Abstract
Independent regulatory agencies (IRAs) have a significant capability to choose how to implement their decisions to be effective, given the mix of managerial autonomy, supervisory powers and political independence that most of these agencies enjoy. As such, traditional approaches which focus on their institutional characteristics or their reputational problems do not fully capture the variation in IRAs’ behavior. This paper suggests a complementary approach to interpreting IRAs’ autonomous behavior, focusing on the possibilities that the practice of accountability offers to these public agencies to make relevant choices for the agency itself and the policy environment. To that end, we identify a key background variable that affects the practice of IRAs, namely, the varying power configurations existing among the regulatees and focus on how this factor shapes their voluntary accountability in different contexts. Lastly, we examine several cases of IRA accountability behavior to discuss whether the patterns we submit might constitute a starting point for a theoretical development on the use of accountability by IRAs.
Highlights
Independent regulatory agencies (IRAs) have spread around the world in recent decades, reflecting a broader trend where the contemporary administrative apparatus increasingly accommodates technocratic expertise and unelected officials who are not—directly or indirectly—accountable to the electorate (Vibert 2007)
We identify a key background variable that affects the practice of IRAs, namely, the varying power configurations existing among the regulatees and focus on how this factor shapes their voluntary accountability in different contexts
We argue that variation in the practice of voluntary accountability by IRAs is influenced by varying power configurations among regulatees, in addition to agency preferences regarding the level of risk that its decisions entail
Summary
ISSN: 2706-6274 Publisher International Public Policy Association Printed version Date of publication: 15 December 2020 Number of pages: 342-357 ISSN: 2679-3873. Electronic reference Fulya Apaydin and Jacint Jordana, “Varying Power Configurations and the Accountability of Independent Regulatory Agencies”, International Review of Public Policy [Online], 2:3 | 2020, Online since 15 December 2020, connection on 07 September 2021. International Review of Public Policy is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International.
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