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The Trouble with Government
 
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The Trouble with Government [Hardcover]

Derek Bok (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Book Description

March 1, 2001

In the past thirty years, Americans have lost faith in their government and the politicians who lead it. They have blamed Washington for a long list of problems, ranging from poor schools to costly medical care to high rates of violent crime. After investigating these complaints and determining that many are justified, Derek Bok seeks to determine the main reasons for the failings and frustrations associated with government.

Discounting three common explanations--deteriorating leadership, the effect of the media on the political process, and the influence of interest groups--Bok identifies four weaknesses that particularly need explaining: a persistent tendency by Congress to design programs poorly; to impose expensive and often quixotic regulations that produce only modest results; to do less than other leading democracies to protect working people from illness, unemployment, and other basic hazards of life; and to leave large numbers of people, especially children, living in poverty.

Bok goes on to explore the reasons for these fundamental weaknesses and to discuss popular remedies such as term limits, devolution, "reinventing" government, and campaign finance reform. While some of these proposals have merit, Bok finds a deeper, more troubling paradox: Americans want to gain more power over their government, but are devoting less time to exerting a constructive influence. Their dissatisfaction with government is growing as their participation in the political process is declining. These contradictory trends, Bok argues, contribute to the problems of our democracy. Fortunately, there are many concrete steps that Americans can take to be politically engaged and to help their government improve its performance.

"Democracy," Bok concludes, "is a collective venture which falters or flourishes depending on the efforts citizens invest in its behalf."

(20010201)

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

In The State of the Nation, published in 1996, Harvard President Emeritus Bok compared America's progress in 17 different fields over the past 40 years to the progress of six other advanced industrial democracies. This companion volume seeks to explain and propose remedies for government failings that affect the wide range of areas in which America lags. Bok first considers and largely rejects common diagnoses of what ails American government--politicians and parties, the media and special interests--then proposes his own theory of the four basic weaknesses that afflict this country: poorly designed legislation, burdensome regulation, the neglect of working-class interests and failed antipoverty policies. Three chapters examine and perceptively criticize widely proposed antidotes, before considering solutions specifically targeting the four basic weaknesses. Despite the short shrift given some arguments, Bok's reasoning is generally persuasive, impressively informed and deft at unearthing root causes behind supposed sources of distress. He's especially convincing in tracing regulatory dysfunction to our adversarial, individualistic culture, fragmented government and lack of broadly inclusive organizations representing business, labor and other relevant interest groups. But while the relative successes of certain social democracies justifies his inquiry, Bok shuns any systematic examination of those nations' achievements or of how they might be adapted. He runs out of steam pondering remedies with an individualist focus that seem more symptom than cure--a disappointing conclusion to an illuminating, vitally important quest.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

The one American institution as notoriously difficult to manage as our federal government might be Harvard University, which gives Harvard's president emeritus standing to analyze why the government does not govern better than it does. In his previous book, The State of the Nation, Bok compared the United States with other industrialized democracies in areas such as the economy, environment, and education and found a mixed picture of success and want. Here he looks at why our laws and regulations are often badly designed and executed, why other nations surpass us in creating opportunities and safeguards for low-income citizens, and how we might improve. Examining hundreds of remedies, he concludes that policy is less the culprit than "causes deeply rooted in our institutions, our political system, and even our culture," with public apathy more than public officials largely at blame. The ambition and scope of this book are its strength as well as weakness. Readers will hardly find its match as an accessible and fair summary of current policy and institutional questions. Yet when Bok is done weighing one proposal against another, against yet another, only the resolute will still be with him. Even so, this is a book for nearly every library. Robert F. Nardini, Chichester, NH
Copyright 2001 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 507 pages
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press; First edition. edition (March 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0674004485
  • ISBN-13: 978-0674004481
  • Product Dimensions: 9.5 x 6.4 x 1.5 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.9 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,868,630 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.0 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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13 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Good Point, Wrong Title, August 5, 2001
By 
Jerry Nechal (Sylvan Lake, MI United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Trouble with Government (Hardcover)
This book's title immediately caught my attention. Currently many of us are not totally enamored with the present state of affairs in both the federal government and national politics. After completing the book, I am convinced that its title is somewhat misleading. Bok ultimately is not totally persuasive in that the real source is "Trouble With Government;" but instead his major conclusion is that the trouble is with us, the U.S. electorate.

Bok, Harvard President Emeritus, presents a very well researched and articulated analysis of the shortcomings of present day government. However, if you looking for highly entertaining big-ticket recommendations on how to improve government, you will not find them here. Instead, the book seems directed toward the more informed student of government and politics, who is seeking a comprehensive and well thought out analysis.

I found Bok's more academic approach and style in sharp contrast to Robert Reich's recent work, The Future of Success, which is an analysis of our current economy. In the latter, Reich is more entertaining and captivating with perhaps more mass appeal. Bok's style, on the other hand, is more intellectual and ultimately attractive to the political or social scientist type.

The Trouble With Government is Bok's companion volume to the State of the Nation, which was published in 1996. He begins with an empirical analysis, which shows the U.S. lagging behind other advanced democracies in several key quality of life indicators. In his search for the cause of these shortcomings, he first looks at the "usual suspects," which are politicians, political parties, the media and special interests. Instead of these culprits, Bok maintains the problem lies with poorly designed legislation, burdensome regulation, and the neglect of working-class interests and failed antipoverty policies. For each of these he offers his own solutions. For the most part, Bok's solutions are attainable and not too far-reaching. His recommendations would not require dramatic structural change to our existing political system. Conversely, some seem rather idealistic and romantic such as increased civic education and a call for added national community service. Ultimately, Bok places much of the root cause squarely on the backs of the general populous. Our own disinterest and disengagement are seen as the ultimate culprits. In Bok's own words we end up with the type of government we deserve. This is certainly a message worthy of our attention.

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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent overview of the source of our frustrations, December 28, 2010
By 
Reader (Silver Spring, MD) - See all my reviews
This book provides a comprehensive and well-documented analysis of the primary reasons for our government's many failings. The upside is that the book is painstakingly evenhanded and non-partisan. The downside is that every chapter seems to end in a frustrating stalemate between two or more opposing policy positions that have equal merit (or that lack merit equally). This book is sort of an annotated restatement of Churchill's assertion that democracy, though a terrible form of government, is still better than any of the alternatives. I don't blame the author for democracy's shortcomings. His title, after all, is The Trouble with Government, not The Solution for Government.
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1 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Slanted writing, September 8, 2001
By A Customer
This review is from: The Trouble with Government (Hardcover)
Author ignores heterogeneous nature of the US, both geographically and ethnicly, comparing the US to smaller and less populous democracies elsewhere. He also fudges the poverty level concept: whereas senior citizen households are almost entirely composed of one or two people, households below the poiverty level which include children show three, four or more persons trying to live on an income sufficient ONLY for one or two, and alleviating this siituation (voluntary on the part of the parents) would only condemn future generations to bare existence levels by encouraging this prolific breeding by those who cannot adequately support their offspring. He also does not give due weight to the immigration (legal or illegal) of millions of workers qualified only for manual labor, which depresses the wage levels at the low end; he should observe the day labor lineups which occur in all of our metropolitan areas, to realize that these people just do not work every day and it is impossible to sustain a family on such work. An oversupply!
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