The document discusses why most developing countries should not try to implement the public sector reforms that New Zealand has undertaken. It argues that developing countries typically have large informal economies with weak rule of law, whereas the New Zealand model relies on formal contracts and internal markets that require robust legal and economic institutions. The author believes developing countries first need to strengthen rule-based government and pave the way for formal markets before considering advanced reforms like those in New Zealand. Adopting such reforms prematurely could exacerbate problems of informality, corruption and lack of accountability in developing country public sectors.
This document discusses ways the G20 could improve its impact on development and addresses it has neglected. It recommends the G20:
1. Improve accountability by transparently measuring progress on commitments and objectives like sustainability and well-being.
2. Improve development coherence by assessing how policies like financial regulation impact development.
3. Increase consultation with developing countries and civil society to better represent the poor.
4. Strengthen financial regulation to prevent future crises and speculation, and ensure finance supports productive activities.
5. Implement commitments to financial transparency, crack down on tax havens, and address corporate tax avoidance.
6. Make progress on innovative long-term climate finance sources like fossil
The OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance of State-Owned Enterprises were first published in 2005 and revised in 2015. They provide non-binding principles for governments on how to professionalize the ownership function and ensure state-owned enterprises operate as efficiently as privately-owned firms. The 2015 revision added new chapters on defining the rationales for state ownership and ensuring state-owned enterprises compete fairly in the marketplace. It also strengthened principles around disclosure, boards of directors, and responsible business conduct. While not legally binding, the Guidelines represent an international standard for reforming governance of state-owned enterprises.
This document summarizes the benefits of pursuing long-term federal construction contracts. It discusses that federal projects provide a stable market, even during economic downturns. Experience meeting commitments and quality work are keys to success as a federal contractor. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provides over $100 billion for infrastructure projects like transportation, renewable energy, and building construction. Companies interested in federal work should focus on gaining experience to match contract requirements.
Business Community Engagement (BCE) PresentationAbdulrahman Abdi
The document discusses the Business Community Engagement (BCE) initiative by the Department of Economic Development (DED) in Dubai. It aims to systematically engage with business groups and councils to benefit both the public and private sectors. Only through coordinated collaboration between these sectors can new ideas be developed and the future economy progress. The BCE seeks to provide an open and inclusive partnership model through engagement plans and councils. It also outlines recommendations for future BCE directions, including developing industry knowledge and involving the private sector in achieving Dubai's 2021 strategic plan goals.
This document summarizes key similarities and differences in governance transitions in the federations of India and Australia. Both countries underwent economic liberalization that impacted intergovernmental relations, though they took different paths. India experienced contradictory centralizing and decentralizing forces, while Australia strengthened negotiated intergovernmental agreements. Lessons for both include managing change through pragmatic negotiation and addressing fiscal imbalances between levels of government.
The ‘Good Governance’ agenda identifies a host of desirable governance goals for developing countries but its implementation and results have been very poor. An important reason is that the framework confuses means and ends, and ignores very significant historical facts about growth in the last century. Its position as the dominant consensus sets poor countries infeasible and unachievable agendas, creating dismay and disillusion, and takes our attention away from achievable and critical governance agendas. Mushtaq Khan’s presentation examines the theoretical and empirical limits of the consensus agenda and identifies the types of governance reforms that are supported by historically informed theory.
SEC seeks input on earnings releases and quarterly reportsAzhar Qureshi
The SEC is seeking public comment on potential changes to earnings release and quarterly reporting requirements for public companies. Specifically, the SEC is considering: 1) Allowing companies to satisfy Form 10-Q requirements using information from voluntary earnings releases; 2) Reducing reporting frequency from quarterly to semiannually; and 3) Actions to address concerns that current practices unduly focus companies on short-term results. The SEC seeks input on impacts of these changes on investors and markets.
The presidents-framework-for-business-tax-reform-an-update-04-04-2016Dr Dev Kambhampati
The document summarizes the President's framework for business tax reform, outlining the need to reform the current U.S. system. It discusses how the current system distorts business decisions and reduces economic growth through loopholes and a high corporate tax rate. The framework proposes eliminating loopholes to lower the rate, strengthening manufacturing and innovation, reforming international tax rules, simplifying taxes for small businesses, and paying for reforms without adding to the deficit.
This document discusses ways the G20 could improve its impact on development and addresses it has neglected. It recommends the G20:
1. Improve accountability by transparently measuring progress on commitments and objectives like sustainability and well-being.
2. Improve development coherence by assessing how policies like financial regulation impact development.
3. Increase consultation with developing countries and civil society to better represent the poor.
4. Strengthen financial regulation to prevent future crises and speculation, and ensure finance supports productive activities.
5. Implement commitments to financial transparency, crack down on tax havens, and address corporate tax avoidance.
6. Make progress on innovative long-term climate finance sources like fossil
The OECD Guidelines on Corporate Governance of State-Owned Enterprises were first published in 2005 and revised in 2015. They provide non-binding principles for governments on how to professionalize the ownership function and ensure state-owned enterprises operate as efficiently as privately-owned firms. The 2015 revision added new chapters on defining the rationales for state ownership and ensuring state-owned enterprises compete fairly in the marketplace. It also strengthened principles around disclosure, boards of directors, and responsible business conduct. While not legally binding, the Guidelines represent an international standard for reforming governance of state-owned enterprises.
This document summarizes the benefits of pursuing long-term federal construction contracts. It discusses that federal projects provide a stable market, even during economic downturns. Experience meeting commitments and quality work are keys to success as a federal contractor. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provides over $100 billion for infrastructure projects like transportation, renewable energy, and building construction. Companies interested in federal work should focus on gaining experience to match contract requirements.
Business Community Engagement (BCE) PresentationAbdulrahman Abdi
The document discusses the Business Community Engagement (BCE) initiative by the Department of Economic Development (DED) in Dubai. It aims to systematically engage with business groups and councils to benefit both the public and private sectors. Only through coordinated collaboration between these sectors can new ideas be developed and the future economy progress. The BCE seeks to provide an open and inclusive partnership model through engagement plans and councils. It also outlines recommendations for future BCE directions, including developing industry knowledge and involving the private sector in achieving Dubai's 2021 strategic plan goals.
