MANAGING IN THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT NEW CONCEPTS FOR A NEW ERA BACKGROUND AND AN OVERVIEW ON: REINVENTING GOVERNMENT AND OTHER RECENT BOOKS ON MANAGEMENT January 1993 ------- ^£1 \ UNITED STATES ENVIRONMENTAL PROTECTION AGENCY * .OMBA* \ WASHINGTON, D.C. 20460 JAM 7 1992 ADMINISTRATION AND RESOURCES MANAGEMENT MEMORANDUM SUBJECT: Background information on Reinventing Government and other recent writing on management FROM: jbhn O'Brien, Chief, QA&E Staff TO: OHRM Division Directors OHRM Program Managers Human Resources Officers With the arrival of new leadership in the Agency, I thought it would be helpful to provide an overview on the concepts and approaches to management which our new executives may use to guide programs and priorities. This booklet provides an overview on the most likely sources — the experts and their books — for the new management concepts. There is one book, Reinventing Government by Osborne and Gaebler, which has been much quoted and referenced over the past several months, and I've concentrated on this book in the pages that follow by including an executive summary and three recent articles. I hope you find the information in this booklet timely and useful. RecycbtfRecyciabie PiMM flo paper mat coma r i « MM> 75K weyctod Cbw ------- MANAGEMENT CONCEPTS AND THE NEW LEADERSHIP As members of the HR community, we need to be well informed on the management concepts and assumptions by which the Agency's senior leadership will convey their priorities and directions. The Agency's new leadership will in due time make clear their specific management style and concepts. However, over the past year, there have been frequent references and discussions in the media concerning a specific book and a specific management concept which we anticipate will play a prominent role in the new leadership. The book is: Reinventing Government; How the entrepreneurial spirit is transforming the public sector by David Osborne and Ted Gaebler The concept is: entrepreneurial government This booklet provides an early snapshot on "entrepreneurial government" as described in Osborne and Gaebler's book, and in addition, provides snapshots on other concepts and books which we anticipate will play key roles in setting the management assumptions and priorities for the new leadership. We present this information to provide the HR community with a preliminary overview and, thereby to make us better prepared to respond to the needs and priorities of the new leadership. In addition, in section 2. An Executive Summary, we highlight specific human resources issues including: a critique of civil service systems, a discussion of the China Lake Project, and views on job classification, training and promotions. We have organized this report from the general to the specific as follows: • I. SNAP SHOTS OF NEW CONCEPTS FOR THE NEW LEADERSHIP — a brief description of Reinventing Government in the context of other books, concepts and individuals which we anticipate will be the most likely sources for the new management assumptions and priorities. • 2 . AN EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF THE BOOK REINVENTING GOVERNMENT — Major concepts from the book, specific human resources issues, definitions of "entrepreneurial government" and "the new paradigm." • 3. TWO ARTICLES AND A BOOK REVIEW OF REINVENTING GOVERNMENT — Critiques of the book, and comments on the application of "entrepreneurial government" in the federal sector. ------- CONTENTS 1. SNAP SHOTS OF NEW CONCEPTS FOR THE NEW LEADERSHIP 1 [source: Washington Post. Nov. 8, 1992] Reinventing Government by David Osborne & Ted Gaebler Laboratories of Democracy by David Osborne The Work of Nations by Robert Reich "The Aschauer Curve" by David Aschauer Minding America's Business by Ira Magaziner & Robert Reich The Silent War by Ira Magaziner & Mark Patinkin Politics and Productivity by Laura Tyson "The New Paradigm Group" — Robert Shapiro "Public investment" — Robert Solow 2. AN EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF REINVENTING GOVERNMENT 7 [source: John O'Brien, QA&E with material from a review article by Jim Carr, EPA -Institute in the OPM newsletter: Senior Executive Service. October 1992] 3 . TWO ARTICLES AND A BOOK REVIEW OF REINVENTING GOVERNMENT 14 "A Case for Reform" by James Fallows The Atlantic Monthly, June 1992 "Bureaucracy busters" by Don L. Boroughs U.S. News & World Report. November 30, 1992 "The Promise to Transform the Government" The Washington Post. December 14, 1992 ------- 1. SNAP SHOTS OF NEW CONCEPTS FOR THE NEW LEADERSHIP ------- David Osborne r I . ' • ' f i • ' I * iJ J I * I i t". H ! • 111 Osbome, 41, a journalist turned expert on innovative government, has helped to shape the Clinton phi- losophy of doing more with less. In Osborne's view, centralized, bureaucratic government no longer works. But state and local govern- ments, short of funds, have made a virtue out of necessity—pioneering new, low-cost ideas that decentralize authority and foster partnerships be- tween the public and private sectors. In his book "Laboratories of De- mocracy," to which Clinton wrote the foreword, Osborne describes Clinton as a "new Democrat" who started his first term as governor of Arkansas as a classic, crusading lib- eral reformer and then discovered that such an approach did not work. He wrote that Clinton in his last two terms as governor came to be- lieve that economic growth must come before spending for social pur- poses, and that government must work closely with business. He would double Clinton's pledge to reduce the federal bureaucracy by 100,000 workers in his first four- year term and would cut the budgets of "antiquated" departments such as Agriculture, Commerce and Housing and Urban Development by 6 per- cent a year over four years. In his book "Reinventing Govern- ment," Osborne cites the grass-roots work in Minneapolis of citizen activ- ist Ted Kolderie. In the 1970s, Kolderie and others began agitating for competition within the public school system and eventually pushed through a bill al- lowing local public school teachers to create their own schools. Kolderie is now drawing up an ed- ucation proposal for Clinton. "The traditional role of government is to give money and add regulations," said Kolderie. "The trick is to connect presiden- tial leadership to state legislatures through the governors." i ------- Roberts. Reich Reich, a member of the faculty of Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, once said that he agrees with only 30 percent to 40 percent of the Progressive Policy In- stitute's positions, but added, "I'm glad the kettle is being stirred." His book "The Work of Nations- has been read and underlined by Clinton, and he has become a leading authority on the competitiveness of the U.S. economy. Reich writes in the book that the notion of an "American" corporation is steadily losing meaning. Whenev- er possible, he says, American-based multinational companies will move their manufacturing to the country that offers the best mix of cheap la- bor and high-quality production. Reich argues that the best de- fense against that is government in- vestment in American workers— through training and education—and in the transportation systems and telecommunications networks on which modern businesses rely. Such investments, he argues, will encourage foreign companies to lo- cate their most modern plants and research facilities in the United States. "Government policy makers should be less interested in helping American-owned companies earn hefty profits from new technologies than in helping Americans become technologically sophisticated," ac- cording to Reich. Reich argues that it is permissible for the federal government to go even deeper in debt as long as the money is invested in people or infra- structure and the amount doesn't exceed the likely return. -- 2 -- ------- THE 'ASCHAUER CURVE1 HOW ECONOMIST DAVID ASCHAUER SHOWS A CORRELATION BETWEEN GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT AND PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH 1950 1955 1960 1965 1970 •The comoinen D'cductivitv ol iaoor and "Value of publicly owrvrj assets sncn as dams, highways SOURCE Davifl Ascnauer 1975 1980 and mass tMnvt 1985 David Aschauer In September 1988, economist As- chauer published a paper for the Chi- cago Federal Reserve Bank that showed what he called "a distinct pos- itive relationship" between U.S. pub- lic spending on infrastructure and the broad growth of U.S. productivity, af- ter a number of factors were dis- counted. Since then the "Aschauer curve" has been cited by many of those, such as Reich, who support major new ini- tiatives by the Clinton administration