Title: THE NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
1(No Transcript)
2(No Transcript)
3(No Transcript)
4THE NEW PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
5Values of the New Public Management
6The New Public Management
- the motivation for change
- the (abstract) solution
- specific proposals for change from traditional
public administration - values
- management practices
7The New Public Management (Borins) Management
Practices
- providing high-quality services that citizens
value - adoption of private sector concepts of customer
service - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - focus on outcomes not process
- performance indicators/benchmarking
- measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets - open-minded attitude about which public purposes
should be performed by the private sector - focus on core businesses
- privatization
- steering not rowing
- alternative service delivery
- appreciating the virtues of competition
8The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality
9Treasury Board. Results for Canadians A
Management Framework for the Government of
Canada. 2000.
10(No Transcript)
11Institute of Public Administration of Canada
12The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls)
13The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management
14(No Transcript)
15(No Transcript)
16The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management - measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets
17The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management - measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets - less effective emphasis esp. on performance
targets
18Institute of Public Administration of Canada
19(No Transcript)
20(No Transcript)
21(No Transcript)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25(No Transcript)
26The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management - measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets - less effective emphasis esp. on performance
targets - open-minded attitude about which public purposes
should be performed by the private sector
27The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management - measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets - less effective emphasis esp. on performance
targets - open-minded attitude about which public purposes
should be performed by the private sector - the role of government can vary from leader, to
catalyst, to partner
28The New Public Management The Canadian Model
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - providing high-quality services that citizens
value - focus on citizen-centred service, service
standards, and service quality - increasing the autonomy of public managers
(especially from central agency controls) - emphasized in terms of financial and
adminsitrative controls less success in terms of
human resource management - measuring and rewarding organizations and
individuals on whether they meet performance
targets - less effective emphasis esp. on performance
targets - open-minded attitude about which public purposes
should be performed by the private sector - the role of government can vary from leader, to
catalyst, to partner - less emphasis on privatization more emphasis on
alternative service delivery
29Alternative Service Delivery
Minor Change
Radical Change
User Fees
Co-location
Special Operating Agencies
Partnerships
Privatization
Single Window Delivery
New Technologies
Contracting Out
Devolution
30Alternative Service Delivery
Minor Change
Radical Change
User Fees
Co-location
Special Operating Agencies
Partnerships
Privatization
Single Window Delivery
New Technologies
Contracting Out
Devolution
31IPAC Award for Innovative Managment
- 2006 Sharing Governance Citizens, Partners,
Networks - 2002 Outside-In Changing Government to Meet
Client Needs - 1999 Measurement and Recognition
- 1992 Partnership Mangement
32The New Public Management The Canadian Model
(Summary)
- distinguishing features pragmatic/practical and
non-ideological - application of the model in Canada has been
limited
33MidTerm Exam Grades
Q1 Q2 Q3 Q4 Q5 Q6 Exam
Highest 100 100 (x2) 90 (x2) 100 100 (x2) 100 97
gt90 10 16 11 21 20 15 12
gt80 20 32 17 37.5 33.3 48.4 22
Avg. 69.7 71.3 68.1 73.7 68.9 76.5 71.0
34The New Public Management
- basic description
- NPM and the context of the Sponsorship Scandal
- NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
35The Context -- New Public Management
- ...there are those who will say that the
adoption of new public management principles,
with their emphasis on service delivery,
increased autonomy of public managers from
central controls. rewarding individuals for
performance, and cutting public programs and
public servants, significantly contributed to the
grants and contributions crisis. David A.
Good, The Politics of Public Management
36The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program
37The Context -- New Public Management
- One expert attribute the Sponsorship scanadal to
excesses caused by what he called a private
business culture or entrepreneurialism in the
public service. This attitude has replaced a
public business standards based on the public
interest. In the Sponsorship Program, acccording
to this theory, the Prime Minister and the
Cabinet, with the best of intentions, encouraged
the entrepreneurialism of certain public
servants, who in turn stopped working for and by
the rules of their department and cultviate
relationships with private-sector sponsorship
companies using a different set of rules and
standards. Gomery Report, Recommendations,
46.
38The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program - lax attitude towards process
39The Context -- New Public Management
- One legal expert spoke of the Government
advertising program as having no rules or
dierction, suggesting that a shift to a
rule-of-law culture would shelter advertising
programs from corruption. Such a culture would
shift the balance towards public servants
loyalty to the rules of the public service rather
than to the wishes of their political
superiors. Gomery Report, Recommendations,
46.
40The Context -- New Public Management
- The management culture has changed dramatically
over the past 20 years from solid record-keeping,
accountability and dedication to the public
service and loyalty according to our oath of
office to Canada, to avoidance of record-keeping
and accountability, and dedication of loyalty to
the individuals who appointed you and can promote
you. Former Public Servant quoted in Gomery
Report, Recommendations, 35.
41The Context -- New Public Management
- ...the preoccupation with policy and the
resulting lack of emphasis on management had
permitted the quality of departmental management
to fall short of acceptable standards. Gome
ry Report, Recommendations, 35.
42The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program - lax attitude towards process
- the emphasis on results
43The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program - lax attitude towards process
- the emphasis on results
- Mr. Chretiens defence of the program
44The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program - lax attitude towards process
- the emphasis on results
- Mr. Chretiens defence of the program
- By the year of 2003, support for Canada in
Quebec had increased substantially from where it
was in the immediate aftermath of the Referendum.
In the fall of 2003, 65 percent of Quebecers
were satisfied with their federal government.