This document summarizes key similarities and differences in governance transitions in the federations of India and Australia. Both countries underwent economic liberalization that impacted intergovernmental relations, though they took different paths. India experienced contradictory centralizing and decentralizing forces, while Australia strengthened negotiated intergovernmental agreements. Lessons for both include managing change through pragmatic negotiation and addressing fiscal imbalances between levels of government.
The ‘Good Governance’ agenda identifies a host of desirable governance goals for developing countries but its implementation and results have been very poor. An important reason is that the framework confuses means and ends, and ignores very significant historical facts about growth in the last century. Its position as the dominant consensus sets poor countries infeasible and unachievable agendas, creating dismay and disillusion, and takes our attention away from achievable and critical governance agendas. Mushtaq Khan’s presentation examines the theoretical and empirical limits of the consensus agenda and identifies the types of governance reforms that are supported by historically informed theory.
SEC seeks input on earnings releases and quarterly reportsAzhar Qureshi
The SEC is seeking public comment on potential changes to earnings release and quarterly reporting requirements for public companies. Specifically, the SEC is considering: 1) Allowing companies to satisfy Form 10-Q requirements using information from voluntary earnings releases; 2) Reducing reporting frequency from quarterly to semiannually; and 3) Actions to address concerns that current practices unduly focus companies on short-term results. The SEC seeks input on impacts of these changes on investors and markets.
The presidents-framework-for-business-tax-reform-an-update-04-04-2016Dr Dev Kambhampati
The document summarizes the President's framework for business tax reform, outlining the need to reform the current U.S. system. It discusses how the current system distorts business decisions and reduces economic growth through loopholes and a high corporate tax rate. The framework proposes eliminating loopholes to lower the rate, strengthening manufacturing and innovation, reforming international tax rules, simplifying taxes for small businesses, and paying for reforms without adding to the deficit.
Our changing state: the realities of austerity and devolutionBrowne Jacobson LLP
One year on from our first roundtable and follow up report ‘The Path to Greater Regional Devolution’, the ‘devolution revolution’ has moved on considerably. Since February 2015 we have seen the Government’s Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill receive Royal Assent, a national programme of area-based reviews of post 16 education and training as part of the Government’s ‘skills devolution’ agenda and the announcement that Cornwall is to become the first rural authority in England to agree a devolution deal.
This period of unprecedented change raises a series of complex challenges, risks and concerns that demand further consideration, discussion and debate. Since the May 2015 General Election devolution deals with more than seven areas have been agreed so will local government structures become more confusing after devolution? What effect will this have on accountability? What conflicts will there be between the new combined authorities and existing local authority arrangements? What lessons can we learn from Welsh devolution? The Government has expressed a desire for greater fiscal devolution but is this realistic?
Chaired by Sir Paul Jenkins, the former Treasury Solicitor, our second roundtable on devolution discussed these issues and many more with local and central government leaders, policy influencers and stakeholders including Centre for Cities, Department for Transport, Grant Thornton, Lawyers in Local Government, LGiU, Local Government Ombudsman, Nottinghamshire Fire & Rescue, Staffordshire County Council, The Department for Communities and Local Government, The Financial Times, The National Forest Company and The Welsh Government.
Our second report, Our Changing State: the Realities of Austerity and Devolution, summarises the key themes and thoughts that emerged from the roundtable and proposes a series of recommendations for further discussion and consideration by both local authorities and other key stakeholders as the country continues along the path towards even greater regional devolution.
https://www.brownejacobson.com/training-and-resources/resources/legal-updates/2016/04/the-realities-of-austerity-and-devolution
Review of Structural Reforms in Financial Sector of Pakistan syed hassan
The document discusses Pakistan's financial sector reforms undertaken as part of structural adjustment programs in the early 1990s. Key reforms included privatizing banks and other state-owned enterprises, deregulating interest rates and foreign exchange, improving corporate governance, and developing the stock market. These reforms helped create a more efficient privately-owned banking system and increased access to consumer financing, boosting economic growth.
This is about the difficulties to establish the Rule of Law in Soth-Est Europe, about the economic costs of a lack it and about thrust and confidence building in networks.
The document summarizes notes from an informal meeting of the BCM legislative Working Group on May 20, 2014. It discusses concerns about the stability of laws, unclear country strategy, poor investor relations, and use of bond proceeds in Mongolia. Specifically, it notes laws on foreign investment have changed twice in recent years and lack of resolution on OT discussions raises questions about stability agreements. It stresses the need for clear, consistent messages, laws and actions to engage investors who have lost patience and attract others looking for investment opportunities in Mongolia.
The document discusses the G20's role in strengthening international economic institutions. It argues that effective multilateral institutions are essential for managing today's integrated global economy. The G20 should ensure these institutions adapt to changes and remain legitimate by having appropriate governance. Specifically, the G20 should focus on surveillance, quota reform at the IMF, regulatory impact assessments of financial regulations, international tax issues, strengthening the WTO, and improving global energy cooperation. Reform is needed to ensure the institutions are representative and can effectively support global economic cooperation.
The document provides an overview of the American Investment Council (AIC), which advocates for the private investment industry. It discusses the AIC's mission to promote long-term investment and economic growth. It also summarizes the AIC's accomplishments, including research reports, meetings with lawmakers, and defending beneficial tax policies. Finally, it outlines some of the top legislative and regulatory issues facing private equity in 2017, such as tax reform and maintaining deductions for interest expenses.
La edición 2015 de ExpoInternetLA atrajo a más de 10,000 visitantes de varios países de América Latina y otros lugares. Hubo 70 expositores nacionales e internacionales y conferencistas de alto nivel. La exposición también colaboró con una ONG para mejorar la educación rural a través del uso de las TIC.
Este documento trata sobre la seguridad en las redes sociales. Explica 11 consejos para protegerse en las redes sociales como ser cuidadoso con los enlaces, revisar la información pública, no confiar en todos los mensajes, y ser selectivo con los amigos. También define conceptos clave como tipos de redes sociales horizontales y verticales, y ofrece normas de seguridad como no publicar fotos personales sin permiso.
