Establishment of an Advocates Office in the Social Security Administration's office of Adjudication in Metropolitan Detroit
By
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
I would take this opportunity to thank my research supervisor, family and friends for their support and guidance without which this research would not have been possible.
DECLARATION
I [type your full first names and surname here], declare that the contents of this dissertation/thesis represent my own unaided work, and that the dissertation/thesis has not previously been submitted for academic examination towards any qualification. Furthermore, it represents my own opinions and not necessarily those of the University.
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Abstract
Personal interactions between clients and street-level bureaucrats are significant in explaining why street-level bureaucrats behave as they do. Not all bureaucracies that apply program rules to individuals, however, engage face-to-face with their clientele. As more intake procedures are automated, such “one-on-one” encounters decrease. The paper generates and tests hypotheses about frontline bureaucratic decision making in the Social Security program, by applying bounded rationality theory. The findings show that eligibility decisions by street-level bureaucrats are affected by their adherence to subsets of agency goals and perceptions of others in the governance system. How quickly they make decisions also has an impact. There is no evidence that the way in which bureaucrats evaluate clients explains their decisions when they lack face-to-face contact.
Table of Content
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT2
DECLARATION3
Background of the study5
Problem Statement7
Purpose of the Study7
Rationale and theoretical frame work7
CHAPTER 2: LITERATURE REVIEW8
Social Security in US8
History and origins8
Amendments10
Goals and principles11
Benefits and payroll taxes12
Pay-as-you-go financing13
Bureaucratic Networks14
Service marketing and customer relations16
Service Capacity as Service Quality17
Capacity as Strategic Advantage19
Interpreting Capacity Constraints21
Customer Relationship Management (CRM)22
CHAPTER 3: METHODOLOGY23
Data Collection23
Variables23
Data analysis and synthesis23
Reliability and validity24
Scope and limitations24
References26
Appendix30
Survey Questions32
CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION
Access to social welfare programs depends not only on the eligibility rules that Congress adopts but also on how bureaucrats apply those rules to individual cases. Often, advocates who determine eligibility for government programs are referred to as “street-level advocates.” One central characteristic of street-level bureaucracies is the face-to-face interactions between advocates and clients. The advancement of information technology has removed this characteristic, however, from many bureaucracies, and some bureaucracies that process people have never had this characteristic. Despite this, most research and theory building on bureaucracies that apply services directly to clients has focused on bureaucracies in which advocates and clients physically interact. Even in the absence of face-to-face interaction, the advocates who apply program rules to individuals should still play a role in influencing policy implementation because program rules can often be interpreted in different ways, and individuals often do not neatly fit into eligibility criteria (AARP, 2007).
Background of the study
In addition to being a good case study to examine the determinants of eligibility determination, studying the Social Security Administration is important in its own right. Social Security Disability is one of the largest welfare programs in the United States. In 2005, the Social Security Administration administered $128 billion in cash benefits to 12.8 million people through the Social Security Disability Insurance (DI) and Supplemental Security Income (SSI). Furthermore, these programs are extremely important for the disabled ...