Title: Human Resources Management in Public Administration
1Human Resources Management in Public
Administration
mgr Martyna Julia Wronka Department of
Entrepreneurship and Innovative Management
University of Economics in Katowice
2Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
3- When government has the right people, and the
right system, and the right intentions, many good
things are possible. The trick is knowing which
ones they are. - Alan Ehrenhalt
4A dynamic environment and key principles
- Managers today need to be mindful of several
trends in the government and public
administration environment. These trends are
important because they provide the context in
which decisions are made. The items listed below
highlight significant developments for human
resources management in predictable future.
5Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
6Trends in work environment (1)
- Changing workforce. The workforce is smaller,
greyer and composed more of women then in
previous years. Paradoxically, there is a need
for workers with high-level skills, knowledge,
and ability to meet the call for learning
organizations. - Declining confidence in government. Many opinion
polls in different countries have shown a steady
erosion in confidence and trust to government at
all levels. Rebuilding trust is an important
challenge facing the public sector. - Declining budgets. A combination of tax
limitations measures, budget cuts, and political
pressures to curb the future expenditures has
occurred at all levels of government.
7Trends in work environment (2)
- Downsizing/upsizing. The size of state civilian
workforce is gradually decreasing although early
retirements were the preferred approach rather
than disruptive layoffs. By contrast, the size
of local and regional government has increased. - Emerging virtual workplace/virtual government.
With the introduction of new information
technologies, some tradition 9-5 (7-3) workplaces
with fixed central office locations are being
replaced by innovative organizations with more
flexible arrangements.
8Trends in work environment (3)
- Reforming/reengineering activities. Alternative
approaches to the delivery of goods and services
are being proposed and implemented with
increasing frequency. - Centralization/decentralization of human
resources activities. At state, regional and
local level there occurs relocation of
responsibilities from centralized staff agencies
to line agencies and managers. Administrators at
the operational level now have greater
flexibility and discretion in the acquisition,
development, motivation, and maintenance of human
resources.
9Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
10HRM principles (1)
- Many roles of public service. Stakeholders expect
civil servants to do many different things
(ensure effective government performance,
implement controversial social policies, respond
to political imperatives). - Performance. Human resources management seeks
optimal contribution to an organization by
acquiring, developing, motivating and retaining
people. This requires an understanding of human
relations and what motivates workers.
11HRM principles (2)
- Understanding the basis for a personnel system.
The public workforce is subject to different
personnel systems. Each has its unique basis and
operating limitations. Effective manager
understand their systems basis and find ways to
deal with its limitations. - Alternatives to civil service. Public services
have been delivered by civil service employees
however, alternative mechanism have emerged
(e.g., purchase of service agreements,
privatization, subsidy arrangements and tax
incentives).
12HRM principles (3)
- Rule of law. Personnel systems, processes and
rules are often based on legal requirements. - Public accountability/access. Another
distinguishing feature of human resources
management is that government decisions are
subject to intense public visibility and
inspection. - Values matters. Neutral competence of the public
service has been stressed since the beginning of
the merit system in the late 1800s, but
neutrality (noninvolvement of employees in
political activities) should not suggest that
values of the workers are unrelated.
13A Comparison of Traditional Public Sector Values
With Those Competing For Emphasis (1)
Macrolevel values
- Competition
- Market incentives (organization around mission)
- Continuous improvement
- Changing programs
- Monopoly
- Regulation (organization fort control)
- Reduction vs. Growth
- Adding programs
14A Comparison of Traditional Public Sector Values
With Those Competing For Emphasis (2)
Values about structure
- Centralized
- Supervisor as controller
- Nondemocratic
- Individual work
- Hierarchical organization
- Simple jobs
- Single service
- Decentralized
- Supervisor as helper
- Participative
- Teamwork
- Flat organization
- Multidimensional jobs
- Multiple versions of service
15A Comparison of Traditional Public Sector Values
With Those Competing For Emphasis (3)
Values about work
- Expert focus (internally driven)
- Focus on tradition (status quo)
- Problem analysis
- Mesaurement is feared
- Protective
- Performance
- Inspection and control
- Customer focus (externally driven)
- Focus on innovation (change)
- Seeing possibilities
- Measurement is an opportunity
- Productive
- Ability
- Prevention
16A Comparison of Traditional Public Sector Values
With Those Competing For Emphasis (4)
Values about employees
- System indifference
- Employee as expense
- Manager focus
- Appraisal sanction ranking
- Employee needs
- Employee as asset
- Employee focus
- Development learning recognition
17Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
18Tides of reforms (1)
- Scientific Management
- Here the focus is on hierarchy, microdivision of
labour, specialization and well-defined chains of
command. - This philosophy, usually associated with Frederic
Taylor, is manifest in the bureaucratic
organizational form with its emphasis on
structure, rules and search for the one best
way. - Scientific management has implications for human
resources. In emphasizes conformity and
predictability of employees contributions to the
organization (machine model) and it sees human
relationships as subject to management control.
