ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGE: Strategies and EU Accession - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGE: Strategies and EU Accession

Description:

... (changing organisational culture and behaviour ... Social, economic, political, demographic, and other circumstances are influencing ... consumer -orientation ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:64
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: Ivan98
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGE: Strategies and EU Accession


1
ADMINISTRATIVE CHANGE Strategies and EU
Accession
  • Professor Ivan Kopric
  • Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb

2
The main differences between the public and
private sectors
  • The public sector is a complex value area
    (political, legal, social, ecological, economical
    values) / the main value orientation of private
    sector is economic one
  • Profit is the main indicator of success in the
    private sector / public servants should fulfil
    different expectations (problem of performance
    measurement)
  • Private sector actors are proactively seeking
    niches with fine prospects for profit, while
    public administrative organizations are, in
    general, reacting to the problems in wider
    environment by decision-making, regulation,
    support, etc. PA is an instrument for resolving
    public problems

3
Public administrative system composition and the
main tendencies
  • State administration organised as the system of
    classical administrative organisations like
    ministries reorientation to the core-business
    (smaller organisations concentrated on the public
    policies, drafting regulations, authoritative
    decision-making, inspections, and similar tasks)
  • Territorial self-government (local and regional)
    harmonisation in wider European context
    decentralisation and new legitimacy wider
    responsibilities from administrative tasks to
    the support of economic and social development
  • Services of general interest (economic and
    non-economic, i.e. social, health, etc.) new
    European regulation of the services of general
    economic interest, especially in network
    industries European social model
  • Overall Europeanisation within broader
    globalisation context

4
Public sector values
  • are integrating governance system
  • are crystallized through political processes of
    amalgamation interests and ideologies
  • Public administration should gain overall
    legitimacy in its social milieu that is why it
    has to adapt to complex value orientations.
  • Value heterogeneity
  • Continental European space stress on the
    political, legal, and social values (Hegel a
    state is Gods walk on Earth Greek democracy and
    Roman law tradition)
  • Anglo-Saxon space stress on the economic values
    and pragmatism (brutal economic and social
    situation)
  • Within the public sector different situation in
    transport sector, finances, local self-government
  • during historical development political legal
    social economic - ecological

5
Types of public sector values
  • Political (democratic) accountability,
    publicness, transparency, responsiveness,
    political decentralisation, openness, legitimacy,
    flexibility (user-friendliness)
  • Legal the rule of law, legality (organisational,
    substantive, procedural, with regard to
    competence), legal responsibility (for damage
    caused by illegal functioning, or disciplinary
    responsibility), legal certainty, protection of
    fundamental rights and freedoms, equality,
    impartiality, due process, court supervision
  • Social social justice, solidarity, social
    sensibility, care, charity, sympathy, mercy,
    assistance to the citizens, cultural diversity,
    respect for national, sexual, and other
    minorities
  • Ecological protection of natural environment,
    protection of biological diversity, careful
    management of natural resources, life in harmony
    with nature
  • Economic the three Es (economy, efficiency,
    effectiveness), quality, market-orientation and
    private sector-orientation, competitiveness,
    entrepreneurship

6
Administrative reforms
  • ARs are, in a way, a consequence of generally
    reactive nature of public administration
  • new politics asks for new administrative
    arrangements
  • PA should adapt to changed expectations and
    search for a new legitimacy
  • PA should in-build new technologies
  • it should find innovative solutions for quite new
    problems
  • ARs are significant, deep organisational,
    institutional and cultural changes in public
    administration that occur periodically.
  • Types (Farazmand, 1999) 1. purposive (motivated
    by certain purposes purposive model), 2.
    adaptation (environmental dependency model to
    respond to environmental pressures), 3.
    institutional (changing organisational culture
    and behaviour changing mindset)
  • Formal (official) and informal (latent) purposes
    and functions of ARs problem of rising
    expectations
  • Success factors political and public support,
    human and material resources, reliable
    organisation, well-thought-out strategy,
    dedicated reform leadership

