Working with the Grain for Reforming the Public Service : A Live Example from Sierra Leone
Keywords
PUBLIC SECTOR GOVERNANCEDECENTRALIZATION
DELIVERY OF SERVICES
BUDGET SUPPORT
RESOURCE ALLOCATION
DONOR ASSISTANCE
PUBLIC SECTOR SPECIALIST
PUBLIC SERVICE
CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS
PERFORMANCE MANAGEMENT
INCOME
ETHNIC GROUPS
POLITICAL COMPETITION
REFORM AGENDA
HEALTH SECTOR
SERVICE DELIVERY
PRIVATE SECTOR
PERFORMANCE OF GOVERNMENT
POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
INTERNAL AUDITORS
ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS
CONSOLIDATION
LACK OF COORDINATION
HUMAN RESOURCE
VESTED INTERESTS
PERFORMANCE APPRAISAL
GOVERNMENT PERFORMANCE
PROVISION OF SERVICES
BENEFICIARIES
CIVIL SERVICE REFORM
BEST PRACTICE
ECONOMIC GROWTH
HEALTH WORKERS
PUBLIC SECTOR
DECISION-MAKING PROCESS
MISTRUST
PUBLIC SECTOR REFORM
PATRONAGE
AUDITORS
CORRUPTION
CIVIL WAR
REFORM PLAN
MDAS
BUDGET PROPOSALS
CONFIDENCE
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
MINISTERS
GOVERNMENT FINANCE
CORPORATE INCOME TAX
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW
DEMOCRACIES
GOVERNMENT EFFECTIVENESS
DEMOCRACY
PRIVATE GOODS
PRODUCTIVITY
STRATEGIC PLANS
PUBLIC GOODS
CIVIL SERVICE
INITIATIVE
DECISION-MAKING
SUB-NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
BEST PRACTICES
POLITICAL COMMITMENT
RULING PARTY
PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
INFORMATION FLOWS
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
PROGRAMS
MARKETABLE SKILLS
SERVICE EMPLOYMENT
INFORMATION ASYMMETRIES
FISCAL CONSTRAINTS
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
PUBLIC POLICY
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
TAX REVENUES
GOVERNANCE REFORMS
REFORM APPROACHES
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
PUBLIC INTEREST
CAPACITY BUILDING
PUBLIC SERVICE MANAGEMENT
APPOINTEES
REFORM PROCESS
PUBLIC SECTOR PERFORMANCE
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
POOR PERFORMANCE
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
PERFORMANCE CONTRACTS
REFORM EFFORTS
RESOURCE ALLOCATION DECISIONS
PERSONAL GAIN
CIVIL SERVANTS
POLITICAL ECONOMY
LOCAL COUNCILS
MINISTER
POLITICIANS
LEADERSHIP
PUBLIC SERVICE ETHIC
INTEGRITY
RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
POVERTY REDUCTION
ACCOUNTABILITY
FOREIGN AID
CAPACITY CONSTRAINTS
PUBLIC SERVICES
PUBLIC RESOURCES
INTEREST GROUPS
SANITATION
PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT
LOCAL GOVERNMENT FINANCE
COLLECTIVE ACTION
CITIZENS
BUREAUCRACY
FINANCIAL SECTOR
REFORM OBJECTIVES
REFORM STRATEGIES
HEALTH CARE
POLITICIAN
PERFORMANCE CONTRACTING
DISCRETIONARY POWER
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
UNINTENDED CONSEQUENCES
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
REFORM PROGRAM
POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11993Abstract
Development practitioners still lack a critical mass of empirical evidence which can help identify the set of interventions that are more likely to work, and inform the design and implementation of feasible reforms. This paper contributes to fill this gap by looking at the case of the 'Sierra Leone Pay and Performance Project', a World Bank-supported initiative to reform the civil service. It analyzes the functional problems characterizing the civil service and discusses what factors account for the observed dysfunctions. The central argument is that the current dysfunctions might be difficult to reverse as they define a sub-optimal equilibrium which serves political purposes (dysfunctions by design). However, politics is not all that matters. This equilibrium is further reinforced by systemic dysfunctions that may not be the consequence of any strategic design or the outcome of elite preferences (dysfunctions by default). This is where there is scope for change, even in the short run. The authors conclude that the chances of successful civil service reforms are likely to be maximized if reform initiatives support modest and incremental changes that work with the grain of existing incentives and are consistent with government preferences. The Sierra Leone Pay and Performance Project aims to do so by adopting a limited and targeted focus on pay reform, performance management and recruitment and staffing. In addition, the use of the results-based lending instrument is expected to help mitigate the current dysfunctions by aligning the incentives of the various players and, in this way, create the conditions for greater coordination across government agencies. Although the suggested approach is not without risks, recent dynamics suggest that the chances of success are greater today than in the past.Date
2012-12-21Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/11993http://hdl.handle.net/10986/11993
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedRelated items
Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.
