Title: Vilnius, 23-24 May 2006
1Vilnius, 23-24 May 2006
Seminar on civil service performance appraisal
- Performance Appraisal
- and
- Performance-Related Pay (PRP)
- an overview of OECD countries
Julio Nabais, OECD, Sigma
2- Presentation based on
- the report published in 2005 by
- OECD (Public Governance and
- Territorial Development Directorate)
- a presentation made by
- Elsa Pilichowski (OECD/GOV)
3Structure of the presentation
- Performance-related pay in the wider management
context key findings - Major trends in performance-related pay policies
- Implementation difficulties
- Impact of PRP
- Lessons learned
4looking at the last century
- Pressures for changing
- Economic and budgetary difficulties
- Social pressures civil servants v. private
sector workers a question of legitimacy of
civil service - Responsiveness to the citizens accountability /
responsibility preoccupation for results a
question of political legitimacy
5and so
from
to
Service incremental salary scales
PRP
Wide variations of degree
6 1. Performance-related pay in the wider
management context key findings
An overview of the current state of play in
performance management
- Most OECD member countries report having an
extended formal performance appraisal system for
employee - Attempt to link individual objectives and
performance to institutional ones - Continuous extension of PRP policies in the past
decade two thirds of OECD member countries have
to some extent introduced PRP for government
employees - Reasons for the introduction of PRP vary across
countries - PRP goes hand in hand with delegation of
managerial responsibilities
7Relationship between delegation and link between
performance appraisal and pay in OECD member
countries
82. Major trends in PRP policies
Trends in performance appraisal systems a
dialogue rather than a control tool
- Performance appraisals tend to rely more on
dialogue with line management than on strictly
quantifiable indicators - Performance rating systems less standardised,
formalised detailed than ten years ago - Trend towards a 360-degree feedback system
- Quota systems for ratings are becoming more
widespread
92. Major trends in PRP policies (cont)
Performance appraisal criteria for assessing
performance
102. Major trends in PRP policies (cont)
Size and form of performance payments
- The size of performance payments is rather small
- On average
- The maximum for top performers is less than 10
of the base salary at the employee level - The maximum is around 20 of the base salary at
the managerial level - Bonuses are tending to supplement and even
replace merit increments - Bonuses used in France, Italy, Spain and the
United States (SES) - Combination bonuses merit increments in Canada,
Finland, Germany, Korea, New Zealand, Switzerland - Bonuses in general higher than merit increments
113. PRP implementation difficulties
Difficulties linked to performance evaluation
- Difficulty in assessing performance in the public
sector due to the lack of quantifiable indicators
- Objectives tend to be too numerous,
unchallenging, unrealistic, not updated - Difficulty in differentiating the average
performance of government employees - Problems with detailed and highly formalised
performance rating - Resistance from unions, staff and middle
management - Costs often underestimated insufficient funds
- Time work for implementation underestimated
- Lack of preparation from line management
123. Implementation difficulties (cont)
Managerial and contextual problems
The four missing components
Lack of valid performance appraisal process
Lack of dialogue with line management
Lack of managerial delegation
Lack of transparency
134. Impact of PRP Key findings
Motivational incentive
Low impact
PRP
Performance
Positive effects in the right managerial
conditions
Derived effects Organisational and management
changes, new working methods and tools
145. Main lessons learned
The design of PRP is a trade off
- Take into account the background culture of each
individual organisation/country no best
solution - Team/unit PRP systems for employees should
seriously be considered - Associate staff/unions in the design of the PRP
scheme - Size and form of performance payments
Implementation problems need to be well
anticipated
Clear anticipation of the time, cost and work
that the introduction and monitoring of the
system requires
155. Main lessons learned (cont)
The performance appraisal process is at the heart
of the whole system
- It should
- be based on well identified job objectives (small
number, both realistic and challenging) - establish a link between individual and
organisational objectives - be based on a simple performance rating
framework, with no detailed differentiation in
the ratings - be based on dialogue with line management
- be transparent and rely on well established
procedural justice mechanisms - feedback on the appraisal should be well reported
and explained - Be understood in the wider management framework
16meaning that performance appraisal is basically
a process aiming to
- Provide a framework for effective management of
the jobholder - Clarify objectives to be met in accordance to
organisational objectives - Identify the appropriate competencies needed
- Provide feedback between manager and the
jobholder - Help personal development through training and
mobility - Foreseen career path
- Eventually, allows to link performance to pay.
17ACIU !
Thank you