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Modern Model Career of European Civil Servants

This academic piece by Enrico Calossi, PhD from Pisa University delves into the definition, access, career development, training, performance management, remuneration, working time, and social dialogue in the context of European Civil Servants. The article explores various aspects of civil service, including recruitment methods, career progression, training categories, evaluation criteria, remuneration composition, working time flexibility, pension systems, social dialogue, and equal opportunities.

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Modern Model Career of European Civil Servants

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  1. Modern Model Career of European Civil Servants By Enrico Calossi, PhD Pisa University

  2. Definition of Civil Service • First use: East India Company to distinguish the civilian from the military personnel. • British context: The remunerated personnel other than those serving in the armed forces, whose functions are to administer policies formulated by or approved by National governments (Bogdanor 1987). • General definition: mediating institutions that mobilize human resources in the service of the affairs of the State in a given territory. • Civil servants are different to contract servants, who works as consultant for a short period or who works for a company owned by the State (they work under the private sector law).

  3. Three Aspects Civil Service as • 1. Personnel Systems • 2. Governance Institution • 3. Symbol System

  4. Features of Modern Model Career of European Civil Servants

  5. Access to the civil service • Concours: written and/oral texts periodically held to create a recruitment list (Belgium, France, Spain, etc…) • Calls: held for vacant posts (ex. Germany, Austria, UK)

  6. Access to the civil service • Announcementofvacancies: journal (ex. WienerZeitung, MoniteurBelge, Journal Officiel); within the administrations; up toeachinstitutions (Finland, UK, Sweden); others • Admissionrequirements: languageproficiency, education, full citizenshiprights, militaryobligations, specificagelimits, physicalaptitude.

  7. Access to the civil service Example: AGE requirements • Max Limits: Belgium: 50; Austria: 40; France: from 27 to 45; Germany: 32; etc… • Min Limits: most of States: 18, Danmark: 20; Luxembourg : from 19 to 25

  8. Career development, internal promotion and mobility • Career Development: • Different Levels: Austria: 9 levels; Belgium: 19 leves; Luxemburg: 3 kinds of career. • Promotion by internal concours (France), calls, seniority (Portugal). • Mobility: compulsory vs voluntary; geographical, professional and/or functional

  9. Training of civil service staff • Categories of Training: a. prior to recruitment b. Initial general training c. Job specific training after recruitment d. Further training (throught the whole career of the official).

  10. Training of civil service staff • Kind of… Compulsory, voluntary, condition for promotion • Who is the trainer? Special national school (France: ENA), local agencies, same institutions • Aims: a. contribute to the implementation of administrative reform and modernisation • Adaptation to the Europeanization process

  11. Management of Performance, Competence and Potential • 1. Rating: presentation, dress, politeness, clarityofexpression • 2. Evaluationofoutputs: numberofcasesdealtwith • 3. Evaluationof performance: quantitative and qualitative indicators • 4. Evaluationofcompetences: analysisoftasks and profilesofposts • 5. Evaluationofpotential: managerialpotential, negotiationskills

  12. Remuneration of Civil Servants • Compositionofremunaration: • Basicsalary • Holiday and end-of-dayallowances: ex. “Christmas Bonus” (Germany)  92% ofbasicsalary • Social allowances: ex. Belgium: extra-moneyforchild’s birth; “localcostof living” • Functionalallowances: towhomacceptsextra-funtioncsexcedinghis/hergrade. • Performance allowances: achievementofcertaingoals • Extrahours: difficul in manycontries, forbidden in Spain

  13. Working Time in the Civil Service Full time vs Flexibility • Full time: Portugal (35 hs) toLuxembourg (40). In Ireland and UK: 41hs, mealsincluded Flexibility: • Flexibility in workinghours • In the lengthofworking life • Contractualflexibility • Flexibility in the location of work • Task flexibility • Payflexibility

  14. Working Time in the Civil Service Flexibility in workinghours: • Part-time • Job-sharing • Flexitime • Flexibiledailyhours • Flexibileweeklyhours • Workingtimeallocatedover a year • Overtime • Night and week end work •  general trend: individualizationofworkingtime

  15. Pension Systems and the Reform Process Questions: When? And howmuch? • When? Effectiveage + yearsof work. Possibile agetoretire (Germany: 65, Sweden: 60) Obligatoryagetoretire (Sweden, Portugal :65) • Howmuch? a. on the ageofretirement b. Typologyofcalculation system Budgeted System VS Funded System

  16. Social Dialogue in Civil Services • Ancient approach: Unilateral Wage Determination by the State • Collective agreements: between whom? • Centralised (France, Germany, Spain) VS decentralised dialogue (UK, Finland, Sweden) • Right to strike: in general Yes, no in Germany and Austria

  17. Equal Opportunities • EU principle “equalpayforequal work”. • Isthatenough? NO!! • Differentneedsfor women and men:  Women: burdenof work and family work. • Solutions: pregnance and motheroodguarantees, daynurseries and childcarefacilities, lowerageforretirement, explicitreservationofpostsfor women (differentmaximumageforrecruitment), time work flexibility

  18. FeaturesofModernModel Career ofEuropeanCivilServants • 1. Access to the civil service • 2. Career development, internal promotion and mobility • 3. Training of civil service staff • 4. Personnel Appraisal System: from Assessment to the 5. Management of Performance, Competence and Potential • 5. Remuneration of Civil Servants • 6. Working Time in the Civil Service • 7. Pension Systems and the Reform Process • 8. Social Dialogue in Civil Services • 9. Equal Opportunities

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