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The Evolution of Management and Organization Theory. Lecture 5 – Administrative Processes in Government. The Origins of Public Management. The key to the city – harks back to an era when the only way into a city was through a locked gate.
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The Evolution of Management and Organization Theory Lecture 5 – Administrative Processes in Government
The Origins of Public Management • The key to the city – harks back to an era when the only way into a city was through a locked gate. • The profession of management began and developed as the profession of arms. • War is not possible without an effective system of public administration. • Military officers were the first public administrators.
The Origins of Public Management • The profession of management began and developed as the profession of arms. • First armies were mobs with managers. • Gradually developed hierarchy, line and staff personnel, logistics and communications. • The continuing influence of ancient Rome. • The transfer of managerial control from those of wealth and power to those with professional expertise first happened in the Roman army. • The power of technical expertise would not be seen again until Napoleon.
The Origins of Public Management • The continuing influence of ancient Rome. • Origins of merit system. • Origins of civil service (to regulate pay). • The core features of modern public administration were first found in the Roman Empire. • Depersonalization, separation of public and private funds, hierarchy, functional specialization. • The virtue of military service (as training in administration).
The Origins of Public Management • The military heritage of public administration. • The history of the world can be viewed as the rise and fall of public administrative institutions. • Rome was effective because the army’s organizational doctrine made it superior to its competitors and because it was backed up by a sophisticated administrative system of supply backed by taxes.
The Origins of Public Management • The military heritage of public administration. • The Roman empire only fell when its legions degenerated into corps of mercenaries and when its supply and tax bases were corrupted. • Both victorious soldiers and successful managers tend to be inordinately admired and rewarded as risk takers.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • All organizations are guided by a doctrine of management that reflects basic values. • The first administrative doctrine (military): Do this or die! • Modern example (Henry Ford): All that we ask of men is that they do the work which is set before them. (Implication: or be fired! Better than being shot.)
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • More sophisticated doctrines are needed when meaningful and fulfilling work for its employees is the central goal of an organization. • These doctrines are generally more conducive to long-term organizational effectiveness and productivity.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Doctrine and attitudes affect morale and performance and more importantly organizational culture. • Organizational culture affects the overall competence or incompetence of the organization.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Each organization’s doctrine remains in place until technological and situational changes make the organization’s adaptations less useful and render the organization incompetent. • Every major political revolution can be said to be caused by the same thing – poor public administration.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • The evolution of management principles. • Authoritarian or traditional management is the classical model of military governance applied to civilian purposes. • Managers under an authoritarian doctrine value order, precision, consistency, and obedience. • This authoritarian model has been gradually been replaced with less centralized, more participatory models. • Why? Because they work better with sophisticated workers.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles. • No royal road to administrative wisdom. No hard and fast principles. But: • Nine principles of war (U.S. Army). • Objective: Direct every, military operation toward a clearly defined, decisive and attainable objective. • Offensive: Seize, retain, and exploit the intiative. • Mass: Concentrate combat power at the decisive place and time.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Nine principles of war (contd.) • Economy of force: Allocate minimum essential combat power to secondary efforts. • Maneuver: Place the enemy in a position of disadvantage through the flexible application of combat power. • Unity of command: For every objective, insure unity of effort under one responsible commander.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Nine principles of war (contd.) • Security: Never permit the enemy to acquire an advantage. • Surprise: Strike the enemy at a time and/ or place and in a manner for which he is unprepared. • Simplicity: Prepare clear, uncomplicated plans and clear, concise orders to ensure thorough undestanding.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Catheryn Seckler-Hudson’s 12 principles of management. • Policy should be defined and imparted to those who are responsible for its achievement. • Work should be subdivided, systematically planned, and programmed. • Tasks and responsibilities should be specifically assigned and understood.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Catheryn Seckler-Hudson’s 12 principles of management. • Appropriate methods and procedures should be developed and utilized by those responsible for policy achievement. • Appropriate resources in terms of availability and priority should be equitably allocated. • Authority commensurate with responsibility should be delegated and located as close as possible to the point where operations occur and decisions need to be made.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Catheryn Seckler-Hudson’s 12 principles of management. • Adequate structural relationships through which to operate should be established. • Effective and qualified leadership should head each organization and each subdivision of the organization. • Unity of command and purpose should permeate the organization.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • Catheryn Seckler-Hudson’s 12 principles of management. • Continuous accountability for utilization of resources and for the production of results should be required. • Effective coordination of all individual and group efforts within the organization should be achieved. • Continuous reconsideration of all matters pertaining to the organization should be a part of regular operations.
The Significance of Administrative Doctrine • Comparing military and civilian principles (contd.) • The military list is more policy oriented, more leadership directed, than the civilian list. • The military approach underlies the reinventing government movement.
What Is Organization Theory? • A proposition or set of propositions that attempts to explain or predict how groups and individuals behave in differing organizational arrangements.