19Tides of reforms (2)
- War on Waste
- The second tide emphasizes role of auditors,
investigators and inspectors. - The implications of the war on waste for HRM are
plentiful. It can result in increase of detailed
rules, processes, procedures and multiple reviews
that are so characteristic of government
bureaucracy. - Management concerned with controlling waste try
to minimize idle time, avoid bottlenecks, install
time clocks, audit travel vouchers and monitor
attendance and punctuality.
20Tides of reforms (3)
- Watchful Eye
- The third reform emphasizes fairness and
openness. Whistleblowers, the media, interest
groups and the public need access to information
to ensure that rights and the general interests
are protected. - Human resources implications from this philosophy
can be identified as well. Concern about ethical
conduct of employees leads to greater scrutiny in
the hiring process to ensure integrity, as well
as job-related competence of new recruits. It
also minimizes the unlawful use of hiring
criteria such as sex, race, age and handicap
status. - Creating an organizational culture of openness,
transparency, careful record keeping is
consistence with watchful eye philosophy.
21Tides of reforms (4)
- Liberation Management
- The goal of the final tide is higher performance
in government. Buzzwords like evaluation,
outcomes and results are associated with this
tide. - Liberation management also holds implications for
managing people in public administration. - Employee empowerment, reengineering, work teams,
continuous improvement, customer service,
flattened hierarchies reflect breakdown of the
bureaucratic machine model and the move towards
liberation. - Belief in harmonious relation between employees
and management increases the prospects for
productive partnership.
22Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
23NPM
- The beginning of the reforms in public sector was
the eight-decade of the XX century. When the
quality improvement in the private sector was
compared with the unchanging public sector the
claims for the public sector occurred at that
time and the total discontent with the state
management increased.
24NPM
- New public management (NPM), management
techniques and practices are drawn mainly from
the private sector, is increasingly seen as a
global phenomenon. - NPM reforms shift the emphasis from traditional
public administration to public management. - Seeking for the effectiveness of public
institutions activity the importance of human
resources becomes especially evident, because it
is not only the most important resource of public
organizations, but also the most sensitive field.
Therefore when managing it, it is necessary to
bring into play modern prime methods.
25Shifting from a Traditional Public Sector System
to a System for 21st Century
Traditional Public Sector System
Public Service for 21st Century
- Expert focus (internally driven)
- Focus on tradition (status quo)
- Problem analysis
- Mesaurement is feared
- Protective
- Performance
- Inspection and control
- Customer focus (externally driven)
- Focus on innovation (change)
- Seeing possibilities
- Measurement is an opportunity
- Productive
- Ability
- Prevention
26Principal characteristics of NPM
27HRM dilemmas (1)
- The aging of the local civil service, posing the
immediate threat of high turnover and a lack of
qualified replacements - A growing vacuum among the leadership bench
the next generation of policymakers and top civil
servants who will assume critical roles in
directing their governments efforts to negotiate
the troubled waters of the 21st Century - The changing definition of career, which means
that employee loyalty to the organization is weak
at best, and which discourages workers from
joining government service for the long time
28HRM dilemmas (2)
- Rapid change (e.g., in technology and economic
conditions) that requires a highly fluid skill
mix in the workforce - Strong competition from the private sector for
the best and the brightest - Budget limitations that reduce compensation and
financial incentives, thereby placing government
at a disadvantage vis-à-vis business and
industry and - A negative public image (government bashing),
which translates into the widespread perception
that government is no longer the employer of
choice (if it ever was)
29- The aim of HR in the new economy is to enable the
organisation to create value through people,
practices and processes, bearing in mind that
people are the competitive edge of any
organisation. - Within this context the defined role of HR must
be seen as providing Human Resources products,
services and solutions that will enable the
organisation to achieve its set strategic
objectives. - Human Resources practitioners must operate as
people Champions and prove their value to the
organisation.
