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Nine - The diminished invisible private service: consultants and public policy in Canada

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 April 2022

Laurent Dobuzinskis
Affiliation:
Simon Fraser University, Canada
Michael Howlett
Affiliation:
Simon Fraser University, Canada
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Summary

Introduction

In the last ten years, the invisible private service has become increasingly visible in both the academic literature and in the media. Numerous scholars have studied policy, planning, and management consultants to better understand what type of consulting is being conducted for the different orders of government, how much money is being spent on consultants, and the extent of influence on public policy and processes. In a similar vein, the media have increasingly commented on public sector consulting projects given high-profile projects and issues. For example, revelations from the Gomery Commission (2005) about contracts were in the national media for months, and disclosures about the Harper government hiring Deloitte for almost $90,000 per day (total contract $19.8 million) to assist the federal cabinet in identifying cost-saving initiatives triggered many journalists to question the need for such a task (Beeby, 2011). The Toronto Star, in an extensive investigative report, found that “90 percent of the $2.4 billion paid out for management consulting in the past decade comes with no description of the work done on the government's public disclosure sites” (McLean and Bailey, 2013). What was an essentially invisible private service a decade ago is slowly gaining recognition, at least at the academic level—and to a certain extent in media circles and the public at large. Yet, it is still challenging to get meaningful data from any order of government or from the management consultants that have been engaged in consulting activities with the public sector.

Despite the billions of dollars spent on consultants in the public sector in Canada (McLean and Bailey, 2013), there has been little attention paid to this elusive unregulated policy actor (CMC, 2016a). The purpose of this chapter is to introduce the reader to the role of the consulting industry for those who are not familiar with this non-state actor. Despite recent scholarly attention to this topic, the role of consultants in the public sector is still neither well understood nor well defined (Buono, 2001; Howlett & Migone, 2013a, 2013d, 2014a, 2014b), especially from a Canadian perspective (Saint-Martin, 2000; Bakvis, 1997; Meredith & Martin, 1970; Howlett & Migone, 2013a, 2014a, 2014b; Howlett et al., 2014).

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Publisher: Bristol University Press
Print publication year: 2018

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