Isn't it a long, ong time since there were political appointees in anything but board level in any of these organisations?
All good points but you also have to take into account that in the private sector I have choice. This is not usually the case in the public sector.
Are you suggesting that on a macro level the public/state sector is as efficient as the private sector?
Since the private sector is more exposed to market forces I would think that this is not the case but I am interested in your opinion on the matter.
"similar in effectiveness" Are you joking? I don't believe I have to actually spell this out
Secnario1. I am unhappy with my bank => I move bank => I am not unhappy with new bank => problem solved
Scenario2. I am unhappy with my public service => I vote for FG/whoever => FF are reelected (Bertie is a nice guy or some other reason), nothing changes => I am still unhappy with my public service => problem remains
....
I am open to being persuaded otherwise but in my opinion the lack of management accountability and in turn their lack of real sanction over their subordinates in a major factor in why the public sector under performs. Political interference, lack of incentives and de-motivational work practices also factor. I do not subscribe to the "public/ civil servants are lazy" view; people are people no matter where they work. I blame weak government, weak management and unions that have too much power (unions having too little power is also a bad thing). I do think that the culture of underperformance is changing and management structures are improving but there is still a long way to go. ...
Scenario 3 - I am unhappy with my bank => I move bank => I find my new bank is pretty much the same as my old bank => problem remains."similar in effectiveness" Are you joking? I don't believe I have to actually spell this out
Secnario1. I am unhappy with my bank => I move bank => I am not unhappy with new bank => problem solved
Scenario2. I am unhappy with my public service => I vote for FG/whoever => FF are reelected (Bertie is a nice guy or some other reason), nothing changes => I am still unhappy with my public service => problem remains
I do not subscribe to the "public/ civil servants are lazy" view; people are people no matter where they work. I blame weak government, weak management and unions that have too much power (unions having too little power is also a bad thing).
DTO Board Members may well be appointed directly by the Minister, but the executives responsible for the day-to-day operation are not political appointees. Similarly in the HSE, while Drumm was appointed by the Minister, I'm pretty sure that every one of the other 100,000+ employees are not political appointees. In the case of local authorities, most councillors will tell you that the county manager and the Directors actually run the authority, not the councillors. The last FF/PD government further emasculated the councillors by putting the controversial power to set waste charges in the hands of the County Manager, not the councillors.All the current heads were politically appointed.
DTO people are appointed directly by the Minister for Transport.
Brendan Drumm was politically appointed to HSE - he's not a former civil servant.
Local Authorities are run by councillors.
DTO Board Members may well be appointed directly by the Minister, but the executives responsible for the day-to-day operation are not political appointees. Similarly in the HSE, while Drumm was appointed by the Minister, I'm pretty sure that every one of the other 100,000+ employees are not political appointees. In the case of local authorities, most councillors will tell you that the county manager and the Directors actually run the authority, not the councillors. The last FF/PD government further emasculated the councillors by putting the controversial power to set waste charges in the hands of the County Manager, not the councillors.
You should have done your homework on bank 2 before you gave them your business. However don't despair. Rinse and repeat for bank 3. (except do your homework correctly this time. It's not hard with access to the internet these days)Scenario 3 - I am unhappy with my bank => I move bank => I find my new bank is pretty much the same as my old bank => problem remains.
Good point.I think it would be more useful to look at why some Public services are better than others, rather then unrelated comparisons between public/private sectors.
There seams to be a bit of a paradox here. You say that 'people are people no matter where they work' and yet you attribute a broad set of personal weaknesses (weak management, unions exercising too much power) to one group of people for no apparent reason other than some anecdotal experiences.
You're talking rubbish, certainly in the case of local authorities. I've sat on local authority interview boards, and there is absolutely no political angle. Interview boards will include people from outside organisations, who have no vested interest, and just pick the best person for the job.Hiring in these organisations is generally done directly rather that via the Civil Service Commission and using less strict recruitment methods than the Commission. The result is that a lot of the management and staff are politically connected to the local branch of whatever party was in power when they were hired. People working in these organisations are not barred from political activity, whereas civil servants are. The result is a lot are party members. The clincher for me is that when the HSE was set up, civil servants who's functions were given to the HSE were BANNED from moving with the jobs and civil servants were banned from applying for many of the jobs that were advertised. Why did the HSE do this? Why did they ban non-politicial civil servants from working for them?
Indeed, in theory it may well be possible to pick a better bank. However, most people just dont bother their backsides doing this kind of research. In fact, the vast majority won't bother moving their business at all - they'll just whinge about their existing bank. Inertia is a powerful force. My own experience is that service from many providers is often largely dependant on individual relationships, and when that individual moves on or leaves or gets promoted, the service deteriorates.You should have done your homework on bank 2 before you gave them your business. However don't despair. Rinse and repeat for bank 3. (except do your homework correctly this time. It's not hard with access to the internet these days)
At this stage in the with the voting you would probably be 20 years older and still paying for an inefficient public service
Organisations have a culture and that culture, to a great extent, dictates how the people within that organisation work. Weak management allows an inefficient culture to exist by not penalising bad work and not rewarding good work and unions stop that weak management from changing to a customer focused culture.
...My own experience is that service from many providers is often largely dependant on individual relationships, and when that individual moves on or leaves or gets promoted, the service deteriorates....
That's not rocket science, and senior people in the public sector are well used to the challenges of dealing with public sector culture. These are (for the most part) hardworking, dedicated, committed, smart people - and I don't accept your broad unsupported criticisms.
True, but it adds little and is annoying. It also smacks of moral superiority.Why? You can play devils advocate. No reason you have to give your own opinion.
I've given my views pretty clearly in this post.I get the impression that you are generally happy with the public sector and the value for money that it delivers. Is this correct? Since you do not offer your own views on the subject I have to draw my own conclusions. That's the thing about discussion forums; the idea is that you offer your own opinions at the same time and possible as a counter to, other posters opinions.
I've given my views pretty clearly in this post.
I've given my views pretty clearly in this post.
Right, I've re-read that post... I still don't know if you are happy, in a general sense, with the value for money we get from the public service.
True, but it adds little and is annoying. It also smacks of moral superiority.
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