FrankTrollman wrote:I am now deeply out of my depth as regards specific people interacting with specific Australian projects or the culture of employment in Australian government. Not having ever been to the Southern Hemisphere, I genuinely have no input on that particular shouting match.
I can say that if the government's hiring protocols are sufficiently non-conducive to succeeding at their appointed tasks that it is better to give the money you would spend on hiring people to a third party and then give them more money on top of that in order to hire people on your behalf with more sensible protocols - that perhaps a better solution would be to change your hiring system and not give that extra layer of money to a third party.
On account of then you'd have hired the same people with the same protocols for the same money and you wouldn't have been giving a large pile of money to an otherwise unrelated third party in order to do it.
Just saying.
-Username17
Oh I agree, but due to the electorate not being entirely rational voters, this is unlikely to happen.
Consider this case that actually happened and caused horward some great discomfort, but is entirely retarded.
4 very highly paid people were being flown in from one city to another. At the end of the week they had to return. Their contract allowed them to be paid for time spent in transit to the airport from the work site.
So they left the worksite, and rather than catch a taxi through peak hour, they instead hired a helicopter. This resulted in the government saving a significant sum of money, as it did not have to pay the high hourly rate of the men while they spent an hour in the taxi, and the helicopter flight is very short and in a competitive market place so it is quite well priced.
However, this made the news, and the public backlash against contractors being transported in helicopters forced the government to ba helicopter flights, at considerable cost to the government. If the government was a rational employer, it would not hesitate to pay for the flights.
However, due to public opinion, they discontinued the flights, and paid more.
This is a problem, and this mode of behaviour is at the root cause of many of the problems. Senior public servants are consistently underpaid, making attracting talent very difficult. The Australian social contract will not wear the pay increases required though.
The other downside is that the significant benefits are piled onto the compensation package, and many of these are abused, such as travel allowances. A systems of controls and performance management combined with higher pay would be much more effective.
Your point about pay scales is somewhat wrong, there are several pay scales. Admin work is paid using the AO scale, stuff thats more technical is on the PO scale for example. All scales are less cash than private enterprise for the same job though. OTOH working hours and flexibility are in favour of the government job.
That isn't the case in the Federal Government: In the Federal Government, all workers are on this pay scale: APS 1-6, EL 1-2, SES 1-3, with special contracts for 3 public servants (DMO, ATO, and some other bloke).
Some departments have elected to 'band' serveral pay brackets together to attempt to deal with the fact that pay is strictly linked to your position in the management heiracy.
For example, in an APS team, the team leader will be an EL 1, and his team members will be low ranked than him. This leads to a problem, because it makes it impossible for the team leader to be supported by a technical expert.
Also, the public sector actually pays considerably more for junior positions. An APS6 worker is a a graduate with 1-2 years experince. His total package is in the order of 80k, including benefits.
In a large private sector firm such as PricewaterhouseCoopers, the same employee would earn considerably less, between 65 and 70k.
However, the next promotion band for the PWC employee would run to 120k max, and he can achieve this with 1-2 years more work. The APS employee on the other hand either has to be a superstar or he can reasonably expect achieving pay parity to take
ten long years
So they quit. Leaving the APS with stars - who get fast tracked, people who strongly desire the secondary benefits of APS employees (i.e. those who do not wish to be part of a demanding performance culture) or below average workers.
This structural problem is part of the reason the APS is terrible at implementation - all the implementers leave or get promoted to middle/upper management.
The problem is partially due to legislation mandating practices that make firing people hard. Its also quite tough to hire someone who is provably good because permanent positions must be publicly advertised and current on job performance is not allowed to be used as part of the decision process. Obviously this is done to increase transparency/reduce corruption though so it can't be removed entirely.
This isn't even the worst part, the stupid stuff is things like interview panels being the only mechanism for interviewing. What? Where is the 1 on 1s? What about checking for a cultural fit?
Plus APS interview panels are universally impolite. When I was interviewing for grad positions, the entire interview panel from
two departments didn't shake my hand (Attorney Generals and Tax) Seriously, I know your sick of interviewing grads, but making eye contact and making me feel welcome would be, you know, nice.
Contrast this to my last private sector recruitment experience which was a series of one on ones were they would take you for coffee, keep it low key rather than confrontational, and they elicited a lot more information.
But seriously if you don't think known good performers are back doored in, I have some news for you - it happens all the time.