to rebuild or upgrade the nation's transportation and telecommunica- tions systems. Sources say that Aschauer's find- ings, if correct, suggest that large in- vestments now are justified even if they worsen the budget deficit in the short term. In the long term, the in- vestments will bring in more tax rev- enue because the economy will grow faster. Aschauer calls his own findings "startling," and acknowledges that they nave been questioned by econo- mists at the Brookings Institution and other think tanks. Without mentioning Aschauer di- rectly, the Congressional Budget Of- fice also has questioned his thesis. Aschauer stresses that not all pub- lic investment will produce a big long- term return. For example, he opposes pork barrel highway projects, but strongly supports government invest- ment on advanced technologies, such as "intelligent highways." These are exciting times for an empirical economist," he said. "Poten- tially, there's a grand experiment out there." ------- niESILENTWAR Ira Maga/iner and Mark I'atmkin Ira C. Magaziner Magaziner, 45. one of the most liberal and controversial of Clinton's inner circle of advisers, first met Clinton as a Rhodes scholar and worked on a variety of issues for the Clinton campaign. A Brown University student activ- ist, Magaziner and other young graduates failed in a postgraduate attempt to transform Brockton, Mass., from a working-class commu- nity into a model city. In 1984, he suffered a bigger setback in a refer- endum when voters rejected 4 to 1 his plan to revive the Rhode Island economy. Magaziner has coauthored two books on U.S. industrial competitive- ness, and has churned out ideas about health care, the retraining of workers, the restructuring of corpo- rations and the conversion of U.S. defense companies to developing commercial technologies. In the latter role, he has offered suggestions to Rep. David McCurdy (D-Okla.), who has emerged as a leading advocate of "defense conver- sion" in Congress. The key goal of both McCurdy and Magaziner is to preserve the advanced skills of de- fense workers by keeping tnem at work on commercial ventures so that they could be quickly switched to new military projects if necessary. to this end, Magaziner would have the Pentagon make a 20-year com- mitment to buy commercially useful communications systems, short-haul aircraft, waste disposal systems and "intelligent highways" from private companies. McCurdy and feOow members of the House Armed Services Commit- tee have stopped short of accepting the proposal, but have recom- mended a long-term plan in which the Pentagon would finance research and development by defense and nondefense companies in energy, transportation, environment, com- munications and other promising commercial fields. — 4 — ------- Politics and Productivity Laura D'Andrea Tyson Tyson, a professor at the Univer- sity of California at Berkeley, wants a closer partnership in technology between U.S. government and busi- ness to stave off Japanese and Euro- pean rivals. It is a notion that has supporters throughout the Clinton camp, begin- ning with the president-elect. "We need to have some place in- side the government to monitor competitive trends in key industries around the world and the U.S. posi- tion in these industries." Tyson said. It could be an existing agency or something new such as Clinton's pro- posed Economic Security Council. In either case, she said, it must be an agency that keeps score, reporting which industries are doing well. Robert Shapiro Shapiro, 42, is a leading force in the Progressive Policy Institute, which some believe could become as influential in a Clinton administration as the conservative Heritage Foun- dation was in the Reagan years. The institute is the research and policy arm of the Democratic Lead- ership Council (DLC), a group of elected officials who banded togeth- er in the mid-1980s to counter the supply-side theories of the Reagan administration. Clinton chaired the group at one time. Shapiro is a member of something called The New Paradigm Group, which has a Republican member and favors a free-market, anti-bureau- cratic approach to public policy. Some Democrats consider his views heretical, but the DLC's more moderate positions have been re- flected in Clinton's frequently voiced support for U.S. technology and business competitiveness. On the deficit, Shapiro is a hawk who would only allow it to grow if personal incomes of Americans were growing at a similar rate. 'The deficit absorbs the energy and the arguments for new initia- tives like a black hole, an enormous gravitational force," said Shapiro. "We have to pull ourselves out of that gravitational field." He stresses that any fiscal stimu- lus must be balanced by concern for the deficit. Robert Sotow Some people who know Nobel Prize-winning economist Solow were surprised when a few months ago he endorsed the Clinton economic plan, which many said would make the federal deficit worse by spending more money on new programs than could be offset by taxes or other sav- ings. The MIT economist had signaled his contempt for President Bush with a sarcastic comment about the "read my lips, no new taxes" pledge. Solow said he could read Bush's lips but he doubted they were connected to a brain. Many people took that as an at- tack on the fiscal irresponsibility that has produced the nation's huge defi- cit. But earlier in the year, Solow, joined by Nobel laureate economist James Tobin and others, urged the Bush administration to give the economy a shot in the arm with more government spending, even if it meant increasing t'ie federal budg- et deficit in the short run. Then, at a press briefing this fall, Solow endorsed Clinton's focus on public investment as the key to ac- celerating growth. Solow, however, remains skepti- cal of claims of economists known as "growth theorists," who claim that government investment in training, education and infrastructure can in- crease the economy's output. Some argue that deficit spending can push the economy close to its potential. But many economists con- tend that is not true for the United States today. Because of the huge budget defi- cit, they say, government borrowing takes away from the pool of capital that would otherwise be used by the private sector to finance its invest- ments. But Solow and others say that the economy is so weak that the govern- ment has to step in to get things moving. ------- HOWT SPIRI' TH HE ENTREPR IS TRANS ! PUBLIC S ENEURIAL )RMING :TOR FROMS TOS CHOOLHOUSE ATEHOUSE, CITY HALL PENTAGON OTHE DAVID OSBORNE AND TH) GAEBLER ------- 2. AN EXECUTIVE SUMMARY OF REINVENTING GOVERNMENT A NEW APPROACH TO GOVERNMENT Over the past decade, governments at all levels in the United States have faced a wide range of problems and challenges, including tighter budgets, a shrinking tax base, rising citizen expectations and declining government resources. The responses to these challenges are varied, but the most effective responses share common elements, and viewed from a broad perspective, they reflect a new approach to government called entrepreneurial government. Osborne and Gaebler have examined those governments in the U.S. which have successfully met the new challenges, and from this examination they have developed 10 key principles which explain successful government. These 10 principles serve, in turn, as a blueprint for citizens and officials who would make their government better, and as benchmarks to gauge their success. Taken as whole, the 10 principles of organizing and operating government, define the concept of: Entrepreneurial government "Entrepreneurial government" is characterized by Osborne and Gaebler as an approach to governing that stresses the importance of "steering" over "rowing". Officials "steer" government toward the goals desired by citizens by leveraging the powers of market forces, incentives, creative financing, improved accounting systems and other innovations. In the past, and unfortunately today as well, governments have concentrated on "rowing"— determining a need such as public housing, job creation, or police protection— and then creating bureaucracies, with complex rules, regulations and controls to serve that need. Today this model, or "paradigm" of government must be changed and replaced by "entrepreneurial government." An "entrepreneurial government" concentrates on "steering" the varied resources of government, private industry, and voluntary organizations toward efficient solutions that meet citizen needs and solve community problems. The 10 key principles of "entrepreneurial government" are: 1. Catalytic government — using the public, private, and voluntary sectors to solve community problems by using methods like seed money grants, public-service partnerships, and vouchers. 