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WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

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Page 1: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK

Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Page 2: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Overview of presentation

• The ‘traditional’ model of reform: a (World Bank) critique

• Commitment as a response to reform failure: developing a model

• Applying the model in Swaziland and Morocco: the primacy of politics

• Building commitment in Swaziland and Morocco: idiosyncratic actions

• Implications for Public Administration Reform

Page 3: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

The ‘traditional’ model of reformProblem? Bad administration

Cause? Ignorance and incapacity

Cure? Injection of knowledge (aka new PA model), with donor

support as the ‘syringe’

Success stories? South Africa, central Europe(?)

Page 4: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

The problem with the ‘traditional’ model: World Bank analysis(Presenting) problem? Bad administration

Cause? Ignorance and incapacity

Cure? Injection of knowledge (aka new PA model), with donor support as the ‘syringe’

Outcome? * Weak, late implementation (40% of WB CSR projects)

* reinventing of the reform wheel

Explanation? ‘Political will’

Remedy? ‘Selectivity’

Page 5: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

The problem with the Bank analysis• What is ‘political will’, and why is it

so often missing?• How will ‘jam tomorrow’

(selectivity) work if ‘jam by lunchtime’ (conditionality) failed?

• Risks disempowering aid agencies in relation to very poor countries

Page 6: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Importance of commitment (aka ‘political will’• Ubiquitous• Associated with development

project outcomes (including PAR)• Entered the mainstream policy

discourse• Led to calls for ‘selectivity’ in aid

allocation

Page 7: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Groping towards a solution: a model of commitment

ANTECEDENTS ELEMENTS OUTCOME

Political capacity - voluntarystrong political base - explicit leadership - challenging Implementation

Administrative capacity - publicunited reform team - irrevocableoverall capacity

Page 8: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Civil service reform in Swaziland

What will generate commitment?

Page 9: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Swaziland (not Switzerland!)• Landlocked, bordered by South Africa

and Mozambique• Fast-growing population of 900,000• 112th out of 174 countries on UN Human

Development Index (in 2000)• Lower middle-income country: stagnant

GDP of $1400• A monoethnic monarchy• Low donor and debt dependency

Page 10: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

The failure of reform

• Swaziland the ‘graveyard of reform’: many reports, little implementation

Page 11: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Other explanations of failure• Money? – reform is cheap,

indebtedness is low

• Implementation? – hasn’t arisen

• Weak capacity? – yes, but interacts with political factors

Page 12: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Extent of commitment

Strong executive (ostensibly) voluntary public

x consensusx explicit and challenging programme x irrevocable action

Page 13: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Understanding commitment• ‘Dualism’ in government – so ‘strong

executive’ is split• Traditional side is pre-eminent• Patron-client relations in land tenure

and in civil service staffing• Consequent resistance to staffing

reform, with its implicit shift from ascriptive to achievement criteria (from ‘who you know’ to ‘what you know’!)

• Reform proposals serve to deflect criticism from the reform lobby

Page 14: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Prospects for reform in Swaziland• Status quo will continue: more stillborn

proposals• Indigenous political pressure will prompt

fundamental political change• Incremental approach: staffing reform

feasible because it is not a fundamental threat

• Restoring the independence of CSB would represent ‘irrevocable action’

Page 15: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Civil service reform in Morocco

What will generate commitment?

Page 16: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Outline of reform

• Multiparty democracy as per 1996 constitution

• Reform team established in Civil Service Ministry

• Good management charter• UNDP support as lead donor (yes!)

Page 17: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Outcome of reform (as of 2002)• Awareness-raising and exhortation• Initiatives taken by individual ministries

(e.g. performance appraisal)• Charter had low profile• Most ministries unaffected by reform• UNDP evaluation:

– the programme ‘seems a little timid to us … concrete results remain some way off’

– termination of support

Page 18: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Commitment in Morocco

• Political base: divided (see below)• Admin capacity: a curate’s egg (good

in parts)voluntarypublicexplicit challenging irrevocable

Page 19: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Understanding commitment• Awareness-raising has been necessary• Structural mistake of putting reform in

legalistic CS ministry• ‘Dualism’ in government: Palace and officials

committed, but nobody wants to jump first• ‘Timidity’ derives from ingrained preference

for: holding the ring; keeping options open; not putting heads above parapets …

• … which derives from national disposition to seek consensus (good!) and passiveness (attentisme – bad!)

Page 20: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Prospects for reform in Morocco• Reframe the problem in political,

not public administration terms• Draft keynote speech for king,

setting up South Africa/UK style ‘royal commission’

• Place commission Secretariat in PM’s office

• Continue awareness-raising and promoting ministry initiatives

Page 21: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Case study implications

• A definition of commitment helps to ‘read the signals’ of – and to predict! – government commitment to reform

• Identifying commitment requires political analysis

• Where commitment is absent, building commitment must take priority over ‘traditional PAR activities

Page 22: WHY REFORM FAILS – AND HOW TO MAKE IT WORK Commitment to public administration reform in Swaziland and Morocco

Summary of presentation

• The ‘traditional’ model of reform: a (World Bank) critique

• Commitment as a response to reform failure: developing a model

• Applying the model in Swaziland and Morocco: the primacy of politics

• Building commitment in Swaziland and Morocco: idiosyncratic actions

• Implications for Public Administration Reform