Elston, ThomasBel i Queralt, Germà, 1963-Wang, Han2024-01-242024-01-242023-11-010033-3352https://hdl.handle.net/2445/206280Collaboration is a commonly prescribed method of public service improvement. If collaboration fails, blame is typically ascribed to transaction costs, organizational inertia, or premature evaluation. However, drawing on a notable case of collaborative failure in England, we show that misdiagnosing public service problems as of a type likely to be cured by joint working also generates poor results, and belongs conceptually prior to many "go-to" explanations of failure. Using stacked difference-in-difference estimators on 11 years of performance data relating to subnational tax collection, we show that inter-municipal cooperation produced no cost or quality improvements over independent service delivery. Supplementary testing attributes this less to governance problems, inertia or precipitate evaluation, than to a basic lack of interdependence - the specific "problem" to which collaboration is the "solution" - between large councils. Having exhausted scale economies internally, partners experienced no mutual reliance warranting their attempt to further economize through collaboration.24 p.application/pdfeng(c) American Society for Public Administration, 2023http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/es/Administració públicaDirecció d'empresesAdministració localCooperació intergovernamentalPublic administrationIndustrial managementLocal governmentIntergovernmental cooperationIf it ain't broke, don't fix it: When collaborative public management becomes collaborative excessinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article7378392024-01-24info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess