300 likes | 386 Views
Results-Based Management in Thailand. A Formative Evaluation for Inclusive Development. Team. Jeanne-Marie Col, Ph.D. City University of New York Marc Holzer, Ph.D. Rutgers University Paul Posner, Ph.D. George Mason University Marilyn Rubin, Ph.D. City University of New York.
E N D
Results-Based Management in Thailand A Formative Evaluation for Inclusive Development
Team • Jeanne-Marie Col, Ph.D. City University of New York • Marc Holzer, Ph.D. Rutgers University • Paul Posner, Ph.D. George Mason University • Marilyn Rubin, Ph.D. City University of New York
Results for whom? • People of Thailand, especially those • who are under-served • who are under-resourced • who are remote from Bangkok • who are most vulnerable • whose voices are not yet loud nor heard
Which results? • Better education and health • More jobs and businesses • More communication and linkage • Speed and quality of service delivery (streamlining and efficiency) • Equal development throughout the country by improving conditions and opportunities for those outside Bangkok (area-based results)
Reaching for Results:Family of Key Concepts • Area-based development requires area-based management & coordination • Results-based management (& budgeting) • Performance management (& budgeting) • Managing for results (& budgeting) • Management “contracts” & leadership • Motivation & incentives (monetary and non-monetary)
Public Administrative Act (#5) B.E. 2545, Section 3/1 • Benefits that accrue to the Thai people • Results-oriented administration • Effective administration • Worthiness of government functions • De-layering of work processes (streamlining) • Abolishment of unnecessary agencies & functions • Decentralization of missions and resources to local administrative units (de-concentration) • Empowerment in decision-making • Facilitation of and responsiveness to the needs of the people; and • Accountability for endorsements
Facilitating Factors Expressed needs Sustained leadership Stakeholders ownership Focused planning Small successes People (training) Recognition of improvements and results Hindering Factors Resistance to change Technical difficulties Resources & skills Negative mentality Performance Improvement Programming (PIP)
The effective use of strategy and planning for area development • The Administrative Plan as a tool for area development • Planning & budgeting as management tools • Balanced Scorecard (themes) • De-concentration requires area-focused leadership & management (CEO Governor) • All efforts focused on area-based development (i.e., the provinces)
Balanced Scorecard • Adds focus to measurement • Standardizes key themes • 1. Effectiveness of missions (strategy) • 2. Efficiency of operations (costs) • 3. Quality of service (citizen-oriented) • 4. Organization development (innovation)
Strategy and Planning Cases • Naga City: to excellence in 5 years • Revenue collection (resources) • Investment in people and systems • Strategic planning and operations control • Improvement in services and processes • Dramatic development increases
Technical aspects of formulating key performance indicators (KPIs) • Accountability for results (dilemmas) • Defining logic models or “results chains” (outputs—intermediate outcomes—final outcomes) • Achieving balanced measures • Defining benchmarks for targets • Focusing on the “vital few” measures • Developing information systems to support results • Measuring emerging priorities and programs • Measuring longer term results
Institutional requirements • Striking balance between central leadership and agency ownership • Aligning performance reforms with other management systems, including budget • Harmonization of indicators by focusing KPIs at the provincial level • Strong leadership at provincial level • Synergy among sectors at provincial level • Information systems and decision-support systems focused on provincial level • Use “clustering” to promote provincial development
Development by expertise led by central departments with specialized staff and programs: one-size fits all blueprint for professional top-down operations Area-based development led by provincial teams & CEO Governor, listening and sensitive to public needs and including public participation in planning, operations, evaluation and learning: leads to building capacity for continuous improvement dialogue Institutional Harmony and Tensions
Action-Harmonization Mechanisms: Cases of Catalysts • Economic Crisis (New Zealand) • Citizen-based benchmarks in Oregon • National performance review (US) • Next steps (UK) • Disasters leading to development (Japan) • World Bank/IMF conditionalities (Uganda) • Vision 20/20 (Malaysia) • Energize new participants for development: more inclusive development (Thailand?)