7
Administrative doctrines vs. science of PA
  • Administrative doctrine a system of ideas about
    desirable way of operating and prescriptions
    about good practices, grounded on dominant values
    and systematised experiences, comprising
    standards with regard to organisation,
    functioning, regulation, management, etc., in
    public administration.
  • Social, economic, political, demographic, and
    other circumstances are influencing doctrines,
    also.
  • Lack of empirically verified theories
    (consolidated knowledge) opens space for
    doctrines.
  • Doctrines are verified in practice.
  • Cameralism, the New Public Administration (the
    Minnowbrook Perspective USA Frederickson,
    Waldo, Marini, Chandler, Rohr, etc.), the New
    Public Management, Good Governance

8
Strategies for administrative change
  • Pollitt and Bouckaert (2000 2001)
  • Maintain. To preserve and incrementally improve
    (up-grade) classical, Weberian model of public
    administration as rational, well-organised,
    monocratic organisation with fine tailored
    hierarchy, professionalism, impartiality,
    legality, and standardised bureaucratic
    procedures.
  • Modernise. More fundamental changes in structures
    and functioning (from procedures to results
    output budget orientation autonomous executive
    agencies from appointment acts to employment
    contract, etc.)
  • Marketize. Introduction of market principles and
    mechanisms in the PA system (internal market
    British NHS and competition of hospitals
    charging real market prices consumer-orientation)
  • Minimize. Shrinking the public sector by
    privatisation, contracting out, public-private
    partnerships, civil (voluntary) sector
    involvement, etc.

9
The New Public Management
  • Imposing economic values and private sector
    techniques into the public sector
  • Stress on economy and efficiency ideology of
    state failure inclination to private
    entrepreneurship and free market economy
  • From the 1980s, grounded in neo-liberal ideology
  • Conservative political actors in Anglo-Saxon
    countries
  • New Zealand, Australia, Canada, UK, USA
  • Significant role of international organisations
    (IMF WB OECD)
  • Attack on welfare state reaffirmation of
    capitalism class structure neo-colonialism

10
The New Public Management - elements
  • Hood (1991)
  • Autonomous professional public managers wider
    leadership competences and individual
    responsibility
  • Performance indicators (quantitative, if
    possible), performance measurement
  • Output control, disregarding procedures
    performance-related pay systems decentralised
    HRM
  • Fragmentation of large PA organisations smaller,
    financially more autonomous organisations with
    one main product (public service) that compete
    at the internal market and/or with private
    organisations
  • Competitiveness, public tendering,
    contractualisation
  • Managerial style more in line with private sector
    practice flexibilisation in employment
    arrangements, public relations like in the
    private sector, etc.
  • Economy and cost reduction including regulation
    costs reduction (deregulation)

11
Structural and functional measures and effects
  • a) Structural
  • Reduction (lean state privatisation, budget
    reduction, reduction of the level of social
    rights, etc.)
  • Forms of private and third sector participation
    in public affairs (PPP, outsourcing, concessions,
    etc.)
  • Loosening structural ties (fragmenting state
    agencification, decentralisation, greater
    autonomy of public sector organisations, etc.)
  • Problems accountability, coordination, strategic
    policy, ethics, local self-government, costs
  • b) Functional
  • Marketisation of the state public market
  • Competitiveness
  • Real prices
  • Services of general economic interest
    (liberalisation and privatisation)
  • Deregulation
  • De-bureaucratisation (removing procedural
    obstacles to private sector subjects and
    citizens management by results)
  • New budgetary solutions internal and external
    audit, etc.

12
NPM Ideas and effects with regard to personnel
social consequences
  • Personnel
  • More mechanical measures (reducing the number,
    pays reduction, flexibilisation, private sector
    managers engagement, greater autonomy of public
    managers with regard to remuneration, payment and
    career system, etc.)
  • Human potentials development (education,
    in-service training, organisational culture
    building, ethics, orientation towards results and
    citizens needs)
  • Problems instability, insecurity, organisations
    as psychic prisons, unsuccessful organisations,
    consumerism, etc.
  • Social consequences
  • Reinvigorating capitalism (state failure)
  • Crisis of welfare state poverty and lower level
    of social services, unemployment rate is
    increasing
  • Democratic deficit weakening democratic
    legitimacy of the state
  • Anomy (crime, social conflicts, disregarding
    legal regulations)
  • Positive effects?

