Title: Institutional Collective Action and Local Government Collaboration
1Institutional Collective Action and Local
Government Collaboration
- Richard C. Feiock
- Askew School of Public Administration Policy
- Devoe Moore Program in Local Governance
- Florida State University
2Overview of Paper
- Institutional Collective Action
- Motivations for Cooperation
- 1) Collective
- 2) Selective
- Identify how do transaction costs and the ability
of local actors to overcome them depend on - 1) characteristics of services
- 2) characteristics of communities
- 3) political institutions
- 4) structure of policy networks.
- Advance specific propositions regarding evolution
and effectiveness of interlocal collaboration. - Report preliminary findings regarding interlocal
agreements and economic development joint
ventures. - Present an agenda to investigate institutional
collective action among local governments.
3Institutional Collective Action (ICA)
- Focuses on collective behavior of organizations
or governmental units rather than individuals - Local Actors participate in collaborative
intergovernmental arrangements when their
benefits exceed transaction costs.
4Why Cooperate?Motivations for Collaboration
- Collective
- Economies of Scale in Production
- Spillover and Externalities
- Selective
- Political costs and benefits for elected
officials - Career consequences for professional managers
5Transaction Costs Barriers to Cooperation
- Bargaining Costs - there can be at most small
resource costs associated with the process of
negotiating a deal - Information Costs - information on the
preferences of all participants over possible
outcomes and on their resources must be common
knowledge - Agency Costs - bargaining agents must perfectly
represent the interests of their constituents - Division Costs - the parties must agree to a
division of the bargaining surplus - Enforcement Costs - there can be at most low
costs associated with monitoring and enforcing
the agreement.
6Characteristics of Goodsand Services
- Proposition 1a The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to the
extent to which a service requires asset specific
investments. - Proposition 1b The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to the
difficulty in measuring and monitoring service
outcomes.
7Characteristics of Communities
- Proposition 2a The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to
demographic heterogeneity among local
governments. - Proposition 2b The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to
demographic heterogeneity within local
governments. - Proposition 2c The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to the
geographic distance between local governments.
8Characteristics of Political Systems
- Proposition 3a The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to the
restrictiveness of state laws authorizing
interlocal cooperation. - Proposition 3b The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are related to form of
government. - Proposition 3c The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to
district based representations systems. - Proposition 3d The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are positively related to tenure
in office of elected and appointed officials. - Proposition 3e The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are negatively related to
institutional heterogeneity in the political
structure of local governments.
9Certain Network Structures Can Mitigate or Reduce
Specific Transaction Problems
- Proposition 4a The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are positively related to
bridging weak tie network relationships among
local governments. - Proposition 4b The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are positively related to
tightly-clustered strong tie network
relationships among local governments. - Proposition 4c The likelihood of the emergence
of collaborative intergovernmental agreements and
their durability are positively related to a
history or reciprocal dyadic relationships across
time and policy arenas.
10Ongoing Projects
- Park, Feiock Steinacker economic development
joint ventures - Shrestha Feiock interlocal service
expenditures - Scholz Berardo water projects in Tampa Bay
estuary - Park Feiock regional economic development
partnerships - Shrestha 25 years of ILAs in Pinellas
County - Ramirez networks among land use actors Leon
Cnty - Park Feiock network survey Orlando/Tampa
- Kwon ILAs among cities in COGs, RPCs and MPOs
- Yoo developments of regional impact (DRI) in
FL - Farmer regional special purpose districts
11Economic Development Joint Ventures Park,
Feiock Steinacker
- Survey of development directors of cities over
50K population. - -responses from 254 of 522 cities (48.7).
