Leadership and Institutional Reform: Engineering Macroeconomic Policy Change in Australia

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Abstract

This article seeks to enhance the actor perspective on major policy reforms. It builds upon the literature on “policy entrepreneurs” and addresses its explanatory vagueness by specifying five hypotheses outlining the actions that proponents of major policy change need to take in order to be effective in forging departures from existing, path‐dependent policies and to overcome entrenched opposition to reforms. These hypotheses on “reformist political leadership” (after Blondel) are applied to the four attempts to reform key aspects of macroeconomic policy in Australia under the first two Labor governments led by Robert J. Hawke.
Original languageUndefined/Unknown
Pages (from-to)235-270
Number of pages36
JournalGovernance
Volume16
Issue number2
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2003

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