Compacts between government and the not-for-profit sector : a comparative case study of national and sub-national cross-sector policy frameworks
Abstract
Policy interest in the not-for-profit (NFP) sector has grown in step with government’s
interest in leveraging the capacity of non-state players to perform service delivery
functions. Once consigned to the periphery of policy-making, the NFP sector is now
widely accepted as an essential player in a mixed economy of service provision.
Increasingly, the achievement of public policy objectives requires working
collaboratively across sector boundaries.
Government’s engagement with NFP service providers has, on many occasions, been
found wanting. The use of competitive tendering and contracting for the purpose of
leveraging greater economic and technical efficiency, choice, responsiveness and
innovation in the delivery of selected statutory public services has introduced a range of
tensions, contradictions and externalities including failures to fund the full cost of
service delivery, the uncertainty of year-to-year contracts, burdensome reporting and
compliance requirements, and the substitution of competitive behaviours for collegiality
among NFP providers. In the process, the role of NFP organisations as sources of policy
advice and legitimacy were devalued.
Governments around the world have attempted to regularise relations with the NFP
sector through the adoption of formal cross-sector policy frameworks – or ‘compacts’.
Compacts serve a number of purposes, some explicit, others implicit. Explicit purposes
include the regularisation of relations between the public and third sectors by
establishing agreed rules of engagement; creating pathways for investment in sector
capacity and capability; and enunciating the values and behaviours required for
effective cross-sector working. Implicit purposes include a desire by governments to
better manage the politics of their relationships with the third sector, and a desire by the
sector to re-weight its policy influence within a strongly asymmetric relationship with
government.
This research takes the form of a comparative multi-case study and relies upon a rich
primary and secondary literature, supplemented by interviews with elite policy actors in
Australia and New Zealand. It aims for a deep contextual understanding of the range of
factors contributing to the spread of compacts amongst Anglo-Saxon jurisdictions.
Employing Kingdon’s (1995) process streams analysis as a heuristic framework for analysis, this thesis seeks to understand why cross-sector policy frameworks have
entered onto the public policy agenda in the UK, Canada, Australia and New Zealand.
In Kingdon’s schema, ‘policy windows’ open when three ‘process streams’ converge:
the problem stream, the policy stream and the politics stream. The prospect of any
solution attaining high ‘agenda status’ can be enhanced by the efforts of ‘policy
entrepreneurs’ capable of recognising and exploiting those ‘policy windows’.
This study finds that in each of the jurisdictions examined, formal proposals for
compacts or similar frameworks have: (a) been preceded by a broad recognition that
aspects of the relationship between government and the NFP sector have become
problematic; (b) been promoted within various policy communities as a feasible
solution to acknowledged problems; and (c) entered onto the public policy agenda at
politically propitious moments. The study found that the implementation and impact of
cross-sector policy frameworks is highly variable. Nevertheless, political and policy
attachment to compacts and similar frameworks appears to be on-going.
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