El documento presenta los 15 grupos étnicos indígenas más grandes de Venezuela según el censo de 2011. El grupo más numeroso es el Wayuú con 413,437 personas que viven principalmente en el estado Zulia. En segundo lugar se encuentra el grupo Warao con 48,771 personas ubicadas principalmente en el estado Delta Amacuro. Los grupos indígenas restantes en el top 15 son Kariña / Pemón, Kamarakoto / Taurepán, Jivi / Guajibo / Sikuani, Kumanagoto, Añú / Paraujano, Piaroa
El documento describe la historia sagrada de los piaroas sobre el origen de la montaña Autana en Venezuela. Según la leyenda piaroa, en los primeros tiempos el dios Wajari creó un árbol gigante con frutos para todos sobre el Autana, pero el espíritu maligno Uripica lo derribó, formando las montañas circundantes. Parte del tronco cayó sobre Uripica y otro pedazo lo atravesó el pez payara escapando de una represa, creando la cueva en el Autana. Los piaroas creen que
Neisseria meningitidis es una bacteria Gram-negativa que causa meningitis bacteriana. Se encuentra habitualmente en la nasofaringe de humanos y puede causar enfermedades como meningitis, septicemia y rinoconjuntivitis. La bacteria es un diplococo móvil que se cultiva fácilmente en medios enriquecidos con sangre. La meningitis bacteriana causada por N. meningitidis puede ser mortal si no se trata con antibióticos como penicilina, cefalosporinas o rifampicina.
Neisseria meningitidis es un diplococo Gram negativo que causa meningitis bacteriana y meningococemia. Posee una cápsula que es su principal factor de virulencia y se transmite de persona a persona a través de gotas de saliva. Los síntomas incluyen fiebre, rigidez de nuca y erupción cutánea. El diagnóstico se realiza mediante análisis de líquido cefalorraquídeo y cultivos bacterianos.
This document outlines an introductory health lesson plan that will teach students about making healthier choices when eating out. It discusses choosing alternatives to fried appetizers, sugary drinks, and fatty entrees. The lesson will be delivered interactively using a Jeopardy-style game on a SMART board to keep students engaged. Categories will include Appetizers, Beverages, Entrees, and Bonus. The competitive format is aimed at helping students retain the information about selecting more nutritious food options.
Este documento discute las diferencias entre TICs (tecnologías de la información y comunicación) y TACs (tecnologías del aprendizaje y conocimiento). Las TICs se refieren a herramientas tecnológicas como tabletas, proyectores y redes sociales, mientras que las TACs se enfocan en el uso adecuado de las TICs en entornos educativos para potenciar el aprendizaje y la enseñanza. El documento también enfatiza la importancia de que los docentes pasen de simplemente usar
Our changing state: the realities of austerity and devolutionBrowne Jacobson LLP
One year on from our first roundtable and follow up report ‘The Path to Greater Regional Devolution’, the ‘devolution revolution’ has moved on considerably. Since February 2015 we have seen the Government’s Cities and Local Government Devolution Bill receive Royal Assent, a national programme of area-based reviews of post 16 education and training as part of the Government’s ‘skills devolution’ agenda and the announcement that Cornwall is to become the first rural authority in England to agree a devolution deal.
This period of unprecedented change raises a series of complex challenges, risks and concerns that demand further consideration, discussion and debate. Since the May 2015 General Election devolution deals with more than seven areas have been agreed so will local government structures become more confusing after devolution? What effect will this have on accountability? What conflicts will there be between the new combined authorities and existing local authority arrangements? What lessons can we learn from Welsh devolution? The Government has expressed a desire for greater fiscal devolution but is this realistic?
Chaired by Sir Paul Jenkins, the former Treasury Solicitor, our second roundtable on devolution discussed these issues and many more with local and central government leaders, policy influencers and stakeholders including Centre for Cities, Department for Transport, Grant Thornton, Lawyers in Local Government, LGiU, Local Government Ombudsman, Nottinghamshire Fire & Rescue, Staffordshire County Council, The Department for Communities and Local Government, The Financial Times, The National Forest Company and The Welsh Government.
Our second report, Our Changing State: the Realities of Austerity and Devolution, summarises the key themes and thoughts that emerged from the roundtable and proposes a series of recommendations for further discussion and consideration by both local authorities and other key stakeholders as the country continues along the path towards even greater regional devolution.
https://www.brownejacobson.com/training-and-resources/resources/legal-updates/2016/04/the-realities-of-austerity-and-devolution
Review of Structural Reforms in Financial Sector of Pakistan syed hassan
The document discusses Pakistan's financial sector reforms undertaken as part of structural adjustment programs in the early 1990s. Key reforms included privatizing banks and other state-owned enterprises, deregulating interest rates and foreign exchange, improving corporate governance, and developing the stock market. These reforms helped create a more efficient privately-owned banking system and increased access to consumer financing, boosting economic growth.
This is about the difficulties to establish the Rule of Law in Soth-Est Europe, about the economic costs of a lack it and about thrust and confidence building in networks.
The document summarizes notes from an informal meeting of the BCM legislative Working Group on May 20, 2014. It discusses concerns about the stability of laws, unclear country strategy, poor investor relations, and use of bond proceeds in Mongolia. Specifically, it notes laws on foreign investment have changed twice in recent years and lack of resolution on OT discussions raises questions about stability agreements. It stresses the need for clear, consistent messages, laws and actions to engage investors who have lost patience and attract others looking for investment opportunities in Mongolia.
The document discusses the G20's role in strengthening international economic institutions. It argues that effective multilateral institutions are essential for managing today's integrated global economy. The G20 should ensure these institutions adapt to changes and remain legitimate by having appropriate governance. Specifically, the G20 should focus on surveillance, quota reform at the IMF, regulatory impact assessments of financial regulations, international tax issues, strengthening the WTO, and improving global energy cooperation. Reform is needed to ensure the institutions are representative and can effectively support global economic cooperation.
The document provides an overview of the American Investment Council (AIC), which advocates for the private investment industry. It discusses the AIC's mission to promote long-term investment and economic growth. It also summarizes the AIC's accomplishments, including research reports, meetings with lawmakers, and defending beneficial tax policies. Finally, it outlines some of the top legislative and regulatory issues facing private equity in 2017, such as tax reform and maintaining deductions for interest expenses.
La edición 2015 de ExpoInternetLA atrajo a más de 10,000 visitantes de varios países de América Latina y otros lugares. Hubo 70 expositores nacionales e internacionales y conferencistas de alto nivel. La exposición también colaboró con una ONG para mejorar la educación rural a través del uso de las TIC.
Este documento trata sobre la seguridad en las redes sociales. Explica 11 consejos para protegerse en las redes sociales como ser cuidadoso con los enlaces, revisar la información pública, no confiar en todos los mensajes, y ser selectivo con los amigos. También define conceptos clave como tipos de redes sociales horizontales y verticales, y ofrece normas de seguridad como no publicar fotos personales sin permiso.
