It’s odd that “Public Bureaucracy” seems to be of so little interest to the
public - since one state alone (eg the UK) can spend no less than 800 billion
pounds a year to give its citizens services….
A
month ago in one of this series of
posts, I actually identified 8 very distinct groups of people (academics,
consultants, think tankers, journalists etc) who write about public services –
from a variety of standpoints - using a variety of styles (or tones) and
formats of writing. We could call them “the commentariat”.
It
has to be said that little of their material is easy to read – it has too much
jargon; it takes 10 pages to say what could be said in 1. Those who write the
material do not write for the general public – they write for one another in
academia and global institutions. On the few occasions they write snappily,
they are generally selling stuff (as consultants) to governments.
The
media do give a lot of coverage to various scandals in particularly the welfare
and health services - but rarely give us an article which sheds any real light
on what is being done with these hundreds of billions of euros….We are treated,
instead, as morons who respond, in Pavlovian style, to slogans.
I
am, of course, being unfair to journalists. They write what they are allowed to
by newspaper and journal editors and owners – who generally have their own
agenda. And who wants to read about the dilemmas of running public services or
arguing about their “functions” being “transferred”? Just looking at these
words makes one’s eyes glaze over!!
It
seems that only journals like “The New Yorker” who can get away with articles
such as The Lie Factory – about the
origins, for example, of the consultancy industry.
And
yet there is clearly a public thirst for well-written material about serious
and difficult topics.
Take
a book I am just finishing - journalist Owen Jones’ The Establishment – and
how they get away with it (Penguin 2014) can boast sales approaching
250,000. For only 9 euros I got one of the best critiques of British society of
the past decade……
I
remember being in New York in 1992 and finding a copy of Reinventing Government (by Osborne
and Ted Graeber) in one of its famous bookstores - which went on to become the
world’s bestseller on government (with the exception perhaps of Machiavelli’s
The Prince?). I simply don’t understand why someone can’t do that again with
all that’s happened in the past 25 years….
In
2015 Penguin Books made an effort in this direction with a couple of titles …..Michael
Barber’s How to Run a Government so
that Citizens Benefit and Taxpayers don’t go Crazy (2015) and The Fourth Revolution –
the global race to reinvent the state; by John Micklethwait and
Adrian Woolridge (2015). The first suffers for me in too obviously
being the special pleading of someone who was Tony Bliar’s Head of Delivery in
the British Cabinet and has now reinvented himself as a "Deliverology" Guru.
And I have avoided the second book for the past 4 years because it was written by managing editors of "The Economist"; spends the first 100 pages looking at how Hobbes, Locke and the Webbs gave us the first three revolutions in thinking about the state; the next 100 at the lessons we should take from California, Singapore and China - with not a single reference in the notes to any of the literature on public administration reform.....But, on the basis that it's better to know your enemy, I succumbed and have now started to read it.......
And I have avoided the second book for the past 4 years because it was written by managing editors of "The Economist"; spends the first 100 pages looking at how Hobbes, Locke and the Webbs gave us the first three revolutions in thinking about the state; the next 100 at the lessons we should take from California, Singapore and China - with not a single reference in the notes to any of the literature on public administration reform.....But, on the basis that it's better to know your enemy, I succumbed and have now started to read it.......
Over
my lifetime, I’ve read/dipped into thousands of books about managing public
services and organisations generally. About a dozen have made a lasting
impression on me – I’ll reveal them in a future post…Let me, for the moment,
continue some of the questions I think we should be asking about the state –
and our public services -
Question
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How has “the commentariat” dealt
with the question?
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Recommended Reading
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6.
Has privatisation lived up to its
hype?
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There
is now quite a strong backlash against the performance of privatised
facilities – particularly in the field of water and communal services – with
the Germans in particular mounting
strong campaigns to return them to public ownership….
A lot
of such services remain monopolies – occupying the worst of all worlds since privatisation
creates “transaction costs” (both in the initial sale process and subsequent
regulatory bodies) and boosts executive salaries and shareholders’ profits –
thereby adding significant additional costs. The only advantage is an
artificial one – in the removal of the investment cap.
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Reclaiming Public
Services; TNI (2017)
Private
Island – why Britain now belongs to someone else; James Meek (2014)
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7.
