New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia

In line with the new public management (NPM), a public service agency (PSA) is considered as an alternative to replace the government-led public service delivery in a more efficient and effective way. At the same time, a PSA mechanism can deliver public service with better quality. To meet these en...

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Main Author: JIN-WOOK CHOI
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta 2016-02-01
Series:Jurnal Studi Pemerintahan
Subjects:
Online Access:http://journal.umy.ac.id/index.php/jsp/article/view/1172/pdf_3
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spelling doaj-88cca340f7ac454ea193480d9264a3592020-11-25T02:42:32ZengUniversitas Muhammadiyah YogyakartaJurnal Studi Pemerintahan2337-82202337-82202016-02-017110412710.18196/jgp.2016.0024New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of IndonesiaJIN-WOOK CHOI0Professor, Department of Public Administration, Korea University.In line with the new public management (NPM), a public service agency (PSA) is considered as an alternative to replace the government-led public service delivery in a more efficient and effective way. At the same time, a PSA mechanism can deliver public service with better quality. To meet these ends, a PSA is granted with operational flexibility and autonomy particularly in managing finance and personnel. However, the PSA system has not yielded the expected benefits in Indonesia. On the contrary, PSAs have been regarded to cause financial burdens to the Government of Indonesia. This paper explores the current conditions of three key institutional bases of PSAs in Indonesia including PSA governance, financial management and performance management. The notable challenges related to the three dimensions in the Indonesia’s PSAs include the weak PSA governance structure, and an inappropriate balance between flexibility and autonomy on the one hand and accountability and performance on the other in managing a PSA. Focusing on these challenges, this paper draws the following policy suggestions for Indonesia to improve the efficient operation of the PSA system: rebuild the PSA governance on a firm and clear legal base, absorb diverse stakeholders and outside experts in the PSA governance decision-making; monitor and evaluate the PSA’s financial flexibility and autonomy through vigilant internal and external monitoring mechanisms; redesign performance appraisal to set up right appraisal structure, process, and performance criteria; and link the results of performance appraisal to relevant rewards and punishment.http://journal.umy.ac.id/index.php/jsp/article/view/1172/pdf_3 New Public Managementpublic service agencyautonomyflexibility
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author JIN-WOOK CHOI
spellingShingle JIN-WOOK CHOI
New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
Jurnal Studi Pemerintahan
New Public Management
public service agency
autonomy
flexibility
author_facet JIN-WOOK CHOI
author_sort JIN-WOOK CHOI
title New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
title_short New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
title_full New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
title_fullStr New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
title_full_unstemmed New Public Management or Mismanagement? The Case of Public Service Agency of Indonesia
title_sort new public management or mismanagement? the case of public service agency of indonesia
publisher Universitas Muhammadiyah Yogyakarta
series Jurnal Studi Pemerintahan
issn 2337-8220
2337-8220
publishDate 2016-02-01
description In line with the new public management (NPM), a public service agency (PSA) is considered as an alternative to replace the government-led public service delivery in a more efficient and effective way. At the same time, a PSA mechanism can deliver public service with better quality. To meet these ends, a PSA is granted with operational flexibility and autonomy particularly in managing finance and personnel. However, the PSA system has not yielded the expected benefits in Indonesia. On the contrary, PSAs have been regarded to cause financial burdens to the Government of Indonesia. This paper explores the current conditions of three key institutional bases of PSAs in Indonesia including PSA governance, financial management and performance management. The notable challenges related to the three dimensions in the Indonesia’s PSAs include the weak PSA governance structure, and an inappropriate balance between flexibility and autonomy on the one hand and accountability and performance on the other in managing a PSA. Focusing on these challenges, this paper draws the following policy suggestions for Indonesia to improve the efficient operation of the PSA system: rebuild the PSA governance on a firm and clear legal base, absorb diverse stakeholders and outside experts in the PSA governance decision-making; monitor and evaluate the PSA’s financial flexibility and autonomy through vigilant internal and external monitoring mechanisms; redesign performance appraisal to set up right appraisal structure, process, and performance criteria; and link the results of performance appraisal to relevant rewards and punishment.
topic New Public Management
public service agency
autonomy
flexibility
url http://journal.umy.ac.id/index.php/jsp/article/view/1172/pdf_3
work_keys_str_mv AT jinwookchoi newpublicmanagementormismanagementthecaseofpublicserviceagencyofindonesia
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