El documento presenta los 15 grupos étnicos indígenas más grandes de Venezuela según el censo de 2011. El grupo más numeroso es el Wayuú con 413,437 personas que viven principalmente en el estado Zulia. En segundo lugar se encuentra el grupo Warao con 48,771 personas ubicadas principalmente en el estado Delta Amacuro. Los grupos indígenas restantes en el top 15 son Kariña / Pemón, Kamarakoto / Taurepán, Jivi / Guajibo / Sikuani, Kumanagoto, Añú / Paraujano, Piaroa
El documento describe la historia sagrada de los piaroas sobre el origen de la montaña Autana en Venezuela. Según la leyenda piaroa, en los primeros tiempos el dios Wajari creó un árbol gigante con frutos para todos sobre el Autana, pero el espíritu maligno Uripica lo derribó, formando las montañas circundantes. Parte del tronco cayó sobre Uripica y otro pedazo lo atravesó el pez payara escapando de una represa, creando la cueva en el Autana. Los piaroas creen que
Neisseria meningitidis es una bacteria Gram-negativa que causa meningitis bacteriana. Se encuentra habitualmente en la nasofaringe de humanos y puede causar enfermedades como meningitis, septicemia y rinoconjuntivitis. La bacteria es un diplococo móvil que se cultiva fácilmente en medios enriquecidos con sangre. La meningitis bacteriana causada por N. meningitidis puede ser mortal si no se trata con antibióticos como penicilina, cefalosporinas o rifampicina.
Neisseria meningitidis es un diplococo Gram negativo que causa meningitis bacteriana y meningococemia. Posee una cápsula que es su principal factor de virulencia y se transmite de persona a persona a través de gotas de saliva. Los síntomas incluyen fiebre, rigidez de nuca y erupción cutánea. El diagnóstico se realiza mediante análisis de líquido cefalorraquídeo y cultivos bacterianos.
This document outlines an introductory health lesson plan that will teach students about making healthier choices when eating out. It discusses choosing alternatives to fried appetizers, sugary drinks, and fatty entrees. The lesson will be delivered interactively using a Jeopardy-style game on a SMART board to keep students engaged. Categories will include Appetizers, Beverages, Entrees, and Bonus. The competitive format is aimed at helping students retain the information about selecting more nutritious food options.
Este documento discute las diferencias entre TICs (tecnologías de la información y comunicación) y TACs (tecnologías del aprendizaje y conocimiento). Las TICs se refieren a herramientas tecnológicas como tabletas, proyectores y redes sociales, mientras que las TACs se enfocan en el uso adecuado de las TICs en entornos educativos para potenciar el aprendizaje y la enseñanza. El documento también enfatiza la importancia de que los docentes pasen de simplemente usar
El documento es un ensayo sobre sistemas operativos escrito por Michelle Escobar para su clase de Informática Tic's en la Universidad Nacional de Chimborazo. El ensayo cubre el tema de sistemas operativos para la asignatura en el primer semestre.
This document is a project report on mergers and acquisitions submitted by Mr. Sunil Shendage. It includes an acknowledgement, objective, table of contents, preface, and various sections analyzing mergers and acquisitions such as the acquisition process, forms of corporate downsizing, the legal procedure, mergers in the IT sector, risk in mergers and acquisitions, and a case study on TATA Tea and Tetley. The report discusses the meaning of mergers and acquisitions, types of mergers like vertical, horizontal, circular and conglomerate combinations, and common objectives for business combinations such as growth, synergy, managerial efficiency, market entry, and diversification.
The document discusses procurement reform and modernization efforts. It defines key concepts like procurement reform, modernization, and capacity development. Procurement reform often has a political dimension and aims to improve frameworks, integrity, and use of technology. Modernization refers to continuous improvements based on other countries' experiences. Capacity development builds the abilities of individuals, organizations, and societies to effectively manage their own affairs. The document outlines principles of procurement reform like professionalism, use of e-procurement, and performance management to increase value for money and service delivery.
This document discusses lessons learned from governments around the world that are transforming to meet new demands and expectations. It recommends that governments adopt a "FAST" model of being flatter, agile, streamlined and tech-enabled. Open government and sharing data openly can empower citizens but also raise security risks that must be addressed. New metrics are needed to measure government transformation progress and the value citizens receive. Case studies from different countries provide examples of best practices in reforming government.
This document provides a framework for creating successful public-private partnerships based on lessons learned from over 60 projects advised by IFC over 7 years. The framework identifies 3 key categories that determine PPP success: economics, politics, and execution. Under each category are specific lessons. For economics, projects must have sound economic fundamentals and an optimized partnership structure. For politics, projects require political champions and stakeholder support. For execution, a disciplined project management approach is needed to address complexity and timing challenges.
This document summarizes a white paper on shared services in the public sector. The key points are:
1. While shared services offer benefits like lower costs, improved expertise, and focus on core business, large implementations in the public sector have often faced problems like cost overruns, delays, and doubts about achieving promised savings.
2. This is likely due to behavioral factors like optimism bias among proponents and fear of loss of control among individual agencies not being adequately considered. Future initiatives need to explicitly account for these behavioral issues.
3. A case study of the ACT Government's shared services arrangement, which is widely seen as successful, found that political support, articulated agency benefits, and tailored services helped encourage
This document is a project report submitted by Hitesh M. Vekhande for their Master of Commerce degree. The report is on the topic of disinvestment strategy. It includes sections on definitions of disinvestment, objectives of disinvestment, importance of disinvestment, benefits of disinvestment, historical perspectives on disinvestment, current government policy on disinvestment and public sector, disinvestment strategy, the disinvestment process, case studies, and conclusions and recommendations. The document provides an overview and outline of the topics that will be discussed in the full project report on India's disinvestment strategy.
The document discusses the need for transformation of commissioning and procurement processes in English local government. It outlines the current financial challenges and notes that local councils will need to reduce costs significantly while relying more on external organizations to deliver services. The transformation process should focus on five key themes: new service models, managing risk versus risk aversion, shaping markets, looking ahead not back, and improved contract management. Savings could be achieved through leveraging collective purchasing power across local councils and improving management of contracts once awarded.