What are the realistic alternatives to
state and private provision of Public Services?
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A
hundred years ago, a lot of public services (even in the education and health
field) were charitable.
That
changed in the 40s – but the 80s saw the welfare state being challenged
throughout Europe. In the UK, government started to fund social enterprises
working with disadvantaged groups – new Labour strengthened that work.
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The Three Sector Solution;
(2016)
Becoming a Public Service
Mutual (Oxford 2013)
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8.
Where can we find rigorous assessments of how well the “machinery of the state” works?
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The
process of changing the way the British “machinery of government” started in
the 1970s and has been never-ending.
Although
the emphasis during the Conservative
period from 1979-97 was transfer of functions to the private sector, a
lot of regulatory bodies were set up to control what became private
monopolies – in fields such as rail and, in England, water.
And,
in an effort to mimic real markets, the health service was also the subject
of a major division between purchasers and suppliers.
Such
innovations were eagerly marketed by international consultants – and copied
globally
New Labour was
in power between 1997 and 2010. Its Modernising Government programme was
developed with a strong emphasis on sticks and carrots – eg naming and
shaming.
Curiously,
there are far more books describing the intentions and activities of specific
programmes of change than assessments of the actual impact on organisations.
A Government that worked
better and cost Less?; Hood and Dixon (2015) is one of
the few attempts to assess the effects of the British changes of the past 40
years.
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The
two clearest and most exhaustive UK books analysing in detail the reasons for
and the shape and consequences of the large number of change programmes
between 1970 and 2005 were written by someone who was both an academic and
practitioner - Chris
Foster author (with F Plowden) of “The
State Under Stress – can the hollow state be good?” (1996); and British Government in
Crisis (2005)
Transforming British
Government – roles and relationships ed R Rhodes (2000) is a good if
outdated collection
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9.
What Lessons have people drawn from all this experience of changing the way
public services are structured and delivered?
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We
have now almost 50 years of efforts to reform systems of delivering public
services - and the last 20 years has seen a huge and global literature on the
lessons……
Academics
contribute the bulk of the publicly available material on the subject – with
Think Tankers and staff of global institutions (World Bank; OECD; EC) the
rest.
Consultants’
material is private and rarely surfaces – apart from their marketing
stuff.
Michael
Barber was Head of New Labour’s Delivery Unit in the early 2000s and has now
become a “deliverology” consultant to governments around the world. He shares
his advice here - How to Run a Government
so that Citizens Benefit and Taxpayers don’t go Crazy
(2015)
Chris
Pollitt and Rod Rhodes are 2 of the top political scientists studying the
changes in the structure of the state - see Rethinking policy and
politics – reflections on contemporary debates in policy studies). Their basic message seems to be
that a lot of civil servant positions were disposed of; new jargon was
learned; management positions strengthened – but “stuff” (ie crises)
continued to happen!
The Fourth Revolution – the global race
to reinvent the state; John Micklewaithe and Adrian
Woolridge (Penguin 2015) is a rare journalistic entry into the field (to
compare with Toynbee and Walker; and Barber).
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The best short article on the experience must be
What do we know about PM reform? Chris Pollitt (2013)
International Public
Administration Reform by Nick Manning and Neil Parison
(World Bank 2004) had some good case studies of the early wave of efforts.
Two
of the best collections of overviews are - Public and Social
Services in Europe ed Wollman, Kopric and Marcou (2016) AND
The New Public Governance
– emerging perspectives on the theory and practice of public governance; ed
Stephen Osborne (2010)
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10.
Is anyone defending the state
these days?
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We
have become very sceptical these days of writing which strikes too positive a
tone. “Where’s the beef?” our inner voice is always asking – ie what
interests is this writer pushing?
Paul
du Gay is a rare academic who has been prepared over the years to speak up
for the much-maligned “bureaucrat” and his is the opening chapter of a 2003
collection of very useful articles
The
Toynbee and Walker book is another rare defence….this time from journalists
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Dismembered – the ideological
attack on the state; by Polly
Toynbee and D Walker (Guardian Books 2017)
“The Values of Bureaucracy”; ed P du
Gay (2003) - googling the title should give you a complete download)
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