2. Community-owned government — empowering citizens rather than the bureaucracy to solve problems. For example, encouraging and supporting the tenants in a Metro DC public housing project to buy their apartments. ------- 3- Competitive government — promoting competition between service providers both inside and outside government. Example: New York City's Sanitation Department operates a huge fleet of trucks with maintenance work performed at city and private repair shops. To spur competition, and gain savings, management posted in each city shop a chart for all workers to see which compared the cost of maintenance in their city shop with the cost in an equivalent private shop. 4. Mission driven government — the mission drives the organization rather than rules and regulations. Example: the Navy's China Lake Experiment which freed managers of traditional personnel regs and allowed greater discretion in promoting and rewarding subordinates. 5. Results oriented government — measuring government effectiveness not just by inputs (money, manhours, equipment), but also by outcomes. For example, the federal Jobs Training Partnership Act which uses performance contracts in which vendors are paid according to the number of trainees placed in iobs. not just the number trained. 6. Customer-driven government — offering choices to clients— for example, choices between schools, training programs, and housing. The World War II era G.I. Bill was an enormously successful example of "customer" choice, because veterans could choose almost any college, rather than having government dictate. 7. Enterprising Government — not just spending money, but earning money thorough user fees, investments, and enterprise, and using these earnings to offer new services, or reduce the cost of existing services. In Chicago the city contracted for towing abandoned cars and now receives $25 per car or $2 million a year from contractors. 8. Anticipatory Government — attacking problems before they emerge rather providing services to mitigate problems after they arrive. An example: EPA's approach to pollution prevention which concentrates on stopping pollution at the source, and pollution controls which emphasize recyclable materials. 9. Decentralized Government — authority is decentralized to make bureaucrats more responsible and more efficient because they have more localized power and more job satisfaction. TQM is a method to decentralize. In addition, General Creech and his turn-around of the US Air Force Tactical Air Command relied on decentralizing and delegating authority down the chain. 10. Market oriented government — using market mechanisms to price services, create efficiencies, trim bureaucracy, save money. For example: the Washington DC Metro system pricing ------- fares at higher rates during rush hour in order to spread out demand. THE PRE-CONDITIONS NEEDED TO IMPLEMENT ENTREPRENEURIAL GOVERNMENT Osborne & Gaebler specify certain pre-conditions that are needed before "entrepreneurial government" can be implemented. They state that at least 4 of the 8 conditions listed below are needed to implement an entrepreneurial approach: 1. A crisis — necessity becomes the mother of invention. The most common form of crisis is a fiscal crisis. When no crisis is present "imaginative leaders sometimes create one." 2. Leadership — Nothing is more important. Typical leaders: a mayor, governor, or president. Important characteristic: the ability to "champion and protect those ... who are willing to risk change." 3. Continuity of leadership — key leaders must stay the course, or else their organization will not take the risk of reinventing itself. 4. A healthy infrastructure — defined as the informal network of civic commitment where citizens, volunteer groups, business and media are committed to the public welfare. 5. Shared vision and goals — a consensus on basic goals. Entrepreneurial leaders rally the community to their vision and goals. 6. Trust — all sectors of the community trust each other: e.g. the mayor, union, business leaders, city council. 7. Outside resources — most organizations embarking on change need outside help in the form of money, expertise or political support. • 8. Models to follow — institutions take great comfort when they can see what they are trying to create already in operation somewhere else. Models provide institutions with the conviction that change is attainable. THE "CRISIS" OF GOVERNMENT TODAY AND THE NEED FOR A "NEW PARADIGM" Osborne & Gaebler consider most government organizations at all levels in the U.S. in a "crisis" primarily because government is following an obsolete model or "paradigm" that does not meet the needs and desires of citizens. What's needed is a "new paradigm", a new way of regarding the relationship between citizens, government, and the services government delivers. ------- The present day model or "paradigm" of government was set in place from 1900 through 1940. During this period, from the Progressive Era to the New Deal, a model of government evolved which functioned primarily to provide "services" for an emerging industrial economy. When the public or voters desired government to meet a common need, then government supplied, sometimes efficiently sometimes wastefully, the "service" to fulfill that need— e.g. building and repairing public roads, bringing electricity to the farmlands, feeding the homeless. But, at the beginning of this period, around 1900, government "service" organizations often suffered from endemic waste and fraud. To attack this weakness, the Progressives and their allies helped to legislate and implement public accounting and budgeting systems, competitive contracting requirements, and civil service systems. The central purpose of these innovations was to provide limits and controls on politicians and bureaucrats in the expenditure of public resources. The controls were exercised through complicated systems of rules and regulations to ensure equity, guard against fraud, and provide detailed documentation for inspectors, and the public at large. The Progressives' prescription for good government succeeded. The Progressives' control systems have largely eliminated the pervasive waste and fraud which was common weakness at the turn of the century. Their "paradigm" of government became the dominant view for the next 60 years: large bureaucracies dispensing "services" to citizens, creating new bureaucracies as new needs were discovered. However, in the 1990s, the complex rules, regulations and limitations of the Progressive era have become the deadweight and inhibitors that prevent politicians and civil servants from responding quickly and efficiently to the challenges of today. Governments must become more than just "service" providers because the "services" citizens desire are too diverse and citizen needs are too varied to be satisfied by large bureaucracies. The "new paradigm" of government which is needed to today is a concept of government in which all sectors of the community — government, private, and voluntary — are engaged in the solution of common problems. Osborne and Gaebler write: "The central failure of government today is one of means not of ends." For the authors "entrepreneurial government" provides a new means for meeting the traditional ends and common needs of a community, while the "new paradigm" provides a new concept to inspire all sectors of the community toward a new vision of government. — 10 — ------- SPECIFIC HUMAN RESOURCES ISSUES CITED BY OSBORNE & GABBLER The authors discuss many examples of innovative management and government systems. They specifically discuss civil service systems, since increasing the efficiency of government must include increasing the efficiency of government workers, and especially the means to manage the workforce. Specific citations concerned with human resources systems are as follows: • Government personnel systems generally Most of today's civil service systems are derived from the Federal Civil Service Act of 1883. Fine for its time, but an obsolete guide for today — "Designed for a government of clerks, civil service became a straitjacket in an era of knowledge workers." • Hiring The hiring process is slow and rule bound. The authors' "favorite horror story": the Michigan State pension fund has to creatively invest $20 billion, but it "is expected to hire venture capitalists from those who score well on the civil service exam." • Promotions Seldom related to performance, and controlled more by the personnel office than the manager. • Firing So time consuming, tedious, and complicated few managers ever make the attempt. • Formal reduction in force Inefficient and