The document discusses the need for transformation of commissioning and procurement processes in English local government. It outlines the current financial challenges and notes that local councils will need to reduce costs significantly while relying more on external organizations to deliver services. The transformation process should focus on five key themes: new service models, managing risk versus risk aversion, shaping markets, looking ahead not back, and improved contract management. Savings could be achieved through leveraging collective purchasing power across local councils and improving management of contracts once awarded.
NAVIGATING ADMINISTRATIVE ISSUES IN FOREIGN MARKETSANTHONY PALAZZO
This document discusses the challenges that attorneys face when navigating administrative issues and advancing technology in foreign public sectors on behalf of private companies. There are two main issues: 1) politics can constrain progress and impact profits, and 2) it is difficult to adapt private sector information systems to the differing needs and structures of foreign public agencies. The attorney must work to identify compatibility issues, understand differences between the private and public sectors, and help design policies and procedures to mitigate challenges through cooperation between sectors. Customizing solutions rather than forcing private standards is key to avoiding failures when working abroad.
This document discusses the need for stability agreements between resource developers and sovereign states to stabilize investment frameworks. While necessary, stability agreements alone are not sufficient to ensure successful resource projects. Ongoing engagement between developers and states is also required, as political and economic circumstances change over time. Practical issues that can affect stability agreements include ensuring all legal requirements are met to properly implement fiscal concessions, understanding the entire constitutional framework, and determining what parliamentary or legislative actions may be required to give agreements full legal force. Maintaining relationships with host states and understanding local political contexts are also important complements to stability agreements.
The document discusses the concept of joined-up government. It explains that joined-up government seeks to enhance coordination and integration within public sectors that have become too disjointed. It also aims to align incentives, structures, and cultures of authority to address critical tasks that cross organizational boundaries. The document provides background on the origins of joined-up government and its objectives. It also summarizes international developments in joined-up government initiatives in several countries. Finally, it discusses factors for success and common barriers to achieving joined-up government.
The document discusses the concept of joined-up government. It explains that joined-up government seeks to enhance coordination and integration within public sectors that have become too fragmented. It aims to align structures, cultures and incentives to address issues that cross organizational boundaries. The document outlines the origins and objectives of joined-up government, and provides examples of initiatives taken in several countries to promote more joined-up approaches to policymaking and service delivery.
The document discusses joined-up government, which aims to improve coordination between government departments and agencies to more effectively address complex issues. It outlines the benefits of joined-up government, such as improved outcomes, more efficient service delivery, and better problem solving. The document then reviews examples of joined-up government initiatives in several countries, including the UK, New Zealand, Canada, Australia, Finland, Ireland, and Singapore. These initiatives focused on areas like e-government, inter-agency collaboration, and citizen-centered services. Finally, the document discusses lessons learned on making joined-up government work and common barriers to its implementation.
The document discusses how institutional factors have limited the success of privatization efforts in India. It outlines four key factors for privatization to succeed - commitment, competition, transparency, and mitigation. India scores well on competition and transparency but lacks commitment and mitigation. The process of privatization in India is lengthy and bureaucratic, involving many committees and administrative bodies, which has resulted in slow progress and low proceeds from privatization sales. For privatization to have been more successful, India needed an appropriate institutional mechanism but this was not established.
- The National Audit Office examined the new central assurance system for major government projects.
- Significant successes for the system include improved data collection, stronger links between assurance and funding approval, and more rigorous project reviews. However, some departments have engaged poorly with the system.
- For the system to be effective long-term, the organizations involved - including the Major Projects Authority, HM Treasury, and government departments - need to cooperate more closely and consistently. The system also lacks formal processes and sufficient resources.
Presentation of Alex Matheson, International consultor an Associate of the Economics and Strategy Group (ESG), in the "I International Seminar on Strategic Management in the Public Sector" in Ceplan, Perú
IoD-Public-Inquiry-Governance-and-Innovation-report-of-findings-update-1-a2ee...The Pathway Group
This document provides a summary of a report on a public inquiry into the relationship between corporate governance and innovation. Some key findings include:
1) Successfully innovative companies tend to have board-level appreciation of innovation's relevance to strategy, undertake innovation to achieve objectives, appropriately integrate innovation into processes and activities, and encourage a culture of innovation.
2) Relevant governance factors that can support innovation include having a clear purpose and values, board composition, how responsibilities and metrics are allocated, organizational structure, and rewards/incentives.
3) Collaboration, ownership models, and public policy/regulation can also influence companies' ability to innovate, both positively and negatively.
A review of the growth of the Israel Genealogy Research Association Database Collection for the last 12 months. Our collection is now passed the 3 million mark and still growing. See which archives have contributed the most. See the different types of records we have, and which years have had records added. You can also see what we have for the future.
বাংলাদেশের অর্থনৈতিক সমীক্ষা ২০২৪ [Bangladesh Economic Review 2024 Bangla.pdf] কম্পিউটার , ট্যাব ও স্মার্ট ফোন ভার্সন সহ সম্পূর্ণ বাংলা ই-বুক বা pdf বই " সুচিপত্র ...বুকমার্ক মেনু 🔖 ও হাইপার লিংক মেনু 📝👆 যুক্ত ..
আমাদের সবার জন্য খুব খুব গুরুত্বপূর্ণ একটি বই ..বিসিএস, ব্যাংক, ইউনিভার্সিটি ভর্তি ও যে কোন প্রতিযোগিতা মূলক পরীক্ষার জন্য এর খুব ইম্পরট্যান্ট একটি বিষয় ...তাছাড়া বাংলাদেশের সাম্প্রতিক যে কোন ডাটা বা তথ্য এই বইতে পাবেন ...
তাই একজন নাগরিক হিসাবে এই তথ্য গুলো আপনার জানা প্রয়োজন ...।
বিসিএস ও ব্যাংক এর লিখিত পরীক্ষা ...+এছাড়া মাধ্যমিক ও উচ্চমাধ্যমিকের স্টুডেন্টদের জন্য অনেক কাজে আসবে ...
A workshop hosted by the South African Journal of Science aimed at postgraduate students and early career researchers with little or no experience in writing and publishing journal articles.
Executive Directors Chat Leveraging AI for Diversity, Equity, and InclusionTechSoup
Let’s explore the intersection of technology and equity in the final session of our DEI series. Discover how AI tools, like ChatGPT, can be used to support and enhance your nonprofit's DEI initiatives. Participants will gain insights into practical AI applications and get tips for leveraging technology to advance their DEI goals.
