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ASSESSMENT OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION IN TURKEY. INTRODUCTION. Forces of change: Internal: Economic crises Earthquake External IMF, WB commitments EU candidacy Amendments to Constitution. CONTENTS. Overv i ew of the state of publ i c adm i n i strat i on and governance i n turkey
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INTRODUCTION • Forces of change: • Internal: • Economic crises • Earthquake • External • IMF, WB commitments • EU candidacy • Amendments to Constitution
CONTENTS • Overview of the state of public administration and governance in turkey • Needs and challenges in the process of modernization of public administration • Decentralisation of central governance and decision-making • Public service delivery • Human resources in the public sector and leadership • E-government • Enabling environment for private sector and investment
OVERVIEW OF THE STATE OF PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION AND GOVERNANCE IN TURKEY • Public administration in line with the needs of society and internal and external developments • 1982 Constitution • Principles: • Legality Of The Administration • Rule Of Law • Concept Of The Social State • State Intervention In The Economic Field • Secularism • Integrity Of Administration • Judicial Review Through Administrative Courts • Amendments to the Constitution
Administration: • Within the Executive branch, but a separate entity • Operatesin close relation with the Executive and under the supervision of the legislative, executive and judicial branches • Administrative Structure: • 81 provinces • 850 districts • 3215 municipalities • 16 metropolitan municipalities • 35000 villages
Administrative structure: • Central Administration • Central Departments • Provincial Organizations • Autonomous Bodies • Regulatory Bodies • Functionally Decentralized Org. (State Economic Enterprises) • Higher Education Board • Local administration • Special Provincial Administrations • Municipalities • Village Administrations
Central Administration • Central Departments and Provincial Organizations • The Office Of The Prime Minister, the Council Of Ministers, Consultative Agencies • Provincial Organizations; provincial units of the Ministries. • Hierarchical supervision
Autonomous bodies: • Regulatory bodies;private sector driven structure, regulatory policy • Telecommunication Authority, • Energy Market Regulatory Authority, • Board to regulate tobacco and alcoholic beverages, • Board to regulate sugar markets, • Banking Regulation and Supervision Agency • Capital Markets Board of Turkey, • Competition Authority, • Public Tender Authority • Radio Television Supreme Council
State Economic Enterprises • Higher Education Board
Local administration • Administrative tutelage of the central administration • Divided into three main administrative tiers. • Special Provincial Administrations; provide public services deemed necessary on the outlying lands not under the jurisdiction of municipalities • Municipalities • Village Administrations
NEEDS AND CHALLENGES • Transparency • Accountability • Participation • Women Participation • Responsiveness • The role of public sector in economy • Auditing • Centralist tradition and highly bureaucratic culture
Transparency • State secret concept, leakage of information • Achievements: • The Law on the Organization of the Prime Ministry • The amended Civil Code • Right of Information Act • Live broadcast of plenary sessions of the Turkish Grand National Assembly
Accountability • Bureaucratic and administrative supervision; • supervision by the superintendents • administrative tutelage over local administration • Risks in achieving accountability; corruption, bribery, favoritism and nepotism • Tools for providing accountability: • general elections • NGOs, and the media • administrative and financial accountability, the State Supervisory Council • a “total quality” approach • legal accountability; Constitutional Court, the High Court of Appeals, and the Council of State
Participation • Political participation in Turkey usually takes the form of participation in elections and election campaigns; and, individual or collective petitioning to political organizations • The Eighth Five-Year Development Plan; “a participatory and people-based administrative system” • Local Agenda 21 • The Regulation on Environmental Impact Assessment (EIA)
Women participation • Low female participation • Parliament: % 3.8 • Mayors of municipalities: % 0.6 • Provincial assembly members: % 1.4 • Municipal council members: % 1.6
Responsiveness • Complexity and excessive red-tape in administrative procedures • Developments: • The Right to Information Act • Administrative Procedural Act
Role of public sector in economy • Leadership of the public sector since 1930s
Auditing • Ineffectiveness in the system of auditing • Reasons: • system is largely based on compliance audits • emphasis on the formal elements of auditing • results of auditing functions are not disclosed to the public
Centralist tradition and highly bureaucratic culture • Solving local problems through the resources of central government instead of adopting local solutions • Unfairness in revenue sharing between central and local administrations • Weakness of local administrations
