What Leads to Administrative Bloat?

I’ve commented many times before on this blog about runaway expenditure on management resulting in the diversion of resources away from the core missions of a university, i.e. teaching and research, while producing no significant improvement in the efficiency, and indeed often a deterioration, of administrative processes. David Graeber wrote a book called Bullshit Jobs about this phenomenon. Management response to this is generally to assert that this administrative bloat is a response to regulatory burden. Many of us working in higher education would instead argue that the entire sector has been hijacked by self-serving parasites who are deliberately sucking the lifeblood out of the system.

I just came across a paper on the Physics and Society section of arXiv that tries to explain management bloat from the point of view of systems theory. The title is What Leads to Administrative Bloat? A Dynamic Model of Administrative Cost and Waste, the authors are Vicky Chuqiao Yang and Levi Grenier of MIT and the abstract is here:

The functioning of complex systems depends on the coordination of diverse components, often supported by regulatory structures that incur costs. In human organizations, such costs manifest as administrative burden, which has been rising despite often reducing efficiency. Classic explanations point to bureaucrat self-interest or regulation, yet they do not explain variation across organizations or clarify how this burden can be reduced. Here, we develop a dynamical model of administrative growth that integrates known behavioral mechanisms of process creation, obsolescence, and removal. The model conceptualizes processes as developed for problem solving, but becoming obsolete as conditions change, while continuing to consume resources until actively pruned. This interplay generates two long-term outcomes: stable equilibrium or run-away growth. The threshold separating these outcomes is shaped by organizations’ propensity to create new processes when faced with problems, and their propensity to prune obsolete ones in response to administrative burden. Importantly, their effects are asymmetric: sufficiently high creation propensity leads to bloat regardless of pruning propensity. Faster environmental change shifts this threshold, making bloat more likely. Simulations of interventions show that lasting reductions in administrative costs and waste require permanent shifts in priorities and investments in distinguishing obsolete from useful processes. Temporary efforts or indiscriminate cuts provide only short-lived relief, and counterintuitively, prioritizing direct production can increase waste. Our work highlights a general mechanism by which well-intentioned problem-solving can create self-reinforcing inefficiencies in complex systems, offering insights possibly generalizable to broader applications, such as legal, policy, and software systems where obsolete elements accumulate.

Here’s a a figure from the paper that provides ample illustration of the problem:

You will find a similar phenomenon on display at universities across the world. In my view this is a large part of the crisis engulfing higher education in the United Kingdom.

It’s an interesting paper, based on a very simple model. The authors also suggest various ways in which this burden could be reduced. The problem with that is that there is no incentive at all for The Management (who hold all the power) to improve the situation, as that would involve eliminating the bullshit jobs held by many of their cronies. With university governance structures notoriously weak and compliant, who manages the Managers? The most likely response from my University would be to appoint a new Vice-President for Self-reinforcing Inefficiency…

#AdministrativeBloat #arXiv241215378 #BullshitJobs #DavidGraeber #ManagementBloat #Universities

Hm. ISPP will be in the #CzechRepublic in 2025. If my calculations are correct, my university currently allows (checks notes) $0 for academic travel, so maybe not.

#professor #highered #enshittification #administrativebloat #budgetcrisis

Ahh life at the modern university with ever growing upper managment (now refered to as executive university leaders). My university is now up to 13 Vice Presidents. The most recent is the VP of Real Estate cause, you know, education and scholorship. Does anyone work at a University that can top that?

@academicchatter #highered #university #administrativebloat #academicadministration #corporatebullshit

Are Universities Failing the Accommodations Test?

As instructors struggle to meet the complex needs of students, schools are leaving both to fend for themselves

by Simon Lewsen, published 2024-08-13

https://thewalrus.ca/accommodations/

#Universities #DisabilityJustice #AcademicAbleism #UniversalDesignForLearning #AdministrativeBloat #InstructorPrecarity #AcademicFreedom #Collegiality

Are Universities Failing the Accommodations Test? | The Walrus

As instructors struggle to meet the complex needs of students, schools are leaving both to fend for themselves

The Walrus

Almost every time someone in a position to solve a problem claims they'd love to solve it but they've tried everything and it didn't work, if you look closer you'll find one or more "sacred cow" solutions that have never been tried. The conversation then goes like this:

Q: To address __X__ have you tried __Y__?
A: That would never work! There's no reason to try it!

The person answering tends to get upset, which is why I put in the "!"

Examples:

X = University financial crises
Y = Reduce administration budgets

X = #Abortion frequency
Y = Healthcare, maternal care, childcare

X = Poverty
Y = Giving money to poor people

X = #IncomeInequality
Y = Wealth tax

X = #Corporate takeover of everything
Y = #Enforcement of #regulations

X = #gunviolence
Y = Gun control laws

X = US political #polarization
Y = RCV, no more electoral college, no more #filibuster...

X = Political polarization
Y = Campaign finance reform

X = Illegal immigration
Y = Enforcing minimum wage, punishing companies employing undocumented immigrants

X = Prostitution
Y = Prosecute the johns, UBI, free college

X = Palestinian #genocide
Y = Not giving/selling Israel any more weapons

etc.

(edit: added the bits about prostitution & undocumented immigrants)

#problem #solution #NotThat #campaignFinanceReform #CitizensUnited #AdministrativeBloat #HigherEd #ubi

US #universities are nearly all in the red, financially.

1. Yes, funding #publicEducation costs money

2. Research shows increasing #tuition costs are overwhelmingly because of (a) state reductions in per-student financing and (b) #AdministrativeBloat

Naturally, every upper administrator (and #university system) thinks the obvious fix is to cut #faculty, destroy #tenure, increase class sizes, remove majors, hire #adjuncts, and otherwise degrade academics--you know, the thing universities are about.

MY RADICAL SUGGESTIONS:

1. Fucking fund universities, you cowards

2. If you need to cut costs, start with the things that don't contribute to academics, like (a) administrative costs, (b) sports programs, (c) police and other non-academic programs using resources

3. Stop letting people in suits who know nothing about education and/or about business (and definitely about the ways universities and businesses are and are not similar) make the decisions

#highered #economics