicking private sector governance models that grant top directors greater autonomy, give them responsibility for meeting key government targets and reward performance with respect to these targets. We examine a central plank of this approach–that directors can impact the organizations they run–in the context of English public hospitals, complex organizations with multi-million turnover. We find little evidence of top directors’ impact on hospital production, though estimated pay differentials suggest that the directors are perceived to be differentiated by the market. These findings are not driven by endogenous sorting of top directors to poorly performing hospitals. The results question the effectiveness of blindly mimicking the private sector to bring about improvements in public sector performance

AB - Governments worldwide have sought to reform the delivery of public services by mimicking private sector governance models that grant top directors greater autonomy, give them responsibility for meeting key government targets and reward performance with respect to these targets. We examine a central plank of this approach–that directors can impact the organizations they run–in the context of English public hospitals, complex organizations with multi-million turnover. We find little evidence of top directors’ impact on hospital production, though estimated pay differentials suggest that the directors are perceived to be differentiated by the market. These findings are not driven by endogenous sorting of top directors to poorly performing hospitals. The results question the effectiveness of blindly mimicking the private sector to bring about improvements in public sector performance

U2 - 10.3386/w25853

DO - 10.3386/w25853

M3 - Working paper

VL - 25853

T3 - NBER Working Papers

BT - The role of top managers in the public sector

PB - National Bureau of Economic Research

CY - Washington, D.C.

ER -