13
Good Governance
  • NPM criticisms during the 1990s followed by
    building new set of ideas at a bit different
    value base
  • The role of international organisations OUN
    OECD EU
  • Still under construction and stabilisation
  • European Governance A White Paper (Brussels COM
    (2001) 428) (governance based on proportionality
    and subsidiarity) fundamental principles
  • Openness
  • Participation
  • Accountability
  • Effectiveness
  • Coherence
  • The stress is on the role of the citizens, civil
    society, and local self-government
  • UNDP combination of efficient and democratic
    governance
  • OECD Citizens as Partners Information,
    Consultation and Public Participation in
    Policy-Making, 2001
  • Increasing administrative and policy capacities
    legitimacy strengthening

14
The European Administrative Space
  • Set of principles and standards of public
    administration organisation and functioning
    defined by law, whose application is supported by
    the appropriate procedures and accountability
    mechanisms
  • Macro perspective (EU uniform implementation of
    the law, the Council of Europe, the main European
    traditions and models)
  • Micro perspective (administrative fields, issues,
    processes, actors, institutions )
  • Space in rising and development (different
    components in different developmental phases)
  • The role of the courts, EU policies, regulatory
    bodies functioning, mutual - experiential
    learning, doctrines, administrative education,
    imitation, interaction

15
The main principles of the EAS
  1. The rule of law (legal certainty, reliability and
    predictability of administrative actions and
    decisions, legality)
  2. Openness and transparency
  3. Accountability of PA to other administrative,
    legislative and judicial authorities
  4. Efficiency in the use of public resources and
    effectiveness in accomplishing policy goals

16
EU Accession
  • Complex and hard task
  • Political dedication and administrative capacity
  • Harmonisation with the acquis communautaire
    (legal adaptations)
  • PA capacity to support negotiations, to acquire
    the European administrative standards, to design
    and implement new European-inspired public
    policies, and to implement the acquis
    communautaire and new, changed domestic
    legislation
  • Although administrative standards are not part of
    the formal acquis communautaire, EC has
    possibility to monitor, ask for change, look into
    AC implementation, etc.
  • Good administration as a general criterion for EU
    accession
  • The SIGMA role assessments are the basis for EC
    Progress Reports, designing ToR of the TA
    projects financed by EC, support to
    administrative modernisation, etc.

17
European administrative standards
  • Codification of standards, mainly by SIGMA
  • Standards with regard to
  • Constitutions (6)
  • Civil Service legislation (8)
  • Administrative Procedures legislation (10)
  • Public sector financial control (9)
  • External audit (4)
  • Budget and public expenditure management (13)
  • Policy-making and coordination at the centre of
    the government (9) (systematisation according to
    Cardona)
  • CS legislation paper no. 5 Civil Service
    Legislation Contents Checklist paper no. 14
    Civil Service Legislation Checklist on Secondary
    Legislation and Other Regulatory Instruments

18
Harmonisation of local self-government The
Council of Europe EU
  • The European Charter of Local Self-Government of
    1985 (the German model influence)
  • Other legal documents (on transfrontier
    co-operation 1980, Urban Charter 1992/2004, on
    the participation of foreigners in public life at
    local level 1992, draft Charter of Regional
    Self-Government, etc.)
  • EU, regionalism and regional policy
  • NUTS classification (Nomenclature des Unites
    Territoriales Statistiques) (5 categories
    regions as NUTS II. units)
  • Committee of the Regions (opinions and
    resolutions)

19
Convergence or divergence?
  • The European local self-government traditions and
    models
  • The French centralised model
  • The German model (federation, subsidiarity
    principle, detailed regulation of local
    self-government scope)
  • The British model (unwritten constitution,
    sovereignty of the Parliament, ultra vires legal
    doctrine)
  • The Scandinavian model of political
    decentralisation with bigger local units
  • Europeanization, harmonisation, learning
    convergence
  • ??
  • Tradition and cultural diversity divergence

20
Services of general interest
  • Former public services liberalisation on
    separate markets, privatisation of former state
    monopolies quality concerns
  • Services of general interest
  • Services of general economic interest
  • Network industries (telecommunications,
    electricity, gas, transport and postal services
  • Other SGEI (waste management, water supply, etc.)
  • Other (non-economic) services (social, health)
  • Public sector obligations (universal service,
    continuity, affordable prices - affordability,
    quality of service, user and consumer protection)
  • Sectoral policies development (energy, electronic
    communications, transport, postal sectors,
    audiovisual policy, water and waste management,
    sport, culture, etc)
  • Designing coherent policy and legal framework for
    social and health SGI
  • Directive 2006/123/EC (the Services Directive)
    MSs have to transpose it by the end of 2009
  • The most dynamic and challenging sector