What Is Organization Theory? • Classic organizational theory. • Organizations exist to accomplish production-related and economic goals. • There is one best way to organize for production, and that way can be found through systematic, scientific inquiry. • Production is maximized through specialization and division of labor. • People and organizations act in accordance with rational economic principles.
What Is Organization Theory? • Theory derived from organizational structures and procedures during the industrial revolution. • Adam Smith and the pin factory. • The Wealth of Nations, 1776. • Laissez-faire. • Economic rationale for the factory system. • All formal organizations are force multipliers.
The Origins of Scientific Management • The basic problem with the traditional hierarchical organization was that it was dependent upon the proper enculturation of individual supervisors at every level for its success. • Changes in the environment can make hierarchical organizations less competent.
The Origins of Scientific Management • Origin of the staff concept to overcome limitations of a single mind and fleeting time. • The general staff concept has been adopted by industrial and governmental organizations.
The Origins of Scientific Management • The influence of Frederick W. Taylor (1911). • Father of the scientific management movement. • Scientific management principles. • Replacing traditional, rule of thumb methods of work accomplishment with systematic, more scientific methods of measuring and managing individual work elements; • The scientific study of the selection and sequential development of workers to ensure optimal placement of works into work roles; • Obtaining the cooperation of workers to ensure full application of scientific principles; And. • Establishing logical divisions within work roles and responsibilities between workers and management.
The Origins of Scientific Management • Henri Fayol’s general theory of management (six principles, 1916, 1949). • Technical (production of goods) • Commercial (buying, selling, exchange). • Financial (raising and using capital). • Security (protection of property and people). • Accounting. • Managerial (coordination, control, organization, planning and command of people).
The Origins of Scientific Management • Fayol (contd.). • Dominant principle was management. • Division of work. • Authority and responsibility. • Discipline. • Unity of command. • Unity of direction. • Subordination of individual interest to general interest. • Remuneration of personnel.
The Origins of Scientific Management • Fayol (contd.). • Dominant principle was management (contd.). • Centralization. • Scalar chains (supervisors). • Order. • Equity. • Stability of personnel tenure. • Initiative, and. • Esprit de corps.
The Period of Orthodoxy • Interwar period a period of orthodoxy in public administration. • Work of government could be divided between decision-making and execution. • Administration was a science with discoverable principles.
The Period of Orthodoxy • Paul Appleby’s polemic. • Politics and administration inextricably entwined. • Luther Gulick (1937, POSDCORB). • Planning (outline and methods). • Organizing (structure). • Staffing (personnel). • Directing (decision-making). • Coordinating (task management). • Reporting (communication and record-keeping). • Budgeting (fiscal planning, accounting, and control).
The Many Meanings of Bureaucracy • First, “the bureaucracy is the totality of government offices or bureaus that constitute the permanent government of the state. • Second, “the bureaucracy” refers to all of the public officials of a government, both high and low, elected and appointed. • Third, bureaucracy is often used as a general invective to refer to any inefficient organization encumbered by red tape.
The Many Meanings of Bureaucracy • Fourth, bureaucracy refers to a specific set of structural arrangements (Max Weber). • Bureaucrats are free as individuals, but not as employees. • Hierarchy. • Clearly specified functions. • Freedom of hiring. • Appointment by merit.
The Many Meanings of Bureaucracy • Fourth, bureaucracy refers to a specific set of structural arrangements. • Due compensation and due process. • Sole occupation. • Advancement by merit or seniority. • Non-proprietary rights in position. • Strict controls.
Neoclassical Organization Theory • The neoclassical theorists gained their reputation by attacking the classical theories. • Important source of the power and politics, organizational culture, and systems theory. • Herbert Simon. • Bounded rationality and satisficing. • Programmed and unprogrammed decision-making. • Management information systems.
Neoclassical Organization Theory • The impact of sociology. • Philip Selznick – Organizations are made up of individuals whose goals and aspirations may not coincide with the organization’s.
Modern Structural Organization Theory • Basic assumptions • Organizations are rational institutions whose primary purpose is to accomplish established objectives through control and coordination. • There is a “best” structure for any organization in light of objectives, environment, products or services, and the technology of the production process. • Specialization and division of labor increase the quality and quantity of production. • Most problems result from structural flaws.
Modern Structural Organization Theory • Mechanistic and organization systems. • Mechanistic – traditional bureaucracy, best in stable conditions. • Organic – less rigidity, more participation, and more reliance on workers, best in dynamic conditions.
Systems Theory • Systems theory views an organization as a complex set of dynamically intertwined and interconnected elements, including inputs, processes, outputs, feedback loops, and the environment. Any change in one element causes changes in other elements.
Systems Theory • Cybernetics – Norbert Wiener (1948).
Systems Theory • The learning organization. • Built on the doctrines of participation • Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. • New component technologies (the five disciplines). • Personal mastery. • Mental models. • Building shared vision. • Team learning. • Systems thinking.