Technocratic means consisting of or influenced by technocrats.
...the current technocratic administration.
technocratic in American English
(ˌteknəˈkrætɪk)
adjective
of, pertaining to, or designating a technocrat or technocracy
Word origin
[technocrat + -ic]-ic is a suffix forming adjectives from other parts of speech, occurring originally inGreek and Latin loanwords (metallic; poetic; archaic; public) and, on this model, used as an adjective-forming suffix with the particular senses“having some characteristics of” (opposed to the simple attributive use of the basenoun) (balletic; sophomoric); “in the style of” (Byronic; Miltonic); “pertaining to a family of peoples or languages” (Finnic; Semitic; Turkic)
Examples of 'technocratic' in a sentence
technocratic
The talks are intended to lead to the appointment of an interim technocratic government.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
He is, probably, too technocratic to be leader in this modern media era.
The Sun (2017)
The case for raising rates was certainly technocratic.
Times, Sunday Times (2018)
It takes the technocratic stuff away from political interference.
Times, Sunday Times (2018)
She disliked his monarchical airs and technocratic mindset.
Times, Sunday Times (2013)
But the process won't be nearly so smooth and technocratic as they expect.
Globe and Mail (2003)
He comes from the pragmatic, not to say technocratic, centre of the party.
Times, Sunday Times (2012)
Others with her pianistic skills might flaunt it on grand technocratic opuses.
Times, Sunday Times (2017)
His or her role is not just one of technocratic leadership.