Part of me understands the groans (sometimes more than
metaphorical!) which meet the term “public
management reform” whenever it comes up in conversation…..
Further Reading
To be continued
I have sometimes wished we could find a better phrase to
do justice to what is, after all, one of the most important issues confronting countries everywhere – namely how we structure and fund the rights
and responsibilities we all have ...in order to help make and keep societies secure.
So this post looks at some of the efforts which have been
made in the last 20 years to find a less brutal approach to public service
management than that represented by New Public
Management…
Just why and
how the British adopted NPM – which then became a global pandemic - is a story
which is usually told in a fatalistic way – as if there were no human agency
involved. One persuasive explanation is given here - as the fatal
combination of Ministerial frustration with civil service “dynamic
conservatism” (as Donald Schoen would put it) with Public Choice economics
offering a seductive explanation for that inertia…. A
politico-organisational problem was redefined as an economic one and, heh
presto, NPM went global
The core
European systems were, however, different – with legal and constitutional
safeguards, Proportional Representation systems and coalition governments –
although the EC technocracy has been chipping away at much of this.
”Good governance” ?
This became a fashionable phrase in the 1990s amongst at
least policy wonks in the World Bank – although it was aimed mainly at
ex-communist and “developing” countries and never really caught on in everyday
conversation. One of the ingredients of the rather formulaic “good governance”
goulash was anti-corruption measures - which I felt were always basic aspects
of sound public management and not a novel add-on….
“Public
Value”?
Mark Moore’s Creating Public Value – strategic management in
Government (1995) demonstrated how the passion and example of
individual leaders could inspire teams and lift the performance and profile of
public services. The decentralisation of American government allowed them that
freedom.
British New Labour, however, chose to go in the opposite
direction and to build on to what was already a tight centralised system a new
quasi-Soviet one of targets and punishment – although this 2002 note, Creating
Public Value – an analytical framework for public service reform, showed
that there were at least some people within
the Cabinet Office pushing for a more flexible approach.
Measuring
Public Value – the competing values approach showed that there was still
life in the idea in the UK – if only amongst academics eg Public
Value Management – a new narrative for networked governance by Gerry Stoker
in 2006.
Sadly
Public
Value; theory and practice ed by John Benington and Mark Moore (2011)
offered no clarion call to a better society, it was full of dreadful
jargon…..Who in his right mind imagines that networked
public governance is going to set the heather alight???
“The
Common Good”?
One of the things which struck me on rereading some of
these references is how academic (apart from Moore’s original book) they are….For
example John Bryson’s work on public strategies constitute the best writing on
the subject eg Leadership
for the Common Good; Crosby and Bryson (2nd edition 2005) but
when I look at the indexes and bibliographies of the material on Public Value,
their names and books don’t appear! This shows utter contempt for the practical
side of things…..
Quite rightly, the title of their latest book Creating
Public Value in Practice – advancing the common good in a ….noone in charge
world; ed J Bryson et al (2015) shows that their contribution is much more
valuable than that of the academics…..
“Communitarianism”?
At one stage, I thought that communitarianism – so
eloquently served by the indefatigable Amatai Etzioni – held an important key……But
I soon realised that it smacked of what Orwell benignly called the sandal-wearers
and others, less kind, would call the Calvin sect……
Before I finish let me bring up the neglected issue
of….Service.
Like Mark Moore, Chris Pollitt’s The Essential Public
Manager (2003) focused on the human aspect of public management
by exploring the core attributes and values of those who used to be called “public
servants”… It’s a pity that more politicians don’t see themselves as
“public servants” – and indeed Pollitt might consider, for the next edition of
the book, replacing the word “manager” with that of “servant”; and adding at
least one chapter to deal with Ministers…. ….????? And “Public Service Reform”
is certainly the better phrase since it removes that offensive word
“management”….and takes me to Robert Greenleaf whose On
Becoming a servant leader (1996) is a book I sometimes turn to for
inspiration.
Greenleaf was
a thoughtful senior manager with corporate giant AT and T who took early
retirement in 1964 to set up a foundation to develop his ideas about leadership
- which had a clear influence on writers such as Stephen
Covey and Peter Senge.
These two management gurus preached/preach in the 90s a softer approach to the
subject – while avoiding the explicit critique evident in the later work of,
for example, Canadian Henry Mintzberg, one of the rare management writers to
break ranks and call big business to
account – in his 2014 pamphlet Rebalancing
Society – radical renewal beyond left, right and center. As early as 1970 Greenleaf wrote an
article which set out the main elements of his approach - The
Servant as Leader (1970). His continuing influence on at least some
management writing can be seen here
In
conclusion
This has been quite a romp – which has taken me longer to
craft than my normal post. But, from my point of view at least, has been very
useful….
“Good government”,
“Public service reform”, “networked public governance”, “public value”,
“communitarianism”, “the Common Good”……what is it to be???? Perhaps I should do a straw poll?
But it has left me with one conclusion….that there are
two significant sets of voices we don’t hear in most of these texts – the
officials who run the services and the citizens who experience them. Last week I
discussed the notion of public service ventures in the shape of cooperatives;
and this is an issue which really does need to be pushed more strongly…….
From
NPM to Public Value (2007) – a useful academic overview
Public
Value and Leadership; 2007 – a mercifully short and clear paper on the
subject
Public
Value; conjecture and refutation (2010) – a good academic overview with an
emphasis on ethical consideration
Appraising
public value; past, present and futures (2011) is an excellent review of
the literature in the first 15 years of the concept’s life
Stocktake
of a concept (2015) – a clear exposition of the development of an idea
Designing
the model of public value management; (2015) How the concept is seen in
Romanian academia
Creating
Public Value in Practice – advancing the common good in a ….noone in charge
world; ed J Bryson et al (2015),
Comparison
of public value frameworks (2016) a good academic assessment