- Questionnaire gathered information on development
policies and politics, contacts with other
governments, development partnerships, and joint
ventures. - Combined with archival demographic, fiscal data
and service expenditure data. - Probit Analysis
12(No Transcript)
13Collaboration in the Supply of Public Goods
Transaction Costs and Social Exchange
TheoriesManoj Shrestha Richard Feiock
- Dependent Variable City expenditure for
payment-for-service and/or joint service
agreements to other local governments for the
supply of 11 public services in Georgia - H1 The relationship between asset specificity
and interlocal service cooperation follows an
inverted U shape at lower levels, asset
specificity increases cooperation, but beyond
some point, further increases in asset
specificity decrease cooperation. - H2 The relationship between measurement
difficulty and interlocal service cooperation has
an inverted U shape at low levels, measurement
difficulty increases cooperation, but after some
point measurement difficulty decreases
cooperation - H3 The relationship between trust resulting from
previous exchange and interlocal cooperation is
linear the greater the level of previous
exchange, the higher the interlocal service
cooperation.
14Heckman two-stage results
15Probability of Cooperation by Asset Specificity
and Measurement Difficulty
16Statistical Models of Collaboration
NetworksSimulation Investigation for Empirical
Network Analysis (SIENA)
- Compares the likelihood of the observed network
with randomly generated networks having the same
number of links. -
- Actor-oriented model. At random time points
actors evaluate current configurations and make
or terminate a link to maximize the implicit
utility function - The utility function can include a parameter
vector containing both structural properties of
the network and actors particular attributes. - The output provides parameter estimates as well
as estimates of the uncertainty of estimation
which permits statistical testing.
17Insights from ICA
- Collaborations and regional governance is
possible even in very decentralized political
systems. - Political, not just economic, interests shape the
costs and benefits of cooperation for local
actors. - Endogenous network relationships are important.
- Salience of both actors and relationships.
18Thank You
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
http//www.fsu.edu/localgovresearch_projects/regi
onal_governance.htm
19What Network Structures Emerge for Water
Services
- Relational analysis of water related services
- Actors - 25 governments in Pinellas County, FL
- Use of inter-local service agreements
- Payment-for-service agreements
- Perspective of the receiver (buyer) government
- Directed relationships (digraphs)
- One moment in time
20Observed networks
Density 0.04 Av. degree 1.04
Density 0.05 Av. degree 1.24
Water network
Sewer network
Density 0,02 Av. Degree 0,40
Density 0.013 Av. Degree 0.32
Utility billing network
Conservation network
21Why the star network? - Theory
- Fragmented governments and inefficiency in local
service supply - Voluntary bargaining and service cooperation
(Coase theorem) - Gains from service cooperation
- Direct benefits
- Indirect benefits
- Costs - Transaction risks and uncertainties
- Maintaining the relationship (link)
- Finding a good partner (search cost)
- Risks associated with asset specificity
- Locked up in transaction (needs assurance in
supply) - Things change (adaptability)
- Dependency (repeated action)
22Local Government Response
- Emulative behavior
- Limited access to information
- Bounded rationality
- Emulation combined with cost of maintaining links
lead to emergence of star network - Future eventualities and dependency reinforce and
maintain the star structure - Reputation restrains opportunism by star
- Actor with critical ability emerges as the star
- Indirect link results extended star network
- Heterogeneity leads to multiple star network
23Emergence of Star Networks
A
A
Economies of scale
A
A
Homogeneous world
Heterogeneous world
24Various in-star configurations
In-star network
Extended in-star network
Interlinked multiple in-star network
25Modeling networks with SIENA
- P model
- Structural effects
- Alternating in-k-star
- Reciprocity
- Out 2-star
- 2-path
- transitivity
- Attribute effects
- Size effect
- Geographic proximity
- Similarity effect gt same service, council-manager
government
26Configuration of network effects
27SIENA p estimation results
Effects labeled in italics indicate significance
at p lt 0.05. All the models meets the
goodness-of-fit test.
28Which government is popular?
29Conclusion
- Main findings
- Prevalence of popularity structure
- Popularity through structural process is evident
in water service - In other services, the popularity structure is
driven by size - Bottom line
- Connecting to the well-connected seems to be
the general rule