Conflicting Values at Stake - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 30
About This Presentation
Title:

Conflicting Values at Stake

Description:

Examination and merit ... like performance pay either, because it means making hard-to-defend distinctions ... Recruitment and promotion on merits ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:32
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: comp46
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Conflicting Values at Stake


1
Conflicting Values at Stake
  • To hire public employees on the basis of merit
    rather than on political connections
  • To manage public employees effectively
  • To treat equal employees equally
  • Responsiveness and representativeness

2
Areas of National Variation
  • The civil service idea and political neutrality
  • Close or open structure
  • Structure of the public service uniformity or
    fragmentation generalists or specialists
    position or rank classification
  • Status of the public service instrument of
    politics or guardian of state interests
  • degree of regulation and centralized controls

3
Why National Variations?
  • Conception of role of the state the state as an
    arena of political conflict or the state as a
    guardian of general interest or general will
  • Sequence of the emergence and growth of the
    following three developments
  • democracy
  • civil service system
  • expansion of bureaucratic functions and structure
    (hence the need for effective management and
    leadership)

4
Hugh Heclo on the U.S. Civil Service
  • In its search for an accepted role the U.S. civil
    service has been the victim of not only
    constitutional design but also of its own
    history. The U.S. civil service system, unlike
    that in other Western democracies, developed well
    after democratic political parties and mass
    political participation but somewhat ahead of
    industrialization and the accompanying expansion
    of central government bureaucracies In the last
    quarter of the nineteenth century, when the first
    stirrings of modern bureaucratic power associated
    with industrialization were being felt, civil
    service reformers were already concentrating on
    an older American problem

5
Hugh Heclo
  • How to reverse the intrusion of political party
    spoils into the work of government
    administration. History thus bequeathed a concern
    that focused somewhat more on negative
    protections and somewhat less on the positive
    duties and the direction of the U.S. civil
    service.

6
Key Areas of Managing the Public Service
  • Merit, Entry and Examination
  • Classification system and structure of the public
    service
  • Appraisal and Pay
  • Over-regulation
  • Bureaucratized versus professionalized service

7
What Does Merit Mean?
  • Inherently ambiguous nature of the meaning of
    merit what are the qualities most relevant to
    jobs?
  • Examination and merit
  • written test and other forms of prediction such
    as job interviews, reference checks or amount of
    experiences
  • earmarked examinations or relying on professional
    qualification
  • testing general ability or job-specific tests

8
The Experience of the PACE in the U.S.
  • A Test of general mental abilities and considered
    a good predictor of administrative ability
  • The political aspect of the merit principle
    which groups benefit from a given format of
    examination?

9
Classification System and Structure of Public
Service
  • Position classification the system of designing
    jobs, organizing them into useful managerial
    career categories, and establishing their rates
    of pay inherently complicated and calling for
    expertise in job analysis and management
  • Rank classification the system in which ranks
    are vested in the individual officials occupying
    the positions. Individual officers are organized
    into different categories with different rates of
    pay

10
Classification System and Executive Leadership
  • Rank classification and horizontal mobility of
    officials
  • horizontal mobility of officials and overall
    executive leadership
  • the Administrative Class in the British system
    and the Senior Executive Service in the U.S.

11
Pay for Performance
  • Civil service pay and over-regulation
  • apparent consensus on the need for linking pay
    with performance
  • limited success the experience of the SES in the
    U.S.
  • equal payment of bonuses to reduce internal
    conflict, the difficulties of evaluating
    individual performance, and to reduce the
    opportunities for misuse of public revenue

12
Reasons for the Limited Success of Performance Pay
  • Bureaucratic Inertia
  • Employees are skeptical about the idea of
    performance pay because they are afraid of giving
    more authority to managers
  • Managers may not like performance pay either,
    because it means making hard-to-defend
    distinctions
  • Politicians worry that this may lead to too wide
    a pay inequality
  • Insistence on being cost neutral

13
Over-regulation
  • National variations, specific political
    institutions and national culture
  • an inherent feature of bureaucracy focusing not
    on national variations over-regulation as a more
    general phenomenon associated with a given form
    of organization

14
Bureaucratized versus Professionalized Service
  • A central dilemma in public personnel system
    autonomy of the professionals and bureaucratic
    accountability
  • Bureaucratized service a set of rules that
    specify who are to be hired, how they are to be
    managed, and what they are to do
  • Professionalized service rules that specify who
    are to be hired but that leave great discretion
    to the members of the occupation to decide what
    they are to do and how they are to be managed

