The Impact of Austerity on Policy Capacity in Local Government

Peter Eckersley, Paul Tobin

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Abstract

Scholars have found it difficult to identify the impact of austerity on policy outputs. This difficulty may have arisen because studies focus on the content of national and EU legislation, or budgetary responses to fiscal constraint, rather than taking a holistic view of ‘policy’. Drawing on fieldwork in two English cities, we show how ‘dismantling by arena shifting’ – exemplified by reductions in ‘back-office’ environmental policy capacity at the subnational level – can provide a more nuanced understanding of national-local interaction and policy change. We propose that such approaches may be common, because they allow policymakers to protect electorally popular ‘front-line’ services and more visible aspects of public goods provision, thereby avoiding blame for potentially unpopular decisions. However, dismantling by arena-shifting may have significant impacts over the medium-term, because reductions in ‘back-office’ functions may make it more difficult for subnational actors to develop, implement and enforce effective policy in future.
Original languageEnglish
JournalPolicy & Politics
Early online date16 Jul 2019
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 16 Jul 2019

Keywords

  • Austerity
  • policy capacity
  • policy dismantling
  • national government
  • local government
  • environmental policy
  • service provision

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