Title: Chapter 9: Human Capital
1 2Human Capital in Government
- Human capital the development of a strategy to
recruit and retain the workers the government
needs and to ensure that they produce strong and
effective government programs. - GAO noted in 2001 that lack of government
attention to human capital was a major problem.
3Challenges to Building Human Capital
- Lack of leaders committed to building human
capital - Lack of strategic human capital planning
- Weakness in acquiring, developing, and retaining
talent - Emphasis on rules and forms instead of results
4Attempts to Build Human Capital
- Federal Office of Personnel Management (OPM),
Office of Management and Budget (OMB), and the
Government Accountability Office (GAO) have
attempted reform. - President George W. Bush made human capital
central to his management agenda. - OPM under President Clinton discarded the Federal
Personnel Manual and a six-feet-long standard
résumé form.
5New Attempts to Alter the Personnel System
- Late 1990s new attempts to make the personnel
system more flexible and to link employee
performance with agency mission - Broadbanding collapses typically large number of
job categories in most government personnel
systems into a far smaller number - Giving flexibility to individual departments
- Experiments with merit pay
6Advantages of Broadbanding
- Flexibility in assigning workers to tasks
- Increased career development
- Ease of linking employee pay to performance
7Disadvantages of Broadbanding
- Downgrading positions without downgrading the
work - Permitting managerial discretion, which could
lead to abuse - More tasks and more stress for workers
- Failure to reward increased productivity
8Flexibilities for Individual Departments
- Congress has allowed some agencies exemptions
from portions of the civil service law. - Flexibility has been granted to the FAA and to
the IRS. - In 2002 the Department of Homeland Security was
awarded some flexibility after President Bush
championed flexibility and freedom. - Largest and broadest-scale waiver of civil
service policy yet granted
9Experiments with Merit Pay
- Texas in 1985 abolished the merit council, and
agencies were given flexibility in hiring and
firing procedures for their employees. - Georgia governor Zell Miller in 1996 abolished
the states merit system and had employees serve
at will. - At-will employment employees have no civil
service protection and could be fired without
benefit of standard civil service procedures. - 2008 GPP survey of state government found Georgia
at the cutting edge of management capacity.
10Experiments with Merit Pay (continued)
- Florida in 2001 made changes to its civil service
system. - All three states have seen success, no widespread
abuse, and no political interference in the
hiring process.
11Leadership Necessary for Reforms
- High performance in public agencies depends on
leadership by top officials. - The government has struggled with how best to
recruit and reward its top leaders.
12Political Leadership
- There are 3,000 political positions in the
executive branch 1,500 of these are at highest
levels. - The United States has a far larger number of
political officials at the top of the bureaucracy
than do other Western democracies. Why?
13Political Leadership (continued)
- Because European countries have more
administrative freedom. - Or because some U.S. presidents bash bureaucracy
and want instead to select their own employees. - Paul Lights recent study the United States has
more layers of leaders and more leaders at each
layer.
14Recruitment of Political Leaders
- Filling these positions is big task for a new
president. - Paul Light it now takes as long, on average, to
get an appointee into office as it does to have a
child. - Many political appointees have suffered from lack
of experience in the federal executive branch and
with no history of extensive management
experience.
15Turnover of Political Leaders
- Turnover refers to political appointees serving
only briefly in their posts - Average service of presidential appointee two
years - Rapid-fire turnover of political appointees
creates many problems
16Problems with Turnover
- Many presidential appointees leave shortly after
adapting to the Washington environment. - Rapid turnover undermines teamwork.
- Staff has weak incentive to obey revolving
superiors. - Staffing the administration never really ends.
- Large exodus occurs during presidents last year
in office.
17Volcker Commission on Political Appointees
- Volcker Commission included fifteen former top
political appointees in 1989 - Recommendation reduce number of presidential
appointees from 3,000 to 2,000 - Recommendation too many appointees serving brief
periods of time may undermine the presidents
ability to govern
18Career Leadership
- Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 created the
Senior Executive Service (SES) to provide career
leadership. - SES absorbed most of the previously GS-16 to
GS-18 career and noncareer positions. - SES consists of about 7,700 employees, mostly
career officials but including 575 presidential
appointees. - SES includes the well-educated with average of
long-term service in government.
19Characteristics of the SES
- Each agency establishes qualification standards
for SES positions. - Each agency is required to establish
performance-appraisal systems. - Problems with SES include rapid turnover of
political appointees, too much specialization,
proliferation of new systems, compression of
performance ratings and pay, and the never-ending
lack of attention to the human capital problem.
20Lack of Leadership at the Top
- Governments big problem is a lack of leadership
at the top of the bureaucracy. - Salaries are inadequate for top federal
officials. - Yet citizens express dismay at the salaries paid
to public officials.