30- The application of HRM principles within the
public sector displaced the traditional model of
personnel administration. - The adoption of New Public Management (NPM) then
may have opened the possibility of managers
acquiring or developing sophisticated HRM
techniques. Thus, NPM principles allow a more
flexible and responsive approach to questions of
recruitment, selection, retention, training and
development of public sector employees.
31Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
32HRM Reform Trends
33HRM Reform Trends
34HRM Reform Trends
35HRM Reform Trends
36HRM Reform Trends
37NPM
- Of course some experts believe that New Public
Management (NPM) has done as much harm as good,
because - It converts citizens into customers
- It shifts the focus from the collective interest
to user satisfaction - It borrows from private sector management
practices without adapting them to public sector
values and principles
38Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
39Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(1)
- Procedural Changes
- Both simple and more complex procedural
adjustments can improve and expedite recruitment
of public servants. - Most procedural innovations are intended to
simplify and demystify the application process to
prospective workers. In other words, governments
are attempting to make their entry procedures
more user-friendly and transparent. - Other procedural changes are designed to enhance
governments attractiveness to applicants and its
appeal to current employees. - Another restrictive practice is a residency
requirement that obligates workers to live in the
jurisdiction where they are employed.
40Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(2)
- Adopting flexible and appealing hiring procedures
- Government has not always extended a welcoming
and helpful hand to job applicants. Progressive
governments have eliminated procedural barriers
by making the application process more inviting
(i.e., training interviewers to not only evaluate
candidates, but also to market jobs) providing
more hospitable physical settings and offering
flexibility in the dates, times, and locations of
tests and interviews.
41Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(3)
- Screening applicants quickly
- Too often, governments has a well-earned
reputation for asking applicants to carry on long
and tortuous examination procedures. - Validating entry requirements and examinations
- One of the biggest problems in HRM is validating
testing instruments and other pre-entry
requirements. - Job interview
- Group interview
- Assessment centers
42Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(4)
- Instituting worker-friendly personnel policies
- These include the wide use of flexible work
hours flat hierarchies that offer workers more
opportunities to participate in decision-making
telecommuting family-friendly procedures and
good working conditions - Creating more flexible job descriptions
- Narrow job descriptions and restrictive career
ladders discourage potential employees. - Job rotations
- Clear and progressive career ladder
43Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(5)
- Improvements to the Recruitment and Selection
Process - public sector recruitment has a notorious
reputation for being slow, unresponsive,
bureaucratic, and passive - giving operating agencies and managers the
flexibility to handle most HR decision making
accelerates the speed, flexibility, and
responsiveness of recruitment - Job descriptions
- Public announcement of openings
- Terms of appointment
44Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(6)
- Aggressive outreach efforts
- Increasingly, public agencies are using
strategies that have long been exploited by
business and industry. - outreach strategies at job fairs, on college
campuses, in local communities - aggressive advertising in print and electronic
media distribution of marketing and recruitment
material (e.g., brochures) that promote public
service careers - other aggressive efforts to stay in touch with
job applicants during the screening process - using outside search agencies (headhunters) to
recruit high-profile applicants for important
vacancies
45Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(7)
- Current employees as recruiters
- Due to concerns about propriety and the supposed
neutrality of the civil service, public agencies
have only recently involved their own employees
in the search for new talent. The tactic proven
to be most effective is employee referrals in
which current workers are asked to recommend
qualified candidates. - temporary workers
- internships
- mentors
46Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
(8)
- Use of Technology
- a movement from traditional HRM to virtual HRM
- on-line job posting
- paperless application systems
- résumé database
47Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
48 -
- People are assets whose value can be enhanced
through investment - David Walker
49Ten Human Resources Essentials
- Pay attention to employee morale
- Establish and communicate clear ethics standards
and hold managers and employees accountable - Implement a recruitment process that will ensure
hiring the right person - Establish and communicate a solid process for
managing employee performance - Before hiring a new manager, assess their skills
and abilities for the job. Follow up with
orientation and training
50Ten Human Resources Essentials
- Ensure that every new employee has been
sufficiently assimilated and trained - Develop and implement diversity and multicultural
organizational development - Continue employee retention programs
- Ensure that the departments structure is aligned
with overall organizations goals and strategies - Stay ready to manage change
51-
- Excellence is an act won by training and habit
- Aristotele
52What skills are needed to improve quality of
public service?