15
Key Political Issues in Managing the Public
Service
  • Civil service idea and the role of politics in
    managing the public service
  • responsiveness of the public service
  • representativeness of the public service

16
Civil Service Idea
  • Conception of the political neutrality of the
    public service (political neutrality understood
    as non-partisan)
  • Britain neutrality of the public service and
    managing the public service is largely a
    managerial matter
  • U.S. the neutrality of the public service is not
    taken for granted a greater role for politics

17
Responsiveness
  • Responsive to whom?
  • To the politicians holding public offices or to
    the public at large?
  • Political patronage and responsiveness the great
    variations in western in the number of political
    appointees
  • Ideological and political screening of senior
    civil servants

18
Representativeness
  • The composition of the bureaucracies reflecting
    the composition of society at large
  • need for representativeness and weak civil
    service idea
  • representativeness leads to better responsiveness
  • affirmative action seek to assure equality in
    the outcome of competition arguing that those
    who have been discriminated against so thoroughly
    in the past should be entitled to special,
    compensatory treatment until effects of past
    practices have been eliminated
  • conflict of the affirmative action with the merit
    principle

19
Over-regulation and de-regulation of Public
Service
  • Over-regulation Proliferation of personnel rules
    that protect the rights of public employees and
    constrain the powers of executive leaders of
    administrative agencies
  • de-regulation changes of personnel rules to
    allow for more flexibility in personnel
    practices, and decentralization of powers over
    personnel matters from central personnel office
    to executive agencies

20
Civil Service Systems and Over-regulation
  • Recruitment and promotion on merits
  • political neutrality, career security and
    permanent employment
  • the need for honest civil servants and career
    security
  • equality equal pay for equal work the same pay
    for people holding the same position
  • public sector unionism

21
Over-regulation in the U.S.
  • Excessive reaction to a 19th century problems of
    political patronage
  • a stronger emphasis on protection of the rights
    of public employees, less on glory and
    responsibilities of serving the state

22
The Case in Hong Kong
  • No concern for political neutrality
  • Based on the British model
  • Need for a clean and honest government
  • As of early 1999, there are a total of 189,282
    civil servants, only less than 2 are on contract
    terms close to 97 of civil servants are on
    pensionable term
  • ease of granting pension and excessive protection
    of rights of employees

23
Explaining Civil Service Reform in Hong Kong
  • What is the impetus of civil service reform in
    Hong Kong?
  • Another step following the public sector reform
    starting in 1989?
  • A response to public criticism of the defects of
    the civil service system?
  • A response to the grievances of the public toward
    the civil service during economic recession?
  • A strategy to deal with anticipated public
    finance crisis?

24
Problems of Over-regulation
  • Similarly over-regulated across different
    countries?
  • Careers in public service become unattractive
  • poor morale within the public service
  • poor performance and inefficiency

25
Should the public service be de-regulated?
  • As a general principle, there seems to be almost
    universal consensus
  • But a critical balance need to be maintained
    between a stable and honest civil service on the
    hand, and flexibility in personnel management on
    the other

26
How to do it?
  • Strong political support
  • political climate
  • civil service reform in Hong Kong changing
    political and economic climate

27
Rules and Bureaucracy
  • What do the people expect from the public
    service?
  • To be efficient, to be honest, to be accountable,
    to treat equal people equally
  • the conflict among solutions to all these problems

28
Rules and Inefficiency
  • Is government really inefficient?
  • Narrow meaning of efficiency
  • Broader meaning of efficiency
  • When we complain that government bureaucracy is
    inefficient, we are often using the narrow view
    of inefficiency
  • a real difficulty we lack objective ways for
    deciding how much money or time should be devoted
    to maintaining honest behavior, producing a fair
    allocation of benefits, generating popular
    support as well as to achieving the main goal of
    the project

29
Rules and Arbitrariness
  • Two important conflicts
  • conflict between efficiency and reducing
    arbitrariness
  • conflict between fairness (following the rules)
    and responsiveness
  • uncertainty is power

30
Gains and Losses of Rules
  • Clear rules induce agencies to produce observable
    outcomes, but not hard-to-observe processes
  • Rules create offices,procedures, and claims
    inside an organization that can protect
    precarious values, but hey also generate
    paperwork and alter human relationship in ways
    that can reduce the ability of the organization
    to achieve its goals and its incentive to
    cooperate with those who enforce the rules
  • Rules specify minimum standards that must be met,
    but they always become maximum standards
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com