illogical: "Typically, layoffs comb out the younger, eager employees and leave behind the deadwood—in jobs they neither know nor want." • Does a transition to "entrepreneurial government" require layoffs? "We have found that the transition can be managed without significant layoffs..." The transition will create new organizations and changes to the traditional mission of government which in turn may require lower staff levels, but these lower levels can generally be met through attrition and reassignments. • Classification Complicated, tedious, and time consuming. — 11 — ------- Training and Development "No one wants poorly trained employees making important decisions, yet few governments spend much on training." Decentralizing is one of the 10 key elements of "entrepreneurial government" but management must assure that employees are well trained to prepared them for broader roles, and to demonstrate concern for their professional development. The China Lake Experiment — a qualified success The 1978 Civil Service Reform Act permitted demonstration projects such as the China Lake Experiment which "revolutionized the personnel system" at the Naval Weapons Center, China Lake, California. At China Lake the complicated federal classification system was replaced by a limited number of pay bands, allowing managers greater flexibility to hire, and reward good performance. The Reagan Administration insisted that the China Lake Experiment be "cost neutral", and thereby weakened its effectiveness. Nonetheless, China Lake "shows the way toward a modern personnel system." -- 12 -- ------- Atlantic A Case for Reform by James Fallows REIN\ ENTING Gov ERNME\T How che Entrepreneurial Spirit Is Transforming the Public Sector. From Schoolhouse to Statehouse. Citv Hall to the Pentagon by David Osborne and Ted Gaebler. Addisoa Wesley, $22.95 JAMES FALLOWS ("A Case for Reform") is The Atlantic's Washington editor and the author of National Defense (\^%\) and More Like Us (1989). Fallows is writing a book about the future of East Asia. ------- THIS BOOK may turn out to be enormously influential. Ten years ago every businessman in America seemed to be reading In Search of Excellence, by Thomas Peters and Robert Waterman. I doubt that Rein- venting Government will enjoy the same runaway commercial success; its in- tended audience—politicians and gov- ernment managers—is not quite as large or as well funded as Peters and Waterman's was. But in spirit, approach, and general elan, the two projects are quite similar. In Search of Excel- lence examined the most suc- cessful U.S. corporations to find out what traits they shared, especially traits of corporate culture. Reinventing Government examines state and local gov- ernments, plus a few federal bureaucracies, to find out what constitutes governmental suc- cess and to see how the lessons of success could be applied where governments now fail. David Osborne (who has written occasionally for The At- lantic) has spent much of the past decade studying state and local governments. His previ- ous book. Laboratories of Democ- racy, which described innova- tion at the state level, was a warm-up for this one. Ted Gae- bler has been a city manager in several places, most recent- ly Visalia. California. The two maintain a studiously nonparti- san pose, and the book's jacket has a carefully balanced set of blurbs from Republican and Democratic officials. William Weld, the Republican governor of Massachusetts, says that the book will be "required reading in the Weld administration." Bill Clinton says more expansively that it "should be read by every elected official in America." Os- borne has been a campaign adviser to Clinton in this year's presidential race, and at one stage he served as a surro- gate for Clinton. (In January, when Gennifer Flowers made her allegations concerning Clinton, Osborne was pit- ted against the New York gossip colum- nist Cindy Adams on the television show Larry King Live. It was up to that point the most bizarre pairing of the campaign, as the tweedy, staid-seeming Osborne had to discuss the nuances of the "love nest" with a woman who exclaimed that the allegations might be good for Clinton because being a "great lover" is "part of the presidential resume.") If Clinton—or, for that matter. Weld— should become President, the Osborne- Gaeblcr message would have obvious importance. Even without top-down support, it has already attracted a cult- like following in state and local govern- ments. Moreover, the impact of the book's argument is almost completely positive. If governments throughout the country ran the way this book sug- gests, the United States would be a happier and better-governed place. Considered as an instrument of politi- cal reform, therefore. Reinventing Gov- ernment deserves attention and praise— even though considered strictly as a book it leaves me quite critical and O; SBOR\E \SD Gaebler's initial achievement is to stand on an unfamiliar side of a great politi- cal divide. This is the divide that sepa- rates theory from practice, politics from governance. It is the gap between the government's intentions, as reflected in speeches and six-point plans, and its effect, as reflected in what agencies and bureaucrats do all dav. Virtually all of American journalism is focused on the intentions side of this divide—on the struggle to pass a bill, win an elec- tion, confirm a nominee. When we read about the effect side, it's usually be- cause of an outright scandal, such as the S&L collapse. Journalists are uncomfortable trying to make subjective judgments about whether a program has worked well or poorly, and they often find the whole subject of implementa- tion boring. The division between in- tentions and effect creates a class division among politi- cians. Senators can remain al- most completely on the inten- tions side. They tell us their plans for solving this or that problem, which usually means the legislation they would support, but they arc rarely re- sponsible for carrying plans out. Governor0 of very large states—in practice, only New York and California—can get honorary membership in the intentions club and be ex- cused from talking much about — 14 — ------- implementation Ronald Reagan was able to rise above the workaday details of the state government in Sacramento, as he later did with the national gov- ernment in Washington Mario Cuo- mo's struggles with the New York state government have been portrayed, by Cuomo and a sympathetic press, as a lamentable nuisance that has kept him from talking about the big picture Osbornc and Gaebler concentrate exclusively on the delivery end of government, although their findings naturally have implications for how laws should be drafted m the future Their most significant accomplishment is to integrate many hundreds of exam- ples into a basically new concept of how government should function. This concept is organized into ten chapters, reflecting the ten operating principles that distinguish a new "en- trepreneurial" form of government But they all seem to be corollaries of one central principle- Government should use incentives, so that people want to do certain things, rathei than using rules and regulations that force people to comply This is also the main idea of the New Paradigm movement, an on- again-off-agam bipartisan effort to re- think government. The Old Paradigm, in this view, was born almost a century ago, during the Progressive era, when "political reform" mainly meant gov- ernment efforts to regulate the mighty business trusts, plus the breaking up of corrupt political machines. (Progressive reformers, like many New Paradigm- ists today, were from the "better class" of people, who looked balefully on the tawdry instincts of ordinary politicians.) The centralized regulatory approach got bigger and stronger through the New Deal, the Second World War. and the postwar welfare, entitlement, and national-security state Everyone in every party now agrees that the system is too big, costly, and cumbersome The New Paradigm argument is that the system can't be saved by doing more of the same, and that, contrary to Ronald Reagan's claims, it's not sensi- ble simply to do less of the same The government must do something differ- ent—which brings us back to this book Osbornc and Gacblcr say that by us- ing more incentives and fewer regula- tions, the government can applv the automatic-feedback mechanisms of the market to its own operations Incen- tives are self-enforcing, if people can save money by changing their behav- ior, thev usually change Regulations. bv contrast, must be enforced You need inspectors to make sure that com- panies are complying, and internal in- spectors to make sure that the regular inspectors