Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa

Masters in Public Administration - MPA === Public service motivation refers to individuals’ with a predisposition to perform public service for largely altruistic motives in public institutions. The purpose of this study was to investigate what public service motivation (PSM) meant to state-employed...

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Main Author: Gershwin, Gershwin
Other Authors: Ruiters, Greg
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4200
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-42002018-07-28T04:49:11Z Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa Gershwin, Gershwin Ruiters, Greg Public service motivation Public sector service Social workers Masters in Public Administration - MPA Public service motivation refers to individuals’ with a predisposition to perform public service for largely altruistic motives in public institutions. The purpose of this study was to investigate what public service motivation (PSM) meant to state-employed social workers in the South African context. In gaining insight into PSM amongst social workers in the public sector, my objectives were to explore the value social workers place on intrinsic rewards, the reasons why participants entered the profession, and what social workers’ self-perceptions of their role was as public servants and what public service meant for their own identities. This qualitative study was conducted in the Western Cape with state-employed social workers. The social workers were selected using snowball sampling. Participants varied in age, years of experience as social workers, gender, and race. Data for this study was based on in-depth, semi-structured interviews. With public service motivation being an under-researched subject in the South African context, an open-ended inquiry into the important variables that influence PSM in the local context was followed. This approach will inform ways in which PSM could be measured in the future in the South African context. The results of my study indicate that social workers were attracted to public sector employment because it offered the greatest extrinsic incentives – higher salaries, medical aid benefits, and a housing subsidy, compared to NGO’s in the private sector. This finding challenges the widely accepted notion in PSM literature that social workers place more value on intrinsic reward than extrinsic rewards. Extrinsic reward refers to financial or other tangible incentives. The data further revealed that participants were willing to leave the social work profession and exit public service for employment opportunities that offered them greater support from superiors, and remuneration that acknowledged their academic qualifications. Poor remuneration adversely affected participants’ feeling of job satisfaction and motivation to perform their duties. Politics has played a seminal role in shaping the quality, and the denying of public service to certain categories of citizens. 2015-05-26T15:16:47Z 2015-05-26T15:16:47Z 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4200 en University of the Western Cape University of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Public service motivation
Public sector service
Social workers
spellingShingle Public service motivation
Public sector service
Social workers
Gershwin, Gershwin
Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
description Masters in Public Administration - MPA === Public service motivation refers to individuals’ with a predisposition to perform public service for largely altruistic motives in public institutions. The purpose of this study was to investigate what public service motivation (PSM) meant to state-employed social workers in the South African context. In gaining insight into PSM amongst social workers in the public sector, my objectives were to explore the value social workers place on intrinsic rewards, the reasons why participants entered the profession, and what social workers’ self-perceptions of their role was as public servants and what public service meant for their own identities. This qualitative study was conducted in the Western Cape with state-employed social workers. The social workers were selected using snowball sampling. Participants varied in age, years of experience as social workers, gender, and race. Data for this study was based on in-depth, semi-structured interviews. With public service motivation being an under-researched subject in the South African context, an open-ended inquiry into the important variables that influence PSM in the local context was followed. This approach will inform ways in which PSM could be measured in the future in the South African context. The results of my study indicate that social workers were attracted to public sector employment because it offered the greatest extrinsic incentives – higher salaries, medical aid benefits, and a housing subsidy, compared to NGO’s in the private sector. This finding challenges the widely accepted notion in PSM literature that social workers place more value on intrinsic reward than extrinsic rewards. Extrinsic reward refers to financial or other tangible incentives. The data further revealed that participants were willing to leave the social work profession and exit public service for employment opportunities that offered them greater support from superiors, and remuneration that acknowledged their academic qualifications. Poor remuneration adversely affected participants’ feeling of job satisfaction and motivation to perform their duties. Politics has played a seminal role in shaping the quality, and the denying of public service to certain categories of citizens.
author2 Ruiters, Greg
author_facet Ruiters, Greg
Gershwin, Gershwin
author Gershwin, Gershwin
author_sort Gershwin, Gershwin
title Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
title_short Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
title_full Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
title_fullStr Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary South Africa
title_sort understanding and measuring public service motivation among social workers in contemporary south africa
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/4200
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