Role of Government
Who is in Control?
Having emphasized that institutions cannot be controlled in the sense of formally managed, the question remains as to where responsibility to remedy dysfunction lies.
The citizenry and the government are the two social entities who ultimately determine the meeting of needs within institutions through .
The government is itself a , and needs to take an active continuing interest in all other societal institutions if they are to thrive. Where government is absent (e.g Haiti at present) or devalued (e.g. USA), institutions fail to thrive.
However, the citizenry is not itself an . Its emergence depends on an expansion of loyalty beyond the family or wider kin-group to the State as embodied by the government. The functioning of a citizenry depends partly on an effective government and an acquiescent State.
In monitoring events and pushing for developments in institutions, including the government, the citizenry requires the aid of the media. (In authoritarian states, government strictly controls the media.)
Government and politics are two closely related . The political system, if functioning constructively, leads to a government that is broadly supported by all in society, despite their differences and how each may have voted.
But government-as-an-institution is more than the President or those elected, because it must be seen to include many components,
including but not limited to:
Note on regulatory authorities:
Limits to Quality
As emphasized earlier, the maturity of the political-governmental institution largely determines the quality of the other societal institutions.
However, even a relatively mature liberal-democratic government can seriously fail in its responsibility to citizens if it is captured by an ideology that denies the need for government or the existence of society (c. Margaret Thatcher, UK Prime Minister who famously stated: "There's no such thing as society.").
A government, like Scott Morrison's in Australia 2018-2022, that lacked any vision for how to improve the well-being of society ended up presiding over a failing educational system, failing housing provision, inadequate migrant systems, tolerance of corruption, ineffective security arrangements especially in regard to natural disasters—and then was surprised at being decimated at the election.
Limits to Responsibility
Even if decentralized and unmanageable.
are a concern for government, they cannot be envisaged as its sole responsibility. For a start, government itself is a , as noted above. While we expect an institution to meet a class of need, government cannot be "held responsible" because institutions areIn practice, even limited responsibility is difficult.
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Good government calls for a proper oversight and coordination of a mosaic of institutions in response to a well-functioning citizenry. While government is not "the" solution, it is a vital mechanism for enabling institutional development. That is why Governments typically organize their bureaucracy to mirror institutions: Treasury aligns with the economy, Health Department aligns with health care, Social Security aligns with welfare, Defence aligns with military, Education with education, and so on.
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The current problem, in even the most advanced societies, is a limited understanding of how government and other institutions should be operated, and the still weak internal restraint on the misuse of power and privilege.
Members of the public currently struggle to accept responsibility for government because of the opacity, complexity and sheer incomprehensibility of institutions. That means the attraction of a traditional unified centralized authority remains, despite its dangers.
How can the citizenry resist this attraction and bring pressure to bear on the government to use its extensive powers wisely? To be able to do anything significant, we depend on a special institution: the media.
Originally posted: 18-Nov-2022. Last updated 30-Apr-2023.