have not been bribed. Os- borne and Gaebler provide more illus- trations, in more permutations, of the incentive-based approach than I can hint at here. For example (although this is not in- cluded in the book), for nearly a gener- ation the U S government has tried to save gasoline by dictating fuel-efficien- cy standards. Under the Energy Policy and Conservation Act of 1975, each manufacturer's fleet had to meet a steadily rising "corporate average fuel economy" level- 20 miles per gallon in 1980, 27.5 miles per gallon by 1985. This is, in effect, the King Canute ap- proach to conservation: the sovereign orders the cars to become more effi- cient But by the mid-1980s, the price of gasoline was dropping—which left manufacturers with no economic in- centive to invest in expensive new en- gine technology and customers no in- centive to buy expensive new fuel-efficient cars. The law did, howev- er, give manufacturers a powerful in- centive to lobby Congress and the De- partment of Transportation, in hopes of overturning the law or postponing the deadlines. The incentive approach would be simply to raise the tax on gasoline. In the short run that would help cover some of the real cost to the nation of using gas—the environmental impact, the effect on the trade balance (im- ported oil now accounts for at least half the trade deficit), the need or tempta- tion to fight wars in the Middle East. In the longer run it would transform the car companies and the American public into natural allies in the struggle to create more-efficient cars. When gasoline costs three 10 four dollars a gallon, as it does in most other First World countries, people find ways to conserve. The same principle applies to other forms of conservation. You see manv fewer bottles on the roadside in states with heavy bottle-deposit fees than m states with strict anti-littcring laws Much of the book is about the inter- nal mechanics of bureaucratic opera- tion, and ic shows great canniness about how regulations and incentives really work. Here a memorable illustra- tion concerns what The Washington Monthly magazine, in a pioneering arti- cle on the subject twenty years ago, called "The Spring Spending Spree." As a government agency nears the end of a fiscal year (which used to occur in June for the federal government), it has every reason to spend every penny that's left in the budget. Under most budgeting systems it can't keep for the future the money it doesn't spend now—and in fact, underspending this year will usually mean a smaller bud- get next year, since obviously the de- partment didn't need all the money it had received. The government as a whole may think it wants to reduce spending, but each component part has an incentive to do just the reverse. The answer, as Osborne and Gaebler sensi- bly explain, lies in changing the incen- tives, through muhi-vcar budgets, more-flexible budgets that allow man- agers ro move moncv from one account to another, even encouraging agencies to open monevmakmg, businesslike operations. Some of these reforms can bring new problems of their own For in- stance, the Customs Service is allowed to sell the boats and airplanes it confis- cates from drug smugglers, and to use the proceeds for its own budget. Some lawyers have complained about an overzealous approach to confiscation. Osbornc and Gaebler carefully sift through such consequences, as part of their generally sophisticated- sounding understanding of bureau- cratic realities. Rather than paraphrasing the entire book, let me simply say that it is full of sensible, specific recommendations. Politicians and government officials re- ally should read and underline in it. But I'm not sure that manv other peo- ple should. ONE OBJECTION co this book is on the purelv conceptual level; ic offers a view of government that defines away some of our largest, most difficult political problems The book's working assumption is that the Ameri- can public, through its government, al- ways means to do the right thing, and that it's held back onK b\ specific fail- ures and barriers—Uultv information, bad incentives A suspiciously large ------- number or supporting anecdotes are drawn from cities like Orlando. Phoenix, and Sunnvvale. California, in Silicon Valle\ In such places the politi- cal world may operate as Osborne and Gaebler sav. and the mam drama of government mav be the struggle to serve its people more efficiently. But in manv other political arenas, from the local to the federal level, government works on more Hobbesian premises. It takes moncv from the politically weak and gives it to the politically strong. No one opposes the concept of efficiency, but in practice many parts of the gov- ernment are designed to be noneffi- cicnt—that is. to preserve jobs. The major problem in federal politics is not that the government is perplexed about how to administer programs. It is that the public demands more in ser- vices and benefits than it is willing to pav for in taxes. Osborne and Gaebler do not explicit- Iv denv that anv of these complications exist, but an implied faux optimism runs throughout the book: If onlv we knew all the facts, we'd never make these foolish mistakes. For instance, in illustrating the (unexceptionable) point that it's cheaper to prevent a problem than to solve it after it has happened. they mention that thousands of young black men are killed or wounded by gunfire everv vear. It would be more sensible and efficient, they suggest, to get rid of the guns than to buitd more jails. You don't say! Hev, maybe it would also be more sensible if the Arabs and Israelis made friends, rather than fighting so much! But perhaps there's something involved in the Mid- dle East, and in America's reliance on guns, that goes beyond faultv cost-ben- efit analysis. Osborne and Gaebler might properly respond that they're not trying to solve all the world's problems, it's enough to help solve a few. as their book will. But a sort of chirpmess in the book's out- look is connected to its most serious lit- erarv and intellectual defect. I trust the conclusions that the authors reach mainly because the conclusions con- form to mv experience as a reporter and in the government. But I don't trust all che evidence thev present. This book sometimes seems to be the work of salesmen, not reporters or analysts The anecdotes that jam the pages have an unvarying narrative structure. A government program is failing The administrator stops and thinks things over the entrepreneurial wav He takes the N'ew Paradigm approach and— presto1—"the results speak for them- selves" (a phrase that is worked to death in the book) I don't doubt that something like this sequence happened—that the pro- grams worked better after the change—just as I don't doubt that peo- ple who go to Dale Carnegie courses generally become better speakers. But the tone of the book often reminded me of an Amwav or a Dale Carnegie sales pitch, or a TV mfomercial. Every story is a success storv. Before the change everything is bad. After the change everything is good. Characters have no function or nuance except to put the New Paradigm into effect. I re- spect Osborne and Gaebler as theorists about the government, but I do not trust them as reporters—that is. people who will observe critically and open- mmdedly and tell vou everything they have seen. Mv suspicions are heightened by their handling of a case I happen to know about firsthand. Osborne and Gaebler present a long and 100 percent favorable profile of William Creech, a retired Air Force general who from 1978 to 1984 ran the Tactical Air Com- mand, often called TAG TAG was the fighter-plane branch of the Air Force. Before Creech took command, it had terrible operational and morale prob- lems. Large numbers of planes sat in the hangars, for lack of spare parts. Pi- lots could not get enough flying hours to remain proficient. By the time Creech left, things looked much better for TAG. More planes were operational; more pilots were in the air. ("The re- sults speak for themselves.") Osborne and Gaebler present this as a clear-cut morality play. Before Creech arrived. TAG had been overcentral- ized—that is. Old Paradigm. Repair work was handled by one big, imper- sonal, centralized depot, which slowed things down and eroded morale. Creech believed in decentralization and incentives. He got rid of the cen- tral repair depot and made each squad- ron responsible for its own mainte- nance. He made sure that the head mechanic's name was painted on each plane's nose, right next to the pilot's, to svmbohzc their bond. He emphasized the intangible elements of pride: "He had every building in the TAC com- ------- mand given a fresh coat of paint, and he invested in carpets and furniture and new barracks." Most impressive of all. according to Osborne and Gaebler, " T.