- Observe, promote and maintain high standards of
professional ethics - Promote efficient, economic and effective use of
resources - Development orientation
- Provide impartial, fair, equitable service
without bias - Respond in time to the needs of the public and
encourage community participation in policy
making
53What skills are needed to improve quality of
public service?
- Be accountable
- Foster transparency by providing timely, and
accurate information - Practice good human resource management and
career development to maximise human potential - Ensure that employment practices are based on the
principles of ability, objectivity, fairness,
equity and are representative of all people
54To sum up
- What the public sector needs more than ever is
its fair share of the best talent in any given
country to respond effectively to evolving
traditional functions of the State, as well as
the challenges of globalization and other social
changes. - Moreover, it is important to underline that
improving human capacity in the public sector
also requires sound public institutions and good
governance.
55To sum up
- In other words, strengthening public sector
capacity requires a holistic approach, which
should begin by rebuilding trust in the public
sector and promoting high-quality leadership. - There are key issues that need to be addressed in
order to promote adequate capacities among public
servants, including
56- Reinforcing human resources planning and
management systems and units - Reinforcing core public service values, such as
- Revaluation of learning, integrity and competence
- Low tolerance for corruption and crime
- Stress on meritocracy
- Growing sensitivity towards and respect for
citizens needs - Fostering a political culture that places
emphasis on the respect for institutions and
norms over personal interest - Promoting professionalism in the public service
- Creating a culture of learning organization
57- Introducing incentive structures, such as
- Fair remuneration system and
- Increasing recognition of the need to acknowledge
and to reward industry, loyalty, accomplishment
and merit - Increasing recognition of the value of
cross-cultural and international links as means
towards the improvement of the professional image
and performance of the public service - Tapping the best talent from underrepresented
groups, including women - Promoting the knowledge and use of ICT tools
58Meeting Agenda
- Introduction
- Trends in work environment
- HRM principles
- Tides of reforms
- New Public Management
- HRM Reform Trends
- Emerging Approaches to Recruitment and Selection
- Summary
- Example from Polish Ground
59Research
- Research was conducted by specialist from Agency
for Economic Development of Municipalities from
UK, NI-CO organisation from Belfast, Wielkopolska
Szkola Biznesu from Poznan and Dolnoslaskie
Centrum Szkolenia Szamorzadowego from Wroclaw
60Research
- 2000 the end of the biggest public
administration project in Poland - part of Proffesional development of Public
Administration Employees - 3 years in partnership with British Fund
Know-How aiming at indentifying key positions
in public sector
61Key positions
- Mayor (burmistrz)
- Organizational Unit Manager (kierownik jednostki
organizacyjnej) - Head of Department (naczelnik/dyrektor wydzialu)
- Inspector/Civil Servant (inspektor/urzednik)
- Department Manager/Administrative Official
(referent/pracownik administracyjny) - Treasurer (skarbnik)
- Secretary (sekretarz)
62Post description
- Tasks
- Responsibilities
- Position in organizational structure
- Functions
- Main job effectiveness indicators
63Personal requirements
- Qualifications
- Skills
- Exeperience
- Knowledge
64Terms of agreement
- Detailed information concerning labour contract
- Comparison to labour contracts in other EU
countries
65Thank you for your attention