front 1 Which of the following is a principle of bureaucratic organization? | back 1 Hierarchical authority, job specialization, and formalized rules. |
front 2 Compared to the president and Congress, the bureaucracy | back 2 Has a more direct impact on the lives of Americans. |
front 3 Which of the following statements does NOT correctly describe the typical independent agency? | back 3 Its head is appointed by an independent commission. |
front 4 The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) and the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) are | back 4 Respectively, an agency within a cabinet department, an independent agency, and a regulatory agency. |
front 5 Federal regulatory agencies have a responsibility primarily in the area of | back 5 Economic Policy. |
front 6 Regulatory agencies have | back 6 Administrative, legislative, and judicial function. |
front 7 Most employees are hired on the basis of | back 7 Merit Criteria. |
front 8 Policy implementation refers to the bureaucratic function of | back 8 Carrying out decisions made by Congress, the president, and the courts. |
front 9 As distinct from the patronage system, the merit system for managing the bureaucracy | back 9 Provides a neutral administration in the sense that civil servants are not partisan appointees, thus ensuring even-hand work. |
front 10 When it was developed during the Jackson administration, the patronage system was designed to | back 10 Tie the administration more closely to the people it served. |
front 11 In the 1800s, rapid economic growth placed new demands on the federal government and it led to | back 11 Create new federal departments built around economic interests. |
front 12 The federal bureaucracy today is | back 12 A mix of the patronage and merit systems. |
front 13 The special interests that benefit directly from a bureaucratic agency's programs are called | back 13 Clientele Groups. |
front 14 Which of the following is true of the federal government's demographic representativeness? | back 14 If all employees are taken into account, the federal bureaucracy comes reasonable close to being representative of the nation's population. |
front 15 The cabinet department with the largest number of full-time civilian employees is the Department of | back 15 Defense. |
front 16 Regarding the education background of bureaucrats, high-ranking civil servants in continental Europe, compared to American bureaucrats, tend to have a college major specializing in | back 16 Law. |
front 17 The National Performance Review addressed which of the following issues about the bureaucracy? | back 17 All of these issues: responsiveness, accountability, and efficiency. |
front 18 The number of employees in the federal bureaucracy is about | back 18 2.5 million. |
front 19 The chief way that administrative agencies exercise power over policy is through | back 19 Rule-making, or deciding how a law will operate in practice. |
front 20 Amtrak is an example of a(n) | back 20 Government Corporation. |
front 21 Which of the following agencies or departments is likely to have strong allies from a group of particular states in Congress? | back 21 The Department of Agriculture. |
front 22 Studies have found that the U.S. federal bureaucracy | back 22 Compares favorably in performance to government bureaucracies elsewhere. |
front 23 What "multiple-use" policy is the U.S. Forest Service tasked with? | back 23 Preserving forests for environmental reasons, and opening them up for logging. |
front 24 __________ is/are most likely to understand the trade issues in the United States. | back 24 Career bureaucrats in the Department of Commerce and the Federal Trade Commission. |
front 25 The __________ established a merit system for certain federal positions. | back 25 Pendleton Act. |
front 26 Whenever Congress has perceived need for ongoing control of an economic activity, it has tended to create a | back 26 Regulatory Agency. |
front 27 The administrative concept of neutral competence holds that the bureaucracy should | back 27 Be staffed by people chosen on the basis of ability and do its work fairly on behalf of all citizens. |
front 28 In terms of holding the bureaucracy accountable, the most important unit within the Executive Office of the President is | back 28 Office of Management and Budget. |
front 29 When an individual believes that he or she was improperly disadvantaged by a bureaucrat's decision and contests the decision, the dispute is usually handled by | back 29 Administrative Law Judge. |
front 30 How has the Government Accountability Office's role changed? | back 30 It has moved from a limited role of keeping track of agency spending to also monitoring whether the agency is implementing policies in the way Congress intended. |
front 31 The Department of __________ was created in 2002. | back 31 Homeland Security. |
front 32 The courts have tended to support administrators as long as their agencies | back 32 Can apply a reasonable interpretation of a statute. |
front 33 The Department of __________ was founded in 1889. | back 33 Agriculture. |
front 34 Which of the following was the most recent broad initiative aimed at making the bureaucracy more responsive? | back 34 The National Performance Review. |
front 35 The importance of clientele groups was especially clear in 1995 when House speaker Newt Gingrich threatened to "zero out" funding for the | back 35 Corporation for Public Broadcasting. |
front 36 Bureaucracy is best characterized in terms of | back 36 Hierarchy, specialization, and rules. |
front 37 In promoting their agency's goals, bureaucrats rely on | back 37 All of these: their expert knowledge, the backing of the president and Congress, and the support of clientele groups. |
front 38 Congress oversees the bureaucracy by using | back 38 All of these: sunset provisions, the Government Accounting Office, and enabling provisions. |
front 39 At the start of the annual budget cycle, the OMB assigns each agency a budget limit based on | back 39 The president's directives. |