How to Add Chatter in the odoo 17 ERP ModuleCeline George
In Odoo, the chatter is like a chat tool that helps you work together on records. You can leave notes and track things, making it easier to talk with your team and partners. Inside chatter, all communication history, activity, and changes will be displayed.
it describes the bony anatomy including the femoral head , acetabulum, labrum . also discusses the capsule , ligaments . muscle that act on the hip joint and the range of motion are outlined. factors affecting hip joint stability and weight transmission through the joint are summarized.
How to Build a Module in Odoo 17 Using the Scaffold MethodCeline George
Odoo provides an option for creating a module by using a single line command. By using this command the user can make a whole structure of a module. It is very easy for a beginner to make a module. There is no need to make each file manually. This slide will show how to create a module using the scaffold method.
2. The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 13, no. 1 (February 1998)124
early stage of adopting selected features of the system, but it is much too early to
gauge how far they will go in embracing its basic tenets. On the whole, industrial and
developing countries have not implemented such reforms because the reforms are
beyond their reach or do not fit their current needs.
I draw this conclusion despite New Zealand’s enormous contribution to the theory
and practice of public management. Not only has the menu of reform possibilities
been greatly expanded, but New Zealand has brought its public management much
more closely into line with institutional economics and with contemporary business
practices. And the rigor with which the model has been applied is impressive. This
was not a case in which reformers selected discrete entries from a large menu of
reforms. The change agenda was driven by ideas that have only recently entered
mainstream economics, and the ideas were applied with full fidelity to their internal
logic. But I do not accept the view that New Zealand offers practical guidance on
how developing countries should surmount deficiencies in public management.
I believe that there are important preconditions for successfully implementing the
new public management approach and that these should not be ignored by countries
striving to correct decades of mismanagement. In contrast to those who take the
position that managerial deficiencies should be the driving factor in determining the
suitability of these type reforms, I argue that they should be deterring factors. The
greater the shortcomings in a country’s established management practices, the less
suitable the reforms.
The New Zealand Model: Government by Contract
Since 1988, New Zealand has implemented an enormous number of management
reforms that add up to an integrated concept of how government should work. That
concept is expressed in the heading to this section. Virtually every element of reform
has been designed to establish or strengthen contract-like relationships between the
government and ministers as purchasers of goods and services and departments and
other entities as suppliers. Hundreds of contracts are formally negotiated each year;
the typical contract specifies the resources that one side will provide and the perfor-
mance the other side will produce. Ministers are always on the resource-providing
side of the relationship; chief executives can be on either side, depending on the role
they are playing. A chief executive provides resources in negotiating employment
contracts with managers but promises results in negotiating purchase agreements
with ministers and performance agreements with the State Services Commissioner.
This “new contractualism” replaces the implicit or relational contracts that char-
acterize traditional public administration.1
Contracts convert the budget from an
understanding between government and parliament on the amounts to be raised and
spent into an explicit statement of what will be done with the resources to be made
3. Allen Schick 125
available. In a similar vein, performance agreements displace the old civil service
ethic of trust and responsibility with accountability for the results expected from
each chief executive.
New Zealand has gone to extraordinary lengths to create conditions under which
formal contracts are negotiated and enforced. It has restructured many departments
to decouple policymaking functions from the delivery of services. (For example, the
national defense organization was split into two separate entities: the Ministry of
Defense, which provides policy advice to government; and the Defense Forces, which
carry out assigned operations). Under the new system, ministers can purchase ser-
vices from government departments or from any alternative public or private sup-
plier. Appropriations are on an accrual basis, so that the full cost of the goods and
services is incorporated in the purchase price. In fact, to promote competition among
suppliers, appropriations include an amount for the tax on goods and services that
would be paid in a private transaction. In a similar vein, a capital charge is levied on
the net worth (as shown on its balance sheet) of each department. This charge re-
flects the opportunity cost of money and resembles the internal rate of return ex-
pected by firms from their operating units.
Contract-like arrangements have been extended to policy advice as well, so
that ministers can opt to obtain information and ideas from consultancies and
other external sources. To put alternative suppliers on an equal footing, the gov-
ernment accords the chief executives of departments the same operating flexibil-
ity that is enjoyed by executives in nongovernmental organizations. Chief execu-
tives are given a block of resources for each class of outputs they contract to
purchase, and they have discretion to select the mix of inputs used in producing
the outputs. These outputs are specified in detail so that the government can
have reasonable assurance that departments are producing the outputs contracted
for. Under the present system, when the budget is tabled in Parliament, each
department publishes a departmental forecast report that, among other things,
specifies the outputs it will produce in the next financial year. Shortly before the
start of the year, the outputs are specified in greater detail in purchase agree-
ments signed by the chief executive and the minister purchasing the services.
Multiple purchase agreements are written when more than one minister pur-
chases services from the same department. After the year is done, each depart-
ment publishes an annual report that specifies the outputs actually produced,
thereby enabling the government to determine whether the terms of various con-
tracts have been fulfilled.
Before assessing whether the New Zealand model is appropriate for developing
countries, it is necessary to consider its effectiveness at home. In my view, organiza-
tional performance has been significantly enhanced. But this favorable assessment
carries certain caveats, some of which were discussed in my report commissioned by
the New Zealand Government (Schick 1996).
4. The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 13, no. 1 (February 1998)126
• The New Zealand model emphasizes matters that can be specified in contracts,
such as the purchase of outputs, but gives inadequate attention to outcomes and
the government’s ownership interest because they do not fit easily into the
contracting framework.
• Robust contracting depends on voluntary, self-interested action. Sometimes,
however, self-interest defeats the government’s collective interest. In the early
years of reform, for example, efforts to establish a senior executive service were
undermined by managers who preferred to contract on an individual basis.
• Contractualism may weaken traditional values of public service, personal
responsibility, and professionalism. It can induce managers to take a checklist
approach to accountability—“if it’s not specified, it’s not my responsibility.”
• Contract-like arrangements do not themselves create arms-length relationships
in the public sector, nor do they enable the government to toughen its insistence
on performance. In most cases, government has little choice but to contract with
internal suppliers, typically its own departments. If these fail to perform, the
government can sack the chief executive and apply some pressure. But it rarely
has the exit option that is essential to the effectiveness and enforcement of private
contracts.
