See also: The Case FOR Bureaucracy
That link bothers me immensely. While many of the things they describe are myths (I consider the most important part of politics to be math, and so the "there's always more waste to cut!" guy drew a laugh here), many of the things they describe are strawmen / they handle them wrongly.
For example, consider myth #5. When you compare private industries as a whole to public industries as a whole, the difference is a statistically insignificant .4%. However, what about when you compare apples and apples, not apples and oranges? The U.S. Postal Service gets a rating of 76.1%, private mail carriers get a rating of 84.5%. Public health clinics get a rating of 74.4%, private doctors' offices get a rating of 80.6%. If you average those two actual comparisons together, private industry's edge is 7.3%, almost a full 10% better than the public industry's ratings.
(Also, I would suggest "evidence against" rather than "refuting" when discussing a result, just like "evidence for" is a better description than "proving.")
Jerry Pournelle's "Iron Law of Bureaucracy" implies that leaders of bureaucratic organizations will seek to maximize the power and influence of the organization at the expense of its stated goals - but is that true in the real world?
Julie Dolan of Macalester College examined surveys of government administrators and found that, surprisingly enough, high-ranking federal bureaucrats tended to prefer less government spending than the general public, even on issues that their own departments are responsible for.
Here is the abstract from her paper, "The budget-minimizing bureaucrat? Empirical evidence from the senior executive service" that was published in the journal Public Administration Review:
I was able to read the paper here for free, but I had to register first.
See also: The Case FOR Bureaucracy