\C accomplished all of this Kith no new money, no man people, and a vork force with less experience than the wort fane m place througfr the years of decline." Osborne and Gaebler chose to itali- cize this passage in their book, which is unfortunate, because it is both flatly untrue and broadly misleading. T\C's turnaround had everything to do with money. The "years of decline" in the late 1970s were due principally to dis- honest budgeting. The Air Force, along with the other services, chroni- cally lowballed its estimates of how much a new fighter plane or missile would cost, in order to get more planes authorized. Inevitably the planes cost more than "expected." and the ser- vices made up the difference by raid- ing the opcracions-and-mamcenance account. The result was the bad old TAG that Osborne and Gaebler de- scribe, with too little fuel and too few spare parts. Creech's tenure coincided with the early years of the Reagan boom in de- fense spending. The reforms Creech made were undoubtedly important, but so was the money. The TAG budget went up 44 percent during Creech's tenure, which included a big increase in the operations-and-maimenance account. It would not have undermined Os- borne and Gaebler's case to show that the story had complications. No matter how much moncv is involved, it still makes sense to decentralize authority, as Creech did. It would not have hurt to hint that the man himself might have had complicated motivations. Be- cause Creech's story seems to fit their argument, Osborne and Gaebler pre- sent him as a one-dimensional hero ("a man who remains a legend within the U S. Air Force, even m retirement"). Thev discuss Creech in a way that sounds as though they have talked with him personally—"Creech later confid- ed," "Creech asked " I don't know whether thev actually talked to Creech —their reference notes show that most of the quotations come from one of Creech's published speeches and a magazine profile—but if thev did, they could hardly have avoided noticing the droll side of his emphasis on pride in appearance. The carpet in his office was so thick that one's shoes practically disappeared in it. His assistants were so ramrod-straight and wrinkle-free that it was casv to imagine the daily panic as they prepared to meet the general's eye. Osborne and Gaebler's case would have been even more powerful if they'd been able to admit that real peo- ple, not earthbound saints, put it into effect. D ------- Bureaucracy busters BY DON L BOROUGHS ------- Business is teaching government how to give taxpayers more for their money Xerox senior manager WC En- mon spends his days training work learns in customer satisfac- tion, quality measurement and process redesign. That should come as no sur- prise. The Stamford. Conn., corpora- tion has been using such total-quality concepts for 10 years to fight Japanese competition and win back market share, from a low of 10 3 percent of the U.S. copier market in 1985 to 17.6 percent in 1991. But Enmon is not working with Xerox employees; he is putting these corporate tools in the hands of the 226.000 civil servants and executives of the Texas state government in Austin. The Xerox-paid special adviser to Dem- ocratic Gov Ann Richards acknowl- edges that government cannot be run exactly as a business, but he believes the same techniques that helped improve copiers will belter the efficiency and service of government. "We're talking about delivering service that meets the customers' needs," says Enmon. "It doesn't matter whether it's a widget or a driver's license." From Fort Lauderdale, Fla., to Fort Collins. Colo., from Oregon to Ohio, state and local governments have begun seizing upon the business concepts (hat American companies began using in the 1980s to reform their own stifling corporate bureaucracies. The new buzzwords of the board- room — empowerment, customer-driven, team- work and especially total- quality management- are increasingly becom- ing the mantra in council chambers, statehouses and pockets of the feder- al bureaucracy. In the past six months alone, 1,000 inquiries have poured into the offices of the Public Sector Quality EMPOWERIN0INI FRONT UNI Building inspectors Pnoena CORPORATE TACTIC: Mov- ing decisions to tower levels for speed, efficiency PUT INTO PMCTKC: Fteid inspectors have been trained to make building- code decisions that were once passed five levels up ;, the chaw of command. \ Decisions that used to „ take a week are made on ^thespot. ITr 11 ./i • .-* i .• < I Improvement Network, a Madison, Wis., group that teaches business principles to government leaders. And the platforms of candidates in eight of the 12 guberna- torial elections this month had planks featuring entrepreneur- • • ial government. Intensifying this trend was the publication this year of "Reinventing Government,", by David Osborne and Ted Gae- bler, which spotlights many of the cities, states and federal agencies where practices honed in the private sector are sav- ing taxpayers' dollars and making the phrase "gov- ernment work" a label of pride, not derision. "We still think of.government as monopoly, bureaucra- cy, hierarchy," says Meryl Libbey of Harvard's Ken- — 19 — ------- • BUSINESS nedy School of Government, "but that's not the way it's happening among the more innovative local govern- ments. There really is a sea change taking place." Many observers believe the tide is about to sweep Washington as well. In Ar- kansas, Gov. Bill Clinton es- tablished what is widely con- sidered the most advanced total-quality-management program in state govern- ment, enlisting the assistance of a local Eastman Kodak di- vision. Quality executives in Little Rock brag that Clinton even left the campaign trail for a day to attend a meeting of his "quality team" in May. The president-elect has also consulted repeatedly with Osborne, whose book Clin- ton has praised (box. Page 55). While the next leader of the federal bureaucracy has been short on specific plans, his national economic strategy promises 3 percent administrative savings in every agency and a 100,000-position reduction in the bureaucracy, enhanced by a "shift from top-down bureaucracy to entrepre- neurial government." Clinton could find an unexpected ally in House Republican Whip Newt Gingrich, who last week in a speech before Republican governors op- timistically estimated that total-quality management could save 15 to 25 percent of the cost of government over five years. Government waste. Falling profits woke business up to the need for change, but government is responding to tax-re- volting voters who refuse to pay another dollar for less than a dollar's worth of service. Seventy percent of Americans believe that when something is run by the government, it is usually inefficient and wasteful, according to a recent Times Mirror poll. Business, too, has tired of paying more and getting less, which helps explain why such companies as Xerox and Kodak have been so eager to share their expertise. Florida Power & Light, the only American company to win Ja- pan's coveted Deming Prize for quality, for example, is acting as a mentor for the Florida government's efforts to reform its bureaucracy. "Whatever we can do that helps the state." explains Dale But- ler, an FP&L supervisor, "could have a tremendous impact on our tax costs." The privatization movement has also stirred bureaucrats to the realization that their monopoly is no longer safe. A survey by the National Conference of State Leg- islatures found that near- ly 60 percent of legisla- tors now favor privatizing traditional government activities. The public sec- tor is increasingly faced with the option of learn- ing from business or be- ing replaced by it. "Gov- ernment has to change the way we operate," says Steve Burkett, city man- ager of Fort Collins. "We are going to have to be- come more productive." To make real produc- tivity gains, politicians are learning, corpora- tions had to change their very shape. Executives became obsessed with flattening their organiza- tions in the 1980s as they came to realize that in- formation and decisions were slowed and garbled as they moved up and down each additional layer of management. The solution was to put more decisions in the hands of lower- level employees who can act on them quickly, while eliminating the need for several layers of supervisors. At Motoro- la's semiconductor division in Phoenix, for example, "empowered teams" now set their own production schedules as PLEASING THE CUSTOMER Traffic police Reno, Nev. CORPORATE TACTK: Ori- enting work around cus- tomer desires PUT MTO PRACTICE: Reno police found that simpfy