• Chief executives, senior managers, and others attribute most of the improvement
in government performance to the discretion given to managers rather than to
formal contracts. Managers differ on how much value is added by contracts, but
few think that they have been the main contributor to higher operational
efficiency.
• Contracting is not costless. Negotiating and enforcing contracts entails enor-
mous transaction costs that have not been systematically studied, although they
take a deep bite out of operating budgets, especially those of small departments.
These concerns point to the unfinished business of public sector reform in New
Zealand. There is much more to be accomplished before a final assessment can be
made. At this early stage, one is justified in acknowledging that the country has
vastly enlarged the stockpile of public management ideas and practices. In promot-
ing internal markets within government, it has devised creative alternatives to
privatization while carrying the pursuit of operational efficiency well beyond stan-
dard market-type mechanisms such as user charges.
Yet one should not lose sight of the fact that these are not real markets and that they
do not operate with real contracts. Rather, the contracts are between public entities—
the owner and the owned. The government has weak redress when its own organiza-
tions fail to perform, and it may be subject to as much capture in negotiating and
enforcing its contracts as it was under pre-reform management. My own sense is that
while some gain may come from mimicking markets, anything less than the real thing
denies government the full benefits of vigorous competition and economic redress.
5. Allen Schick 127
The Informal Public Sector
In New Zealand, formal contracts and internal markets were feasible because the
country had a robust market sector and established mechanisms for enforcing con-
tracts—conditions that are often absent in developing countries, which tend to have
an informal economy with relatively weak specification of property rights and other
formal processes to regulate economic activity.
Informality is not a new concept; shortly before New Zealand embarked on its
reforms, de Soto (1989, p. 12) emphasized informality as the distinctive condition of
the Peruvian economy. Characterizing it “as a gray area which has a long frontier
with the legal world and in which individuals take refuge when the cost of obeying
the law outweighs the benefits,” de Soto found that the informal economy supplied
more housing to Peruvians than did the government, was the main source of public
transportation, and enabled entrepreneurs to start businesses when they were blocked
by government regulations. He also concluded that the informal economy was inef-
ficient, bred corruption, denied home and business owners access to capital, and
retarded economic development.
De Soto and others have focused on informality in the market economy. I believe
that informality is as pronounced in the culture of government as it is in the market-
place. In fact, the parallel incidence of informality in the public and private sectors is
not happenstance. Norms, practices, and ideas migrate from one sector to the other,
as does the dead hand of overregulation and the eagerness of government officials to
look the other way in exchange for favors. The emergence of open, robust markets is
as much a precondition for modernizing the public sector as it is for developing the
private economy. It is highly unlikely that government will operate by the book
when rules and regulations are routinely breached in private transactions. If New
Zealand–style contracts are at one end of the spectrum, then informality is at the
other end. And if contracts and the rule of law are underdeveloped in business rela-
tions, it is highly improbable that they can be effectively applied in the conduct of
the government’s business. It would be foolhardy to entrust public managers with
complete freedom over resources when they have not yet internalized the habit of
spending public money according to prescribed rules. Many developing countries
have formal management control systems that prescribe how government should
operate. These systems are overseen by powerful central agencies such as the finance
ministry, the civil service board, and the procurement agency. On paper everything
is done according to rule. The civil service system is based on a detailed classification
of positions and ranks, each with its own job descriptions, skill and experience re-
quirements, eligibility rules, and pay scale. In this formal control process, operating
units must obtain advance approval from the civil service agency (and sometimes
from the finance ministry as well) before they can fill vacant positions. Formal rules
dictate every step in the hiring process: announcing the position, establishing eligi-
6. The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 13, no. 1 (February 1998)128
bility qualifications, processing applications, appointing the winning candidate, and
setting each employee’s pay and grade levels. Each step is monitored by a central
agency to assure compliance with the rules.
Where informality flourishes, however, this is not the way many civil servants get
their jobs. They are hired because they know the right person or have contributed to
some organization or cause. Because official pay levels are low, they may be assigned
to one position but be paid for another. Many may be ghost workers who appear on
the payroll but not at work; some may hold two or more positions, and those who
show up on the job may put in less than a day’s work because the official salary scale
is a lot less than a day’s reasonable pay. Thus there are two coexisting civil service
systems—one based on formal rules, the other on actual practices. To say that there
is an informal system is not to conclude that the rules always are ignored or that
corruption always flourishes, although these pathologies may occur. Rather, it is to
argue that the informality contributes to public order; in the case of the civil service,
it enables the government to recruit and retain skilled persons.
Informality also reigns in the budget arena. The government has two budgets: the
public one that is presented to the parliament and the real one that determines which
bills are paid and how much is actually spent. The formal budget promises spending
that exceeds the government’s fiscal capacity; the informal budget facilitates macro-
economic stability by not making some of the expenditures approved by the parlia-
ment. The formal budget is known in advance, the informal one after the spending
occurs. Because there are two budgets, the temptation is for the formal document to
be unrealistic and unachieveable. The process thus feeds on itself. Inasmuch as the
official budget will not be implemented, why not cram into it spending that will not
be made? This behavior leads to cash flow budgeting, in which the amounts actually
spent are determined more by cash payments than by the amounts authorized by
law. It also breeds repetitive budgeting, in which the government “rebudgets” several
times during the year to align disbursements and resources.
Informality is a mixed blessing. On the one hand, it cuts through red tape, unre-
sponsive bureaucracies, and bad policies; on the other hand, it opens the door to
(and sometimes institutionalizes) corruption and inefficiency. The positive side of
informality in public management includes the maintenance of fiscal discipline de-
spite unrealistic budgets and the provision of public services despite rigid rules and
controls. But the costs are high; they include widespread evasion of civil service rules
and other controls, the time and resources spent in beating the system, distrust of
government, routinized corruption, and inattention to the outputs and results of
public programs and the performance of government agencies and officials. It would
not be surprising if some of the most esteemed and productive civil servants in devel-
oping countries are those who use their entrepreneurial and managerial skills to out-
wit the formal controls. But when bureaucrats are valued for their verve in operating
informally, it is easy for them and others trapped in the system to lose sight of the
7. Allen Schick 129
public purposes they are serving and the outputs they are supposed to produce. It is
only a short step from disabling the controls to bending the rules for dishonorable
purposes.