21
Europeanization of the Republic of Croatia
  1. Croatia as a late-comer
  2. Formal and substantial Europeanization
  3. Membership in the Council of Europe (1996)
  4. Stabilization and Association Agreement (2001)
  5. EU candidate status (2004)
  6. Negotiation process
  7. Administrative education

22
State administration development
  • I. 1990-1993 Establishment phase
  • Semi-presidential system
  • Considerable new parts of state administration
    (new ministries, etc.)
  • War
  • Politicisation poor professional standards
    hidden lustration
  • II. 1993-2001 Consolidation phase (war till
    1995)
  • Etatisation and centralisation
  • A number of poor reorganisations
  • Very slow democratisation
  • First Law on State Civil Servants in 1994
  • III. 2001-2008 Europeanisation phase
  • First political change after 1990 (coalition
    Government) parliamentary system
  • Democratisation, decentralisation, attempts to
    raise professionalism (second Law on State Civil
    Servants in 2001 third one in 2005)
  • Stabilization and Association Agreement (2001)
    candidate status in 2004 accession negotiations
    institutional capacity building functional
    review etc.
  • IV. 2008 Modernisation phase?
  • The State Administration Reform Strategy

23
State administration
  • Central state administration
  • Ministries (15)
  • State administrative organisations (9)
  • Central state offices (4)
  • First instance state administration
  • Offices of state administration at the county
    level (20)
  • Offices of the City of Zagreb (4) transferred
    state administrative tasks
  • Government ( Secretariat certain other bodies
    Governments Professional Service, Governments
    Office)
  • State servants and employees
  • ICT implementation Functional Review Project
    preparation of the new law on general
    administrative procedure and law on
    administrative justice system, new system of
    human potentials development and management
    organisational adaptations, etc.
  • Agencies, independent regulatory bodies, other
    public bodies and legal entities with public
    competences

24
Local self-government system
  • Local self-government municipalities (429)
    towns (126 15 large towns with more than 35.000
    inhabitants) territorial self-government below
    municipal level (municipal and urban districts,
    city quarters)
  • Regional self-government counties (20 about
    200.000 inhabitants in average)
  • City of Zagreb (capital, the largest city, double
    status as local and regional unit, performs
    transferred state administrative tasks)
  • Fully separated from the state administration
    system with regard to organisation and personnel
  • Searching for a new legitimacy introduction of
    direct election of mayors (elections in May 2009)

25
State administration reform strategy
  • Adopted by the Croatian Government in March 2008
    as part of EU accession efforts (www.uprava.hr)
  • Structure
  • Executive summary
  • State administration we want (Vision and goals of
    modern administration)
  • The main results in the reform of political
    system and state administration
  • The main areas and directions of state
    administration reform
  • Implementation of strategic measures
  • Leadership, monitoring and evaluation of results

26
State administration reform strategy - goals
  • Increasing efficiency and economy in state
    administration system
  • Raising the quality of administrative services
  • Openness and access to state administrative
    organisations
  • The rule of law
  • Increasing social sensitivity inside state
    administration and in relations with citizens
  • Rising ethical level and reducing corruption
  • Modern ICT implementation
  • Joining the European Administrative Space
  • accompanied by 29 indicators

27
State administration reform strategy main areas
and directions
  1. Structural adaptations of state administration
    system from structure to good governance (3
    directions 13 activities)
  2. Increasing quality of programmes, laws and other
    regulations better regulation (4 directions 14
    activities)
  3. System of state servants modern civil service (4
    directions 10 activities)
  4. Education and in-service training of state
    administration knowledge, skills and
    competencies (2 directions 8 activities)
  5. Simplification and modernisation of
    administrative procedures e-administration (2
    directions 17 activities)

28
Other strategic documents
  • Strategic Development Framework for 2006-2013
  • - Previous efforts 55 recommendations for
    improving national competitiveness of Croatia
  • Decentralisation strategy under preparation
    failure?
  • - Previous efforts Decentralisation of Public
    Administration (2000-2003)
  • Lack of overall strategic document with regard
    to services of general interest
  • - Sectoral documents (for example, Strategy for
    Development of Communal Utilities)

29
Implementation, management and monitoring PAR
  1. Implementation Central State Office for
    Administration
  2. Management Government and CSOA vice prime
    minister for public administration reforms
  3. Monitoring National council for monitoring and
    evaluation established in the Autumn of 2008
  4. Policy making Government (formally) CSOA
    (???) domestic and international experts (???)
    business community (???)

