This book provides numerous examples that apply the modern theory of bureaucracy developed in Breton and Wintrobe (1982 and 1986) to the Nazi Holocaust. More specifically, the book argues, as do Breton and Wintrobe (1986), that the subordinates in the Nazi bureaucracy were not “following orders” as they claimed during the war crimes trials at Nuremberg and elsewhere, but were instead exhibiting an entrepreneurial spirit in competing with one another in order to find the most efficient way of exacting the Final Solution. This involved engaging in a process of exchange with their superiors, wherein the subordinates offered the kinds of informal services that are not codified in formal contracts. In doing so, they were competing for the rewards, or informal payments not codified in formal contracts, that were conferred by those at the top of the bureaucracy. These came in the form of rapid promotion, perquisites (pecuniary and in-kind), and other awards. The types of exchanges described above are based on “trust,” not formal institutions.
Author(s): Franklin G. Mixon
Publisher: Palgrave Pivot
Year: 2019
Language: English
Pages: 161
Tags: Economic History, Entrepreneurial Bureaucrats, Nazi Holocaust
Front Matter ....Pages i-xvii
The Organization of Terror and Murder (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 1-15
The Modern Theory of Bureaucracy (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 17-35
Bureaucratic Competition in the Third Reich (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 37-59
Vertical Trust Networks in the Nazi Bureaucracy (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 61-99
Horizontal Trust Networks in the Nazi Bureaucracy (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 101-117
Coercion and Vertical Trust in the Nazi Bureaucracy (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 119-128
The Last of the Third Reich’s Vertical Trust Networks? (Franklin G. Mixon Jr.)....Pages 129-144
Back Matter ....Pages 145-153