It is a much longer step for them to adopt New Zealand–style reforms, and a
much riskier one. No country should move directly from an informal public sector
to one in which managers are accorded enormous discretion to hire and spend as
they see fit. New Zealand did not make this leap, and neither should other countries.
Before reform New Zealand operated under budgets that controlled spending and
corresponded to actual transactions; it also had a civil service system that governed
how public employees were hired and paid. In other words, it had a formal public
sector. This is an essential precondition for adopting elements of the New Zealand
model.
The Logic of Development
If contract-based public management is beyond reach and informality is an unsatis-
factory state of affairs, what can developing countries do to improve government
operations? In my view, significant progress can be made through a logical sequence
of steps that diminish the scope of informality while building managerial capacity,
confidence, and experience. This concluding section outlines some of the key steps.
First, progress in the public sector requires parallel advances in the market sector.
As long as the economy operates according to informal norms and property rights
are defined more by practice than by contract, the government is not likely to make
much headway in installing rule-based public management. There may be special
situations (in colonial regimes, for example) that enable a developing country to
establish a skilled civil service system, modern financial management, and other trap-
pings of formal public management even though the market sector is lagging be-
hind. But the much more typical situation is one in which market development
precedes or coincides with the development of robust public institutions. Singapore
and Chile are countries in which economic development and modernization of pub-
lic management have proceeded in tandem.
Formalizing the market sector does not ensure reciprocal changes in public insti-
tutions, however. Informality is as much a matter of culture as of practice; it defines
social roles, relationships, and legitimate and expected behavior, and it persists even
when the underlying conditions that gave rise to it vanish. There are quite a few
countries in which the development of the public sector has not kept pace with
economic changes. These countries typically have a competitive sector that is open,
formal, and lightly regulated, as well as a heavily regulated sector that depends on
informal contracts, embedded traditions, and government protection. The two cul-
tures can operate independently of one another for an extended period, but sooner
8. The World Bank Research Observer, vol. 13, no. 1 (February 1998)130
or later they will be driven by scandal, financial mismanagement, or citizen pressure
to modernize the public sector.
Second, modernizing the public sector means establishing reliable external controls,
as described above. As old-fashioned as external controls may seem to be, they are
building blocks for a formal, rule-based, honest public sector. Operating in an exter-
nally controlled environment is an essential phase in the development process. It gives
managers the skills to manage on their own, builds trust between central controllers
and line managers and confidence between citizens and government, and encourages
managers to internalize a public ethic of proper behavior. As these basic conditions of
formal management take root, it should be possible for central controllers to ease the
regulations by giving line managers broader discretion in operating their programs.
This process, however, can bear fruit only if the controls are exercised in a fair and
realistic manner. In the case of civil service rules, this means that pay levels rise as the
economy develops, the number of ghost positions declines, and public employees are
given opportunities to acquire new skills and advance professionally. If these condi-
tions are absent, learning will take place, but it will be pathological: how to beat the
system, how to outmaneuver the controllers, how to get paid without really working,
and so on. Realism must also pervade budgeting, another arena that often is infected
by pervasive informality. The budget presented to the parliament must be one that
can be implemented, not a political wish list that promises more than the govern-
ment intends to spend. Moreover, agencies must inculcate the habits and ethic of
spending according to the plans laid out in the budget. In other words, the budget
must be treated as an implicit contract. Only then does it make sense to convert the
budget into an explicit contract.
Third, politicians and officials must concentrate on the basic process of public
management. They must be able to control inputs before they are called upon to
control outputs; they must be able to account for cash before they are asked to ac-
count for cost; they must abide by uniform rules before they are authorized to make
their own rules; they must operate in integrated, centralized departments before be-
ing authorized to go it alone in autonomous agencies.
Once the basics have been mastered, the public sector should be organized ac-
cording to the principles of internal control. External control and New Zealand–
type managerial discretion are not the only options for organizing governmental
operations. Internal control is a third possibility. In a formal sense, internal control
refers to the systems and procedures used by agencies to assure compliance with rules
and to safeguard public assets. In a behavioral sense, internal control means that the
rules are accepted as fair, workable, and legitimate. Without this normative under-
pinning, no system of internal control can be effective.
In practice, internal control gives managers broader discretion; it shifts the focus
from ex ante control to ex post audit, from control of individual actions to control
within a broad band, from reviewing specific actions to reviewing systems. It means,
9. Allen Schick 131
for example, that civil service rules dictate the total number of positions or the total
within broad employment categories and that operating departments make their
own hiring decisions subject to oversight by central agencies. In the financial sphere
it means that if funds are available, agencies can make purchases, authorize travel,
and take other spending actions without obtaining prior approval.
Singapore illustrates the progression from external to internal controls and thence
to New Zealand–type arrangements. On gaining independence and for many years
afterward, Singapore had a line-item budget that specified the positions to be filled
and the items to be purchased. During the 1980s block budgets were adopted that
shifted the government from external to internal control, and in the mid-1990s a
“budgeting for results” system was adopted that implements several elements of the
New Zealand model.
Singapore provides another lesson for countries seeking to advance to the first
rank of developing countries. The process of development does not have to stretch
out over generations. If development proceeds in a logical order, progress can be
rapid, especially if modernization of public institutions advances apace with mod-
ernization of the market sector. To many developing countries, New Zealand is at
the cutting edge in public management, but they will not get there by taking short-
cuts that turn into dead ends.
Notes
Allen Schick is a consultant in the Public Sector Group, Poverty Reduction and Economic Manage-
ment, of the World Bank. He wrote this article while on assignment to the Economic Development
Institute.
1. The term is taken from Davis, Sullivan, and Yeatman (1997). See especially Matheson (1997)
in that volume.
References
The word “processed” describes informally reproduced works that may not be commonly available
through library systems.
Davis, Glyn, Barbara Sullivan, and Anna Yeatman, eds. 1997. The New Contractualism? South
Melbourne: Macmillan Education Australia PTY Ltd.
De Soto, Hernando. 1989. The Other Path: The Invisible Revolution in the Third World. New York:
Harper and Row.
Matheson, Alex. 1997 “The Impact of Contracts on Public Management in New Zealand.” In
Davis, Sullivan, and Yeatman (1997), pp. 164–79.
Schick, Alan. 1996. “The Spirit of Reform: Managing the New Zealand State Sector in a Time of
Change.” Report prepared for the State Services Commission, Wellington, New Zealand.
Processed.[ok?? where located??]