Inclusive Development • Improve education and health • Add industries and jobs • NESDB: planning • BOB: resources and MOF proper financial mgt • OCSC: public service personnel: policy etc. • Departments: operations • Ministries: coordination • ? leadership for results: monitoring & evaluation ? • Area-based development: villages, tambons, districts, provinces: capacity & responsibility
Action-Harmonization mechanisms: Managing change processes • Pacing the change process • Maintaining parallel systems (new and old) during the transition process • Encouraging inspired and committed implementation • Recognizing and rewarding synergistic efforts: competition to show competence and attract development partners and investment • Sharing accountability and responsibility • Maximizing IT: strategic management tool • Agenda, targets, reports: management tools • Transparency as a management tool
The role of the CEO Governor in performance contracting • Setting area priorities • Managing area operations • Coordinating ministerial and departmental activities, inputs • Measuring provincial results • Reflecting national priorities at provincial level
The role of the CEO Minister in performance contracting • Contributing to area (provincial) priorities • Sharing responsibility for area development • Contributing to provincial results • Supporting other ministries/departments in the province • R&D for priority provincial issues • Accountability for contributing to provinces
CEO Leadership & Training • Uganda: Governor (CEO-style) • Managerial Grid: people and task • Coordination: “shared future” • Reaching cooperation • Supporting each other • Transparency of issues (no secrets) • Asking the people
CEO Leadership Cases • Bangladesh Power Authority • Results needed; wastage high • Negotiated with union • Set targets for each area office • Set incentives and discipline • Measure after three months • Dealing with laggards
Capacity and Learning • Working with performance indicators (KPIs) – expertise in-house • Using information technology systems • Aggregating and Disaggregating data at appropriate levels (especially provincial) • Conceptualizing cross-cutting issues • Linking strategies, results and intermediate outcomes (results chains) • Learning from feedback from performance systems • Benchmarking for using best practices
Capacity and Learning Cases • Decentralization(as close as possible to the people) • For strategic planning • For accountability • For feedback and continuous learning • Need systems and trained personnel • Close citizen-government relationship • e.g., local level innovation creates diffusion of innovations among area governments
Risks and Dysfunctional Behavior Patterns and their mitigation • Over-simplification (reductionism) • Too many measures (over-elaboration) • Confusing outputs and outcomes • Measurement by convenience • Losing the “big picture” • Bureaucratic routines distort results • Hiding behind bureaucratic intricacies • Resistance to change; stalling tactics
Risks and Dysfunctional Behavior Cases • Buffalo garbage fiasco
Role of the People:Voice and Governance • Strengthening Citizens’ Charters • Improving Citizen Surveys • Popular participation in advising, priority-setting and decision-making • Community-based knowledge & wisdom • Community-based initiatives • Role of the Tambons • Putting the “balance” in the balanced scorecard
Role of the People: Cases in Voice and Governance • Benchmarking in communities • Benchmarking among provinces • Benchmarking among departments and ministries • Benchmarking studies and application • Seeking to be “the model” for effective and efficient strategy and operations: competitive spirit
Sustainability • Enabling environment mechanisms, resources, capacity, data • Recognition and positive reinforcement (awards and distinctions) • Enhancing both supply and demand • Credible supply of KPIs and data • Dynamic institutionalization of demand from the people, decision-makers and stakeholders
Sustainability CasesSurprise: Many nations have sustained RBM more than 10 years • Community-based benchmarks • Long-term perspective • Integration with budget • Broad-based stakeholder support • Managers appreciate tools and adapt tools for their use • Citizens appreciate results
Dialogue for Sustainability • Do we know what & how we are doing? • Where to we discuss these issues? • Mechanism for researching benchmark cases and for dialogue on government operations • (legislative staff unit to evaluate and report on government operations: parliamentary or separations of powers system)
NEXT STEPS • Increase focus on provinces for results identification and measurement • Invigorate CEO-style management at provincial level • Align ministry/department resources to provinces (HQ=R&D & Policy; Province=Operations) • Strengthen incentives for cooperation (awards) • Align performance systems with other management systems, including budget • Improve KPI measurement and data (use IT) • Facilitate dynamic people participation • Increase transparency of reporting and awards