DECENTRALISATION OF CENTRAL GOVERNANCE AND DECISION-MAKING • Attitude for annulling this centralist structure • Two draft laws on public administration • Public Administration Basic Law • Draft laws on Municipalities, Metropolitan Municipalities and Special Provincial Administrations (SPA) • Division of tasks; democratic governmental system through introducing good governance principles such as transparency, accountability, participation and responsiveness
New tools for good governance in both central and local governments with the draft laws: • Consultation to related parties such as NGOs, universities and professional organizations for any kind of administrative decision or/and acts • Public administration shall provide all information • Fiscal information shall be issued to public at certain times of the year. • Role of civil societies shall be strengthened • Ombudsmanship at the provincial level is created • Existing neighborhood system will be empowered
PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY • Main criticisms: • Intransparent and unaccountable bidding system • Delay in privatization process • Inadequate interest to allow foreign private companies • Ignored participation • Poor quality of services
Recent developments: • Privatization • A new instrument in sectors such as communication (GSM operators), gas and electricity distribution, and transportation (Turkish Airlines). • Build- Operate- Transfer • Different models of BOT implementation • Legal disputes • Local administrations • Public Procurement Law • New procurement system which meets international standards, in particular EU standards • Public Tender Authority as a public legal entity
Tools for public service delivery: • Services directly provided by public administration authorities • Contractual work • Partial privatization • Leasing • Concession • Subsidiary arrangements • Volunteer personnel • Self-help • Regulatory and tax incentives
HUMAN RESOURCES IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR AND LEADERSHIP • Main criticism of human resources in public sector are as follows: • Rigid system • Evaluation of personnel was not depending on performance criteria • The salary system also has not been based on performance evaluation • Civil servants enjoy a life-time employment
Legal framework • civil servants • right to establish trade unions without the right to strike (2001) • right to collective bargaining • Public workers • wider labor rights such as right to strike and right to be a member of a political party • Recruitment • lack of an objective public employment system • transformation of the system to a flexible one in accordance with the EU norms • a new entrance exam system
Career • career system; • Ministries of Interior, Foreign Affairs and Finance • regulatory bodies and to specific governmental departments such as the State Planning Organization. • Training in public administration • no standard training system for civil servants • TODAİE • New perspective towards human resources • Public Administration Basic Draft Law
E-GOVERNMENT • Weaknesses and challenges • Lack of sound infrastructure for e-government • Lack of well-defined vision and mission statement • Lack of cooperation among governmental agencies • Lack of information in the Internet environment • Lack of cooperation between governmental agencies and private sector agencies • Lack of willingness in the usage of e-government tools within bureaucracy • The lack of formal education regarding the usage of computers and the internet • The lack of legal framework in the field of e-government
Recent developments • “Restructuring of the Public Administration Project” under the Prime Ministry • The EU initiative: eEurope Program and Action Plan- eTurkey • e-Transformation Turkey Project • computerized programs for service delivery, such as in tax collection and giving licenses • e-transformation projects in local government agencies • Localnet
Good practices in e-government implementations • Ministry of Interior; applications for issuing passports • Ministry of InteriorDG of Registration and Citizenship • Retirement Department for Civil Servants • Ministry of Finance, Revenue Department
ENABLING ENVIRONMENT FOR PRIVATE SECTOR AND INVESTMENT • Forces of change: • economic and political "restructuring“; Economic crises, natural disasters, regional and political challenges • accession process to the EU • Developments : • private sector is steadily gaining ground • creation of a more favorable environment is the result of the liberalization policies • positive developments in the economy • political stability with one party government of Turkey after a long period of coalition governments
Difficulties and achievements • administrative structure- new public administration reform • psychologically negative perception of the bureaucratic apparatus- new spirit after the candidacy of Turkey to EU • legal problems stemming from the judicial system- academy for in-service training for judges • EU aquisproblems related to implementation- slow pace improvement • criticism to protection of intellectual property rights- new Procurement Law • unfair competition- Competition Authority; new Penal Code • protection of consumers; new Consumer Protection Law