The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic

This paper examines the efficiency and public transport accessibility of indirect (devolved) state administration performed by municipalities with extended powers (hereinafter MEPs) in the Czech Republic. Our aim is to evaluate the efficiency of the revenues made by municipalities with extended powe...

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Main Authors: Vrabková Iveta, Vaňková Ivana, Ivan Igor
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Sciendo 2016-06-01
Series:Review of Economic Perspectives
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/revecp-2016-0010
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spelling doaj-d6294b8a559f4195996d56487bd714ef2021-09-05T14:00:15ZengSciendoReview of Economic Perspectives 1804-16632016-06-0116213515610.1515/revecp-2016-0010revecp-2016-0010The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech RepublicVrabková IvetaVaňková Ivana0Ivan Igor1VŠB – Technical University of Ostrava, Faculty of Economics, Department of Public EconomicsVŠB – Technical University of Ostrava, Faculty of Mining and Geology, Institute of GeoinformaticsThis paper examines the efficiency and public transport accessibility of indirect (devolved) state administration performed by municipalities with extended powers (hereinafter MEPs) in the Czech Republic. Our aim is to evaluate the efficiency of the revenues made by municipalities with extended powers, through performing powers delegated to them by the state administration, and those municipalities’ public transport accessibility as of 31 December, 2014. The rate of efficiency is tested on an output-oriented Free Disposable Hull model. One input variable is selected - the operating expenses of the municipal offices recalculated per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district - and two output variables are selected: contribution to the performance of state administration, recalculated per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district, and revenues from administrative fees per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district. The municipality’s offices’ transport accessibility is evaluated via network analysis using ArcGIS software. The article investigates the hypothesis that public administration deconcentration practices logically result in higher security costs and therefore inefficiency. The results reveal that only 66 of the country’s 205 MEPs are efficient and that operating expenses and state contributions for the performance of state administrative tasks play a significant role in these results. Efficiency is less significantly influenced by administrative fee revenues. Public transport accessibility is analyzed for two time intervals - 6:00 to 8:00 am and 1:00 to 2:00 pm - on Tuesdays. The degree of accessibility is defined using a six-point scale of accessibility. The results show that the best accessibility is in the morning hours, when the offices are accessible for 68.8% of the population aged 15+ in the Czech Republic; the worst accessibility is in the afternoon hours when only 2% of the population aged 15+ can access the offices.https://doi.org/10.1515/revecp-2016-0010efficiencypublic transport accessibilitystate administrationmunicipality with extended powermodel free disposable hull
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vrabková Iveta
Vaňková Ivana
Ivan Igor
spellingShingle Vrabková Iveta
Vaňková Ivana
Ivan Igor
The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
Review of Economic Perspectives
efficiency
public transport accessibility
state administration
municipality with extended power
model free disposable hull
author_facet Vrabková Iveta
Vaňková Ivana
Ivan Igor
author_sort Vrabková Iveta
title The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
title_short The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
title_full The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
title_fullStr The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
title_full_unstemmed The Efficiency and Public Transport Accessibility of Indirect State Administration in the Czech Republic
title_sort efficiency and public transport accessibility of indirect state administration in the czech republic
publisher Sciendo
series Review of Economic Perspectives
issn 1804-1663
publishDate 2016-06-01
description This paper examines the efficiency and public transport accessibility of indirect (devolved) state administration performed by municipalities with extended powers (hereinafter MEPs) in the Czech Republic. Our aim is to evaluate the efficiency of the revenues made by municipalities with extended powers, through performing powers delegated to them by the state administration, and those municipalities’ public transport accessibility as of 31 December, 2014. The rate of efficiency is tested on an output-oriented Free Disposable Hull model. One input variable is selected - the operating expenses of the municipal offices recalculated per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district - and two output variables are selected: contribution to the performance of state administration, recalculated per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district, and revenues from administrative fees per inhabitant of the municipality’s administrative district. The municipality’s offices’ transport accessibility is evaluated via network analysis using ArcGIS software. The article investigates the hypothesis that public administration deconcentration practices logically result in higher security costs and therefore inefficiency. The results reveal that only 66 of the country’s 205 MEPs are efficient and that operating expenses and state contributions for the performance of state administrative tasks play a significant role in these results. Efficiency is less significantly influenced by administrative fee revenues. Public transport accessibility is analyzed for two time intervals - 6:00 to 8:00 am and 1:00 to 2:00 pm - on Tuesdays. The degree of accessibility is defined using a six-point scale of accessibility. The results show that the best accessibility is in the morning hours, when the offices are accessible for 68.8% of the population aged 15+ in the Czech Republic; the worst accessibility is in the afternoon hours when only 2% of the population aged 15+ can access the offices.
topic efficiency
public transport accessibility
state administration
municipality with extended power
model free disposable hull
url https://doi.org/10.1515/revecp-2016-0010
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