issuing more tickets made residents angry without reducing acci- dents. After soliciting the advice of their "custom- en, " traffic cops found more targeted and less offensive ways to control traffic, such as this speed-monitoring sign. Citizens are happier, and accidents are falling— down 20 percent in the first half of 1992. they prepare batches of specialized computer chips. Because such deci- sions have been imple- mented without passing through the chain of command, most Motor- ola units in Phoenix have eliminated at least two layers of management. Executives credit the im- proved productivity and responsiveness with helping reverse Motoro- la's slide in worldwide semiconductor market stiare, which has grown over the past two years, while revenues have risen $600 million. Flattened. Across town. Phoenix Mayor Paul Johnson isn't much worried about market share, but he is equally enthusiastic about alter- ing the hierarchical bu- reaucracy of city government. Phoenix has studied Motorola's success, and Johnson now boasts that the city serves more people today with 450 fewer em- ployees than it had three years ago, largely because of cuts in senior- and middle-management positions. The mayor is particularly emphatic that de- cisions not get passed from desk to desk, a lesson he learned battling red 1 ------- • BUSINESS tape as the owner of a local construction firm. In the past, for example, when Phoenix building in- spectors came across uncer- tain situations that required them to interpret the build- ing code, they would routine- ly refer the question up the chain of command to an as- sistant director, five layers above. Developers would have to put parts of a con- struction project on hold while waiting for a decision, which was usually based on the advice of the inspector anyway. Today, inspectors make similar decisions on the spot, or refer them to their immediate supervisors, sav- ing developers tens of thou- sands of dollars. Such im- provements have led to a drop in customer complaints at the Development Services*] Department, despite^a 23 • percent reduction in staff. In most government agencies, the number of complaints coming over the transom is not followed very closely, but a new vanguard of entrepreneurial govern- ments is taking up the customer revolu- tion begun by corporate America in the early 1980s. In Phoenix, every depart- ment has conducted customer focus groups in the past six months. The city of Fort Lauderdale hopes to polish its im- age by putting parking enforcers, who often deal with irate tourists, through customer training. Fort Collins annually sends out surveys to 1,000 of its citizens. Says City Manager Burkett, "We can have all kinds of data about how great our library is, but if our customers think it's lousy, we're not achieving our goal." Productive police. If the Reno, Nev., Police Department had been interested in customer service in the early 1980s, it would have found an ideal model close at hand. Harrah's Casino Hotels was then developing what is perhaps the most ex- tensive customer-service data collection system in its industry. Nearly 2,000 visi- tors are surveyed by phone each year after returning home from Harrah's, while thousands more are interviewed on site. The results are tracked monthly. But the Reno police were more interested in writing tickets than reading surveys. Ac- cidents rose in the early and mid-1980s. Reno cops, armed with 21 new radar units, more than doubled the number of traffic citations. But the accident rate refused to budge, and in 1986 and 1987 SCOn OCXDSMITH CQO '. S angry citizens turned down two ballot-box pro- posals that would have in- creased police funding. With some advice from Harrah's, Reno police have begun listening to their customers. More than a thousand citizens are surveyed each year by telephone. As a result of their advice, many inter- sections have been im- proved. Police are no lon- ger encouraged to write tickets in random loca- tions, instead targeting sites with large numbers of accidents or customer traffic complaints. To- day, 9 of 10 Reno citizens approve of the depart- ment, up from 4 of 10 in 1988. And though ticket- ing is down, the accident CUTTING WASTE FROM THE PROCESS Tree-trimming crews Cleveland CORPORATE TACTIC: Rede- signing the work process in search of efficiencies PUT MTO PRACTICE: When business consultants ex- amined the way Cleve- land cut trees, they found crews spending almost as much time driving from site to site, stuck in traf- fic jams and waiting at the gasoline pump as they spent trimming trees. The problem was not la- ziness but organization. With a better schedule and division of labor, productivity rose more than 40 percent. rate fell 20 percent in the first six months of 1992. In their pursuit of satisfied custom- ers, American companies in the 1980s sought out the teachings of W. Edwards Deming, the quality consultant many Japanese industrialists credit with their success. One of the key tenets of his philosophy of total-quality management is music to the ears of government workers weary of the stigma of the lazy bureaucrat: Of any problem with quali- ty or efficiency, 85 per- cent or more lies within the process, not the peo- ple who work it. Bob Garda of McKinsey & Co. finds that 10 to 20 percent of the costs can be wrung out of a proc- ess—in business or gov- ernment—by redesign- ing it. "We have good people in government trapped in bad systems," says Gaebler. "They have to go." Out on a limb. The tree trimmers of the city of Cleveland would agree. For as long as anyone could remember, several tree crews had criss- crossed the city daily, pulled away from rou- tine trimming tasks to handle emergency re- quests. When Garda studied their movements in the late 1980s, he found that they were actually working with trees only five hours of the day, spending much of the other three hours in traffic. Garda recommended that one crew be as- signed to emergencies, while the others stick to their assigned trimming jobs all day. As a result of such changes, the department now services more trees with 18 people than it could in the past J ------- with 27. Productivity has risen 43 per- cent while citizen complaints have fall- en 63 percent. In the front-running governments that are using Dealing's total-quality management seriously, government workers themselves are finding ways to improve the efficiency of their work sys- tems. Arkansas has sent more than 5,000 of its 32,000 employees-from Gover- nor Clinton to garage mechanics— to I'/fc- to three-day training ses- sions where they are taught how to chart work processes, measure results and redesign for effi- ciency. One team of workers from the motor-vehicles of- fice studied how to speed the turnaround of license- plate renewals, which were generat- ing weekly complaints from citizens who were waiting up to three weeks for their certificates and decals. The team decid- ed that rather than saving up re- newal requests so that new regis- tration certificates could be batch-printed on the weekend, they could simply attach computer-coded slickers to the old certificates as they arrived. All renewals are now mailed out within a day, while the department saves $10,000 a year on forms alone and even more on printing. If Clinton promises to do for Ameri- ca what he has done for Arkansas, how large a revolution could he stir in the halls of the Washington bureaucracy? The new president may find himself too preoccupied with reviving the stagnant economy to make any early, bold moves toward creating a more entrepreneurial federal government. And if he does, he will find all manner of obstacles in his way. Th§ federal bureaucracy is an orga- nization far larger than General Motors and IBM combined, with a civil-service system rewarding a manager for running a bigger staff, not a more efficient one. Nonetheless, at the Federal Quality Institute, an appendage of the Office of Personnel Management, the change in leadership has sparked hope. Director Don Mizaur, whose staff has spent five years as the federal government's princi- pal cheerleader and catalyst for total- quality management, says that Washing- ton is "not seeing the bottom-line, measurable results that some people ex- pected." The private sector has turned in more impressive results, adds Mizaur. largely because in companies "these things are primarily led by the CEO." But expectations are rising once again in Washington; a new CEO is on his way from Little Rock to the White House. • ------- THE WASHINGTON POST THE FEDERAL PAGE CLINTON'S DOMESTIC AGENDA AREAS UNDER CONSIDERATION BY TRANSITION TEAM: •^Reinventing government j National service j Welfare overhaul j Children and family issues j Crime and