45The Context -- New Public Management
- the degree of reliance on private enterprise in
the Sponsorship program - lax attitude towards process
- the emphasis on results
- Mr. Chretiens defence of the program
- By the year of 2003, support for Canada in
Quebec had increased substantially from where it
was in the immediate aftermath of the Referendum.
In the fall of 2003, 65 percent of Quebecers
were satisfied with their federal government. - indicative of general problems with performance
reporting - reporting problems
- attributing causation
46The New Public Management
- basic description
- NPM and the context of the Sponsorship Scandal
- NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
47(No Transcript)
48Values of the New Public Management
49Context in which Change is/was Taking Place...
- globalization
- budgetary deficit
- information technology revolution
- less deferential public
- more aggressive media
50Some Thoughts on the Context
- When a culture of forbearance and forgiveness
descends on Washington, please alert the FBI at
once. It is evidence that someone has kidnapped
or anaesthetized the entire legislative and
judicial branches. James Q. Wilson - Theres a new emphasis in the federal government
to encourage risk-taking among its employees.
But the reality remains that when mistakes are
made the individual is hoisted up the
flagpole. News report of TBS Study
51OBSTACLES TO REFORMThe Control Lobby
- who are they?
- opposition parties in Parliament
- The Auditor General
- the media
- link
- doubts about the adequacy of rules regulating
bureaucratic behavior - motives
- benign
- cynical
52REFORM VS. THE CONTROL LOBBY A Chronology
- the Glassco Commission (1960-1963)
- Refitting Bonaventure
- the Lambert Commission (1979)
- the McGrath Report (1985)
- PS2000 (1989)
- the Al-Mashat Affair (1991)
- the New Public Management (1992...)
- the HRDC Billion Dollar Boondoggle
- the Sponsorship Scandal
53Control Lobby Demands
- calls for greater personal bureaucratic
accountability
54Calls for Greater Bureaucratic Accountability
- ministerial answerability
- lack of appropriate penalties
- artificiality of ministerial answerability
- tenure of ministers
- scope of ministerial knowledge/competence
- reactive (rather than proactive)
- example of HRDC scandal
55Calls for Greater Bureaucratic Accountability
- the myth and practice of ministerial
responsibility - the problems of ministerial answerability
- towards greater personal bureaucratic
accountability
56Calls for Greater Bureaucratic Accountability
- the myth and practice of ministerial
responsibility - the problems of ministerial answerability
- towards greater personal bureaucratic
accountability - Freedom of Information
57Calls for Greater Bureaucratic Accountability
- the myth and practice of ministerial
responsibility - the problems of ministerial answerability
- towards greater personal bureaucratic
accountability - Freedom of Information
- bureaucratic accountability to parliamentary
committees
58Control Lobby Demands
- calls for greater personal bureaucratic
accountability - calls for tighter controls on bureaucracy and
stricter program rules
59Effects of Control Lobby Pressure
- centralization over decentralization
- flexibility becomes a risk
- risk for political officials
- risk for bureaucratic officials
- alternative service delivery poses risk
- contracts, partnerships
- risk-taking is strongly discouraged
60- In the private sector, it does not matter much
if you get it wrong 30 percent of the time so
long as you can turn a profit at the end of the
year and the bottom line remains healthy. In the
public sector it does not matter much if you get
it right 95 percent of the time because the focus
will be on the 5 percent of the time you get it
wrong. - Donald Savoie,
- Governing from the Centre (199954)
61Effects of Control Lobby Demands
- centralization over decentralization
- flexibility becomes a political risk
- alternative service delivery poses risk
- contracts, partnerships
- risk-taking is strongly discouraged
- process accountability favoured over
results-based accountability
62The New Public Management
63The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
64(No Transcript)
65The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
- no need for new central controls
- ...more red tape and more regulations than exist
at present should not be recommended. - re new internal audit approach and establishment
of CFOs in departments - ...they could also add more red tape to
government and have but limited impact on the
political and adminstrative culture. (26)
66The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
- no need for new central controls
- greater accountability for existing rules
- Managers must continue to have the resonsibility
for managing, but they should be more accountable
for the use of thier power. (10) - They must know that they will be held
accountable for any deficiency in their
stewardship of the public purse. (11) - The knowledge that ones errors and misdeeds
will be found out and exposed is a powerful
encouragement to better performance and
behaviour. (117)
67The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
- no need for new central controls
- greater accountability for existing rules
- strengthen the Public Accounts Committee
- make DMs directly accountable to PAC for
management
68The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
- no need for new central controls
- greater accountability for existing rules
- culture change
69The NPM and the Gomery Recommendations
- ...a change in administrative culture is needed
to ensure that management in the Government of
Canada reaches acceptable standards. ... Fr
the culture of the public service to change so
that regularity, propriety, and good management
in general are given a higher priority, the
public service, and particularly those who are
its administrative heads, must give management
skills a higher priority. ... The solution
remains...to persuade the managers to focus on
good management. Gomery Report,
Recommendations, 106-7.
70CONCLUSIONSThe Virtues of Bureaucracy vs. The
Need for Reform
- valuing the virtues of bureaucracy
- impartiality/accountability
- can be misconstrued as red tape and inefficiency
- the vicious cycle of bureaucratic distrust
71The Virtues of Bureaucracy vs. The Need for Reform
- valuing the virtues of bureaucracy
- need to temper public expectations regarding
bureaucratic performance - the need for reform
- need to temper public expectations about
accountability and raise public tolerance of risk - Where to start?
- Big answers to management constraints in
government departments will not be possible until
Parliament and the control lobby first change
their ways. - Donald Savoie, 1999