30
Central State Office for Administration
  • Established in 2004, as one of four central state
    offices as special tool for increasing managing
    and coordinating capacity of the prime minister
    (responsible to PM)
  • History Ministry of Administration State
    Directorate for State Administration and Local
    Self-Government
  • Increasing capacity from 66 to about 140
    employees
  • Vague role design (legal regulations)
  • Organisational gaps and possible improvements
  • Lacking human potentials and low professional
    level
  • Moderate political, administrative and public
    support
  • Facing reorganisation according to the results of
    FR?

31
Main challenges
  • Political support Croatian Parliament
  • Administrative support changing position in
    administrative system
  • Public support communication strategy and
    activities
  • Strategy development
  • CSOA internal organisational development
  • National council establishment
  • Capacity development education, training,
    recruitment
  • Financial support lack of support from the
    Ministry of Finance

32
Lessons learned
  • PAR as part of the Europeanisation process is not
    the best solution for domestic problems
    (Europeanisation is only one of the environmental
    influences EU is one of broader institutional
    frameworks, not the only one)
  • PAR should be in line with previously discussed
    and adopted basic national goals otherwise it
    could be unsuccessful or counter-productive
  • Three main parts of PA (state administration
    local and regional self-government public
    services) need different reform approaches
  • Strong administrative body needed (Ministry of
    Public Administration, probably with vice PM as a
    minister)
  • Laws could foster or freeze reform efforts, but
    cannot replace real will to make PA modern and
    better
  • Policy orientation should be developed
  • Education and training should be more intensive
    capacity building
  • State administration system, structural,
    personnel, human resource, financial etc.
    measures needed

33
Institutional challenges
  • Good institutional structure is a necessary
    prerequisite for successful reform, but other
    prerequisites are needed and are of equal
    importance (political will and support strategic
    planning and policy making educated and informed
    civil servants extra-organisational expertise
    financial support reform dedication, etc.)
    institutions do matter
  • Inappropriate institutions (weak institutions or
    inappropriate networks of institutions ) impede
    positive impacts of other favourable conditions
  • Institutions should be adapted to the specific
    circumstances of a country (culture, external
    conditions, basic states goals )
  • Certain regularities are generally recognizable
    and could be used for learning and suggesting
    proposals
  • Significance of good and bad examples in similar
    and different conditions experiential learning

34
Good and bad Croatian examples
  • Good examples
  • Cooperation between academic community and CSOA
    in the Strategy preparation, education, reform
    monitoring and evaluation
  • TA projects with participation of pro-reform
    domestic experts as key experts
  • Strong politicians as reform leaders
  • Bad examples
  • Attempts to prepare the strategy and realise
    certain reform measures with teams consisting
    exclusively of academics, or CSOA servants, or
    foreign experts (similar in acquiring acquis
    communautaire)
  • Weak lines of CSOA state secretarys political
    accountability to the PM
  • Informally politicised networks
  • Too broad networks of politically selected
    experts for EU accession negotiations

35
Administrative education
  • Development trends in Europe
  • Creation of a comprehensive administrative
    education system with vertical mobility (323)
  • Diversification of administrative education
    programmes, along with consolidation of general
    administrative programme
  • More attention to practice
  • Impregnation by dominant doctrines
  • More multidisciplinary and interdisciplinary-orien
    ted programmes
  • Croatian situation
  • Bologna process since 2005
  • Binary model of high education (polytechnics and
    universities)
  • Administrative education at polytechnics (BA
    degrees)
  • MA degree missing
  • Postgraduate studies specialist and doctoral
    programmes
  • Predominantly legal or managerial orientation
  • Unsatisfied specialisation of specialist
    programmes

36
Thank you!
  • Professor Ivan Kopric
  • Faculty of Law, University of Zagreb
  • Mailto ikopric_at_pravo.hr
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com