justice j Education and training G Community development j Housing and agriculture G Civil rights and labor G Campaign finance G Technology and related issues 10 PROPOSALS FOR CLINTON FROM A FAVORITE THINK TANK • Create a performance-based federal budget. • Overhaul the civil service system. • Create a labor-management council, negotiate a "grand bargain" with federal employee unions, and cut the bureaucra- cy through attrition by 200,000 jobs. • Enact a "sunset" law and commission to eliminate federal programs and regu- lations. • Pass a non-tax revenue act creat- ing incentives for federal agencies and employees to raise new revenue. • Create an "innovation fund" so that federal agencies could borrow for invest- ments that would increase revenue or cut costs. • Cut spending for designated depart- ments such as Agriculture, Commerce and Housing and Urban Development by 6 percent annually for four years to force their transformation from ",-owing" to "steering" organizations. • Merge the Census Bureau and other appropriate statistical agencies into a new National Information Agency. • Enact a truth-in-spending law that would force elected and appointed offi- cials to confront the long-term implica- tions of their decisions. • Inject further competition into the de- livery of federal services. SOURCE: "Mandate tof Change," Progressive Policy Institute THE WASHINGTON f>OSr ------- THE WASHINGTON POST MOINDAV, DECEMBER 14,1992 The Promise To Transform Government By Stephen Barr WjUnngton Post SuH Wirier The womes are familiar: Gov- ernment is sluggish, suffering from bureaucratic bloat. It is full of rules and regulations and chains of com- mand. It can't keep up in the real world. Now, more than ever, change is mandatory. For Bill Clinton, the remedy is "reinventing government." The words served not only as a cam- paign slogan but as the foundation for his promise "to change the way the federal government operates." How that promise can be carried out is under study by the transi- tion's domestic policy team. Its leading advocate, David Osborne, has been asked to take part in the Little Rock, Ark., economic summit beginning today, focusing, he said. on "the connection between rein- venting government and creating job growth." The transition team's work has been guided in many ways by Os- borne. who wrote a chapter on the topic in "Mandate for Change," a policy blueprint for the Clinton ad- ministration released last week by the Progressive Policy Institute, a think tank that has helped shape several Clinton initiatives. In his chapter, Osborne urges the next president to "create a high-level reinventing government group within the White House." The phrase "reinventing govern- ment" covers almost everything that Clinton talked about during the campaign. It's a way to raise money and cut costs, a way to link govern- ment management and systems to big issues like health care and "fair share" taxation. It includes Clin- ton's pledge to cut 100.000 federal jobs through attrition and to require federal executives to achieve a 3 percent across-the-board adminis- trative saving in every agency. It's also how Clinton can change the behavior of the bureaucracy by injecting it with an entrepreneurial spirit that provides new incentives for federal workers. To skeptics, however, "reinvent- ing government" is just a buzzword that, allows Clinton to redefine tough political issues as bureaucrat- ic problems and to beguile taxpay- ers with visions of more govern- ment for less money. "When we can't deal with the big issues, we start dealing with the management," said H. George Fre- derickson, a University of Kansas public administration professor. "The big issues are housing and health care. It takes dedication and political consensus-building and dol- lars and skills with federalism to deal with those problems. What you've got in Washington is the wrong-problems problem." But Osborne and his supporters say they believe it is time to con- centrate on how government works, because they view this as central to helping solve the nation's long-term economic problems. For example, Osborne said, the government has set up job training, vocational education and welfare systems that began decades ago. Because of the way the government provides money for vocational ed- ucation, he said, "you get a system that continues to teach things in some cases long after those skills become fairly irrevelant to the mar- ketplace." The government's systems can be restructured only by "changing the basic incentives that drive pub- lic institutions," Osborne said in an interview. The budget system re- wards waste and encourages waste, because if you don't spend every penny every fiscal year you lose it and get less next year. So if you're smart, you spend it." As he explains in his "Mandate for Change" chapter: "Most public programs are monopolies whose customers cannot go elsewhere for a better deal. Most are funded ac- cording to their inputs—how many children are eligible for a given pro- gram, how many families are poor enough to qualify for public assist- ance—rather than according to their outcomes, or results." — 24 — ------- Osborne doesn't fault govern- ment workers so much as he does the way government manages. "The marching orders given to the bureaucracy often require them to suspend common sense." he said. "If your personnel system makes it difficult to move people around as needs change, it won't move them around." Ralph Whitehead, a University of Massachusetts professor who studies the nation's work force, said he thinks the Clinton administration can use "reinventing government" efforts as "an experimental show- case for new ways of organizing work." If the federal government be- comes an innovator, "it can gain new stature in the country. If it doesn't step up, it will be one more sign that the Beltway is out of touch," he said. The erosion of the middle class over the last decade shows why it is important to think about how work is organized, Whitehead said. "The vanous levels of the public sector spend hundred of millions of dollars on manpower, mainly for education, and hundreds of millions on tech- nology," he said, "but spend very little on establishing the work sys- tems that make sure that the man- power and the technology will get hooked up to one another in ways that are efficient and equitable." Osborne's proposed solutions have been outlined in detail in a book. "Reinventing Government," that he wrote with Ted Gaebler, a former city manager of Visalia, Calif., and. Vandalia, Ohio. The book, which appeared on best-seller lists earlier this year and has sold 70.000 copies, gives examples of innovative government at the local and state levels and concludes that "the central failure of government today is one of means, not ends." Under Osborne's framework, a "mission-driven government," for example, would overhaul its budget system and adopt performance- based budgeting. Performance mea- sures would be developed for all federal programs, and the budget would specify performance targets and reward agencies that exceeded those targets. "Politically, it requires a change of mindset on the part of people in Congress," Osborne said. "They're used to controlling the inputs— you'll spend so much on this base or that base—and they're used to dis- tributing pork. A performance- based system eliminates some of the micro-management up front." Congress, however, has seen several similar overhaul proposals before. For example, Osborne urges a "sunset law" that would re- quire reapproval of all government regulations—a practice that could create political chaos when such popular programs as Social Security came up for renewal. And Congress has been moving to foster better management in the government. Sen. William V. Roth Jr. (R-Del.) expects to reintroduce legislation next year that would re- quire federal agencies to develop program performance plans, specify goals and report on the results. Sen. John Glenn (D-Ohio), chairman of the Governmental Affairs Com- mittee, has helped create new agen- cy financial officers and reviews and strengthened the role of inspectors general. James Colvard, a former deputy director of the Office of Personnel Management, said there is "some real profit to be made" by rethink- ing many of the current bureaucrat- ic premises. "The federal system is highly overstructured at the moment," he said, leading to situations where the official interpreting a federal rule effectively makes decisions for line managers and employees but "is not held accountable." He added, "It's the kind of thing that occurs when you have complex processes There are no villains, and that's the part that makes it so frustrating." -- 25 — ------- |