Bad governance in Australia and how to mitigate it
Date
Authors
Dowding, Keith
Taflaga, Marija
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Access Statement
Abstract
We argue that new public management (NPM) and other processes have led to adverse selection and agency rent problems within the political elite in Australia. The politicisation of the public service and the rise of careerist politicians have led to the de-separation of what was once two distinct career paths within the
political elite. This has changed the decision premise of the advisory system for policy formation and implementation, leading to worse public policy, even policy
disasters. We recommend that some of the principles of the Westminster form of government be updated and re-instituted for political elites within the structures of the Australian government. We canvass four reforms: return to merit appointments and promotion for public servants; a return to tenure for senior public servants; an enhanced push for descriptive representation within
the career public service; and a formal role for staffers with centralised appointments, inability to instruct public servants, and restrictions on political and policy roles once leaving public service. These are designed to end the distrust, perceived corruption, and poor governance in the Australian government.
Description
Citation
Collections
Source
Australian Journal of Public Administration
Type
Book Title
Entity type
Publication