| A Review of: Breaking the Bargain: Public Servants, Ministers and Parliament by Martin LoneyDonald Savoie has established a reputation as an acerbic critic of
Canada's governing structures. In his latest contribution he turns
his attention to the profound changes that have transformed the
relationship between Canadian politicians and public servants.
Savoie's central thesis is that the line between politics and
administration is increasingly blurred with consequent problems for
both bureaucratic and political accountability. In his previous
book Governing from the Centre, Savoie examined the growing
concentration of power in the Prime Minister's Office and the
resulting decline in Cabinet government and parliamentary accountability.
Here Savoie argues that while the autonomy of cabinet ministers has
been eroded, the growth of horizontal decision-making, with departments
becoming increasingly dependent on reaching shared goals in program
design and delivery, diminishes ministerial accountability.
Increasingly the Canadian public service marches to its own drum,
often in ways that cost Canadian taxpayers dearly.
The introduction of managerial approaches derived from the very
different world of the private sector has lead not to increased
efficiency but confusion over objectives. The public service is
risk-averse, more anxious to avoid public controversy than to deliver
value-for-money services. It is also subject to a degree of adversarial
scrutiny unknown in the private sector. It has certainly become
clear that the business-management approach failed to deliver.
The catalogue of recent bureaucratic fiascos is long. It includes
the billion-dollar boondoggle at Human Resources and Development
Canada, the $2-million gun registry bill, the implementation of
which rocketed to close to a billion dollars, the numerous scandals
at Public Works, the diversion of health funds intended for aboriginal
programs, and the Radwanski affair, in which the problems plaguing
the Commissioner's office were noted by both the Public Service
Commission and Treasury Board without either agency taking any
effective action. What is striking about all these cases is the
absence of clear ministerial or bureaucratic accountability. Mel
Cappe, deputy minister at HRDC during the height of the Transitional
Jobs Fund fiasco, went on to head the public service. He currently
holds the plum posting of High Commissioner in London. Alfonso
Gagliano left Public Works with a diplomatic posting to Denmark,
and, in a reminder that truth is often stranger than fiction was
tipped as ambassador to the Vatican. David Dodge, former deputy at
Health, is now chairman of the Bank of Canada. The list of those
involved in the gun registry imbroglio is as long as responsibility
is elusive. Radwanski appears to have escaped further censure with
an apology that convinced few, while the oversight failures of
Treasury Board and the PSC attracted little comment, a reflection
of the diminished expectations characteristic of today's public
service sector.
The decline in accountability has been accompanied by the increasing
politicisation of public service. Fifty years ago, the line separating
politics from administration was clear, and senior public servants
were not identified with whichever party happened to be in power.
Today, Alex Himelfarb, Chretien's handpicked head of the public
service, sees nothing improper in making a speech in which he informs
participants in a symposium: "we will have Human Resources
reform, we will have health reform and we will have an innovation
agenda and we will have a skills and learning agenda and we will
reach out to Aboriginal people and poor people and we will make
sure every kid has a good start in life." In earlier days,
Savoie observes, this kind of speech would "properly have
been left to politicians." Today roles are so indistinct that
Himelfarb attended the Prime Minister's farewell dinner for his
cabinet members.
The politicisation of the public service and the continuing erosion
of the merit principle is further demonstrated by the ability of a
minister's political staff to transfer on preferential terms after
three years of service, frequently without any competition, into
the senior levels of the public service. Those familiar with such
staff will have no doubt that for most it is the only basis on which
they might secure selection. The practice grew rapidly under Trudeau
and while the Mulroney government made equally enthusiastic use of
such patronage, the Liberal Party's preponderant role in government
for most of the last forty years ensured a cadre of Liberal
functionaries at the core of the ostensibly neutral public service.
Recruitment and promotion has also been adapted to meet the Liberal's
enthusiastic courting of the ethnic vote. No less than 20 per cent
of new public service appointments and promotions must come from
visible minorities', a figure far in excess of labour market
availability and a direct attack on the merit principle.
Savoie's contribution to understanding the marked shift in political
and bureaucratic power in Canada is impressive. He makes a number
of recommendations designed to increase the power of parliament and
create clearer lines of accountability for program design and
delivery, but it is not clear where the audience for such reforms
is situated. Paul Martin talks enthusiastically, if vaguely, about
addressing the democratic deficit, but neither his career at Finance
or his well-financed take-over of the Liberal Party suggest any
real appetite for change. The current system serves the Prime
Minister. Senior public servants are extraordinarily well rewarded
as measured by any historic comparison, even as, by the same measure,
the service is more costly and error-prone. The business-management
approach may be flawed but as Savoie argues it "has served
senior public servants well An advisory committee from the private
sector helps determine their salaries. Their pensions are more
generous than ever, and they have many opportunities for employment
after they retire. in industry, lobbying firms and consultancy."
The cuts of the mid-nineties are a distant memory. The federal
public service has grown by some 25 per cent in the last five years
even as the ranks of senior officers have been swelled by a plethora
of new appointments. Savoie cites one department that boasts no
less than 17 assistant deputy ministers, below which are yet more
associate assistant deputy ministers, directors and director generals.
If there is any positive correlation between this burgeoning
bureaucracy and the quality of government it is not easy to discern.
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