Title: Seven perennial design challenges
1Seven perennial design challenges
- Gary J. Reid
- The World Bank
- May 4, 2004
2Seven perennial design challenges
- Big-bang reductions vs. institutional reforms
aimed at improving priority setting and
management - Ensuring adequate planning of the reform effort
- Addressing sources of resistance
- Sequencing
- Targeting reductions
- Facilitating re-entry into the labor force for
retrenched workers - Making severance attractive and cost-effective
3Big-bang reductions vs. institutional reforms
aimed at improving priority setting
- Ensuring that policy objectives of the reform are
met. - Ensuring adequate establishment and wage bill
control (http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/ci
vilservice/establishment.htm ) - Anticipating all fiscal impacts
- Functional reviews (http//www1.worldbank.org/publ
icsector/civilservice/reengineering.htm )
4Big-bang reductions vs. institutional reforms
aimed at improving priority setting
- Ensuring that policy objectives of the reform are
met (cont.) - Reform of the budget process (http//www1.worldban
k.org/publicsector/pe/pem1subthemes.htm ) - Reform of Cabinet decision-making processes
(http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservi
ce/center.htm )
5Big-bang reductions vs. institutional reforms
aimed at improving priority setting
- Ensuring that management objectives of the reform
are met. - Human resource management reform
- Reform of the budget process
- Reform of the Cabinet decision-making process
- Monitoring reform execution and impacts
6Ensuring adequate planning of the reform effort
- Knowing all the legal constraints and
implications - Voluntary vs. involuntary retrenchments
- Conditions that must be satisfied for each
- Required steps for each
- Fiscal obligations by method of retrenchment
- Redress rights
- http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/civilservicelaw.htm and http//www1.worldbank.or
g/publicsector/civilservice/establishment.htm
7Ensuring adequate planning of the reform effort
- Anticipating all fiscal impacts
- Wage bill
- Severance costs
- Pension costs
- Social assistance costs (e.g., unemployment
compensation) - http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/pension.htm
8Addressing sources of resistance
- Designing benefits into retrenchment actions
- Benefits to managers who make staff cuts
- Recognition
- Cash flow reliability
- Enhanced managerial authority
- One-shot budget infusions
- Promise of faring better in the normal budgetary
process - Benefits to staff who are retrenched
- Severance packages
- Redress opportunities
9Addressing sources of resistance
- Designing benefits into retrenchment actions
(cont.) - Benefits to staff who are not retrenched
- More competitive salaries
- Better conditions of public service employment
- Enhanced intrinsic rewards of public service
employment
10Addressing sources of resistance
- Engaging affected staff (e.g., through working
with unions) in the design and implementation of
downsizing efforts (http//www1.worldbank.org/publ
icsector/civilservice/psunions.htm ) - Monitoring and publicizing progress and impacts
(http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservi
ce/agency.htm )
11Sequencing
- Establish effective employment and payroll
controls first in order to avoid backsliding
(e.g., re-entry). (http//www1.worldbank.org/publ
icsector/civilservice/establishment.htm ) - Effective establishment control
- Post authorization
- Hiring authorization
- Effective salary-setting control
- Salary structure, including all components of
remuneration - Individual remuneration decisions
12Sequencing
- Improve salaries only after most retrenchment is
completed - Incentive issues
- Cost issues
- Make easier employment cuts first
- Unfilled vacancies
- Ghosts
- http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/strategies.htm
13Targeting reductions
- By attrition Ease of implementation approach
- Uniform, across the board cuts
Fairness/political feasibility approach - By inducements Buy your reductions approach
- By policy priority Government priority-setting
approach. - By performance Management approach
14Targeting reductions
- Engaging affected staff in the design and
implementation of reduction targeting efforts - Management
- Staff (e.g., public sector unions)
- http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/evaluatingpay.htm
15Facilitating re-entry into the labor force for
retrenched workers
- Cash settlement (up front vs. stream of payments)
- In-kind benefits (health insurance, housing,
etc.) - Re-training
- Job-search assistance
- Helping retrenched staff to set up their own
businesses - Engaging affected staff (e.g., through working
with unions) in the design and implementation of
re-entry assistance programs. - http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/winners.htm
16Making severance attractive and cost-effective
- Credibility of severance promises is important
(cash vs. promises) - Prompt payment of severance benefits
- Cash vs. in-kind benefits
- Engaging affected staff (e.g., through working
with unions) in the design and implementation of
severance packages. - http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/civilservic
e/winners.htm