-
Making Public Sector Reforms Work : Political and Economic Contexts, Incentives, and StrategiesBunse, Simone; Fritz, Verena (World Bank, Washington, DC, 2012-08)Supporting effective public sector reform is a major challenge that the World Bank and other agencies and stakeholders have been grappling with. It is increasingly recognized that political economy factors play a crucial role. However, beyond this broad proposition, specific questions arise: What country contexts are more/less propitious for public sector reforms and what reforms are likely to succeed where? And can more explicitly taking political economy challenges into account help to pursue public sector reforms even in less propitious contexts? This paper addresses these issues in two ways: first, it draws on the existing literature to identify key propositions about factors that can trigger or facilitate public sector reforms, and those that tend to work against (successful) reforms. Second, it investigates the experience of World Bank public sector operations over the decade 2000-2010. It finds that governments in many developing countries face incentives to initiate public sector reforms, but that at the implementation stage, political costs frequently outweigh potential gains; and hence reforms are abandoned or left to wither. Real breakthroughs have been achieved in countries experiencing major structural shifts and those having political leadership committed to higher-level goals. The review of operations shows that successful projects are significantly more widespread than the literature would lead to assume. Furthermore, it provides tentative evidence that investing in understanding political economy drivers has been associated with better project performance. Key implications are the need to differentiate between country contexts more clearly ex ante, concentrate more on reform implementation during windows of opportunity that are typically of limited duration, and design reforms with a clear plan of engagement with stakeholder incentives.
-
Lao PDR - Civil Service Pay and Compensation Review : Attracting and Motivating Civil ServantsWorld Bank (World Bank, 2012-03-19)Lao PDR is at a point on its development
 trajectory where strategic attention to administrative
 performance is crucial. An efficient and high-performing
 civil service, with the compensation and human resource
 management systems to attract and motivate qualified
 personnel, will be essential to Lao PDR's development
 efforts. The ministerial-level Public Administration and
 Civil Service Authority (PACSA) is currently spearheading
 the drafting of a comprehensive new civil service management
 strategy that will be implemented over the period 2010-2020,
 with a number of important reforms to strengthen the civil
 service anticipated to take place within the next five
 years. Key objectives include improvements in human resource
 policies and planning, salary reform, and enhanced
 performance management. In order to present as comprehensive
 a picture as possible of the Lao civil service pay and
 compensation system, and its strengths and challenges, this
 report comprises four chapters. The first characterizes the
 Lao civil service in perspective. The second examines how
 civil servants are compensated. The third assesses whether
 they are compensated adequately. The fourth summarizes civil
 servants own characterization of their incentives in both
 compensation- and non-compensation-related terms. A brief
 conclusion points to a set of principles for civil service
 reform and outlines three sequenced steps toward achieving a
 more rational civil service pay and grading system.
-
Ethiopia Public Sector Reform Approach : Building the Developmental State - A Review and Assessment of the Ethiopian Approach to Public Sector ReformWorld Bank (Washington, DC, 2013-09-25)The objective of this report is to review and recommend improvements to Ethiopia's approach to public sector reform in order to advise the Government and executive institutions on the future of its public sector reform. The report also serves as a think piece for the World Bank, other partners, and policy makers. The report provides important basic information about the features of Ethiopia's public sector reform approach and reviews what worked well and what did not. It draws lessons from other countries' experience to help develop ideas and instruments of future public sector reforms in Ethiopia. Ethiopia's system of decentralization process has been credible in devolving power, improving governance and service delivery well as narrowing the per capital differences among Regional Governments and districts. The second phase of decentralization was 'big bang' and brought some gaps on addressing administrative and fiscal decentralization issues associated with: a) detailed clarity of expenditure and revenue assignments, b) shortage of skilled manpower and lack of incentive in remote areas and inadequate budget for recruitment , c) building local government specific purpose fiscal transfer, d) local government mandate on Public Sector Reform (PSR) and capacity building and e) transfers and f)decentralizing more decision making power to regional states on deciding financial resource for PSR and capacity building implementation. In an effort to link the incentive and pay mechanisms to performance in the civil service, the Ministry of Civil Service (MoCS) has prepared a draft incentive guideline and is waiting for its approval by the Council of Ministers; it is an important step to the way forward. In the future, the guideline has to reflect a systematic and comprehensive incentive and pay reform and performance mechanism and rolled out as it is a prerequisite to the PSR.