{"id":64183,"date":"2021-04-29T12:41:02","date_gmt":"2021-04-29T02:41:02","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/?p=64183"},"modified":"2021-04-29T12:41:02","modified_gmt":"2021-04-29T02:41:02","slug":"building-better-bureaucracies","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/building-better-bureaucracies\/","title":{"rendered":"Building better bureaucracies"},"content":{"rendered":"
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On 8 April, French President Emmanuel Macron<\/a> announced that he will close<\/a> France\u2019s elite postgraduate school for training public leaders, the \u00c9cole Nationale d\u2019Administration (ENA). Macron, himself an \u00e9narque<\/em> (as graduates are known), says he wants to encourage equal opportunity and national excellence, and respond better to the challenges of Covid-19. But eliminating ENA will likely represent only a negligible step toward this goal.<\/p>\n

Ironically, ENA was established in 1945 by General Charles de Gaulle to break up the French elite and overturn a system of patronage and spoils that had produced a corrupt and inefficient public administration. Admission to the school was thus subject to competitive examination, with those winning places offered a salary for their studies.<\/p>\n

Similarly, the United Kingdom\u2019s Northcote\u2013Trevelyan reforms a century earlier\u2014which drew on Sir Charles Trevelyan\u2019s experience rooting out corruption in Britain\u2019s Indian civil service, as well as on the example of imperial China\u2014sought to introduce recruitment by open, competitive examination and make promotion merit-based. Subsequently, countries from the United States, Japan and China to Ghana and Nigeria have sought to embed meritocracy in their public administration, many by using examinations.<\/p>\n

The problem today is that the examination system no longer serves to identify talent and equalise opportunity, but instead has fuelled a growing market in expensive private preparatory education that benefits wealthier students. So, while 29% of ENA students in the 1950s came from working-class backgrounds, by 2003, it was only 9%<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Likewise, standardised US college-entry tests, originally intended to help top universities diversify their applicant pool beyond rich students from exclusive prep schools, are now seen as \u2018a proxy for privilege<\/a>\u2019. This year, a revolution took place when Covid-19 disruptions meant that university admissions departments had to make test results optional. This led to a huge increase in applications to top schools and to more diverse freshman classes<\/a>. The University of California, Los Angeles, for example, reported a 48% increase in African American applicants, a 33% increase in Hispanic applicants and a 16% increase in Native American applicants.<\/p>\n

In the UK, pupils from private fee-paying schools had until recently been seven times more likely<\/a> to gain a place at Oxford or Cambridge than those from non-selective state schools. Oxford now uses contextual data<\/a> that considers students\u2019 individual backgrounds to understand their achievements, which is increasing undergraduate diversity<\/a>.<\/p>\n

Then there is the problem of elite universities themselves relying heavily on examinations to test, drill and rank their students, as ENA famously does (Macron came fifth in his cohort). A more effective approach would focus on the interpersonal skills vital for good public service, such as learning to mobilise, support and encourage others, and discerning people\u2019s abilities. A diverse public service will be a stronger one only if those in charge know how to make diversity a strength.<\/p>\n

ENA was a solution to two major challenges. In 1945, France needed to attract the best possible talent into its public administration to rebuild after World War II. Equally, the government needed to comprehend and represent a wide range of citizens, rich and poor, and prove that it could serve them better than communism could.<\/p>\n

Today, many governments face a similar task. To build back rapidly from the pandemic (as China is already doing), they must step in after decades of standing back. And they must rebuild public trust in the face of a powerful populist backlash against \u2018elitist\u2019 government.<\/p>\n

Professional schools\u2019 admissions should therefore reflect what the public sector needs rather than what is administratively convenient. This might mean relying less on test scores and more on alternative measures of ability, which take time, experienced judgement and adequate resources to develop and implement. Educating public leaders will also require public-sector organisations to invest in supporting their employees\u2019 studies, and extensive fundraising so that a diverse range of students can attend.<\/p>\n

Keeping these leaders in public service is another challenge. When asked why \u00e9narques<\/em>\u00a0are increasingly choosing the private sector over public administration, one recent student said<\/a> that French government ministries were employing big consultancy firms to make strategic decisions that\u00a0ENA graduates once made.<\/p>\n

The French government has signed at least 575 contracts with private consultancies<\/a> since October 2018, for services ranging from developing economic recovery plans to charting a zero-carbon transition to helping combat Covid-19: McKinsey & Company, not the health ministry, seems to be leading the country\u2019s vaccine rollout<\/a>. Likewise, the UK\u2019s Covid-19 test-and-trace system was set up almost entirely by consultants and outsourcing firms. The UK government has even turned to consultants to advise it on how to reduce its reliance on consultants<\/a>.<\/p>\n

If governments give the exciting policy work to outside firms, some of the best civil servants will leave. By contrast, smart public agencies, like those in Singapore, give strategically important assignments to their best employees to retain them and develop their skills.<\/p>\n

And when politicians and their advisers denigrate \u2018bureaucrats\u2019 or \u2018the blob<\/a>\u2019 (as a former UK government adviser described the British civil service), they may well be creating a self-fulfilling prophecy. If the narrative is that the public sector is useless, what hope is there that it will attract or keep outstanding people?<\/p>\n

Britain\u2019s successful Covid-19 vaccine rollout has highlighted the benefits of keeping government in the driver\u2019s seat, bolstered by private-sector leaders willing to help pro bono<\/a>. This arrangement combines the best of the public sector (including factors like people\u2019s trust in the institutions that are vaccinating them) with the advantages of a venture-capital approach to assessing risk and allocating resources.<\/p>\n

Three weeks after Macron\u2019s announcement, it\u2019s now clear that he is not abolishing ENA but rather reducing its annual intake (from 80 students to 40) and renaming it. But the challenge for France is to build a public administration ambitious enough to attract people of purpose and talent, but also open enough to recruit from a much wider cross-section of society. Tinkering with ENA will not achieve this.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

On 8 April, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that he will close France\u2019s elite postgraduate school for training public leaders, the \u00c9cole Nationale d\u2019Administration (ENA). Macron, himself an \u00e9narque (as graduates are known), says he …<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":522,"featured_media":64189,"comment_status":"closed","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"_mi_skip_tracking":false,"footnotes":""},"categories":[1],"tags":[1905,291,162,344],"class_list":["post-64183","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-general","tag-emmanuel-macron","tag-france","tag-governance","tag-public-service"],"acf":[],"yoast_head":"\nBuilding better bureaucracies | The Strategist<\/title>\n<meta name=\"robots\" content=\"index, follow, max-snippet:-1, max-image-preview:large, max-video-preview:-1\" \/>\n<link rel=\"canonical\" href=\"https:\/\/www.aspistrategist.ru\/building-better-bureaucracies\/\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:locale\" content=\"en_US\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:type\" content=\"article\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:title\" content=\"Building better bureaucracies | The Strategist\" \/>\n<meta property=\"og:description\" content=\"On 8 April, French President Emmanuel Macron announced that he will close France\u2019s elite postgraduate school for training public leaders, the \u00c9cole Nationale d\u2019Administration (ENA). 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