To the extent that it wasn’t clear before, it should be now: the once-respected public service has a major problem around competence.
We’ve been tracking the growing problem of public service bungling for a couple of years now, and the evidence is that things are getting worse, not better. The highest profile public service casualty of recent times has been Border Force’s Roman Quaedvlieg, but his dismissal wasn’t the result of underperformance. The comprehensive failure of the agriculture department to effectively regulate live export companies for animal welfare, revealed by the decade-long non-compliance of sheep exporter Emanuel Exports, led to the relevant minister publicly savaging his own bureaucrats for their failure to do their jobs properly. No one at agriculture will, as far as we know, be held to account for the failure, though. Bureaucrats there will just endure the humiliation of having Attorney-General’s staff come in and give them lessons on how to regulate properly.
Nor will anyone at Prime Minister and Cabinet will face legal action in relation to the trove of sensitive material that found its way to the ABC before being handed back by a cowed national broadcaster. Given the Abbott and Turnbull governments have dramatically extended their own powers to combat what they describe as “insider threats to national security” but which the rest of us call whistleblowers, it’s a strange outcome. Having postured about the need for draconian powers to ensure national security information isn’t revealed, having sought to criminalise basic forms of journalism such as receiving information that is in the public interest, the loss of thousands of pages of sensitive and in some cases cabinet documents seems to have yielded surprisingly little in terms of consequences for the bureaucrats involved.
Perhaps they’ve moved on to other jobs or retired. That’s one of the great mechanisms for avoiding accountability in the public service, one that’s regularly on show at every estimates hearings and at senate inquiries involving the public service — bureaucrats nodding understandingly and declaring how much they wished they could help the senator with her question, but sadly the officer involved is no longer with the department and they themselves have only recently commenced in the position.
But even for public servants that remain in position, there’s little to fear as a result of demonstrated incompetence. Last year, the Australian National Audit Office, after examining the handling of underperformance in eight public service agencies, concluded “there is significant room for improvement in the management of underperformance”. According to the ANAO, “underperformance is not being accurately identified and the proportion of employees undergoing structured underperformance processes is very low in all agencies.”
While you’d hope that a low number of employees would have been identified as underperforming, the plethora of problems found in the public service in recent years — Immigration bungling billion-dollar contracts and locking up Australian citizens again, the census debacle, the robodebt scandal, the repeated loss of personal information, and many others — suggests that the low level doesn’t reflect a dearth of candidates. Instead, there are internal barriers to managing underperformance — it’s time-consuming for managers, the procedures required are often repetitive and unnecessary and underperforming public servants can use sick leave to evade the process or allege bullying or harassment — which in turn deters managers from trying to deal with underperformers.
Sometimes, from the point of view of agencies, there’s been no underperformance. Immigration refused to accept the ANAO’s criticisms of its quite spectacular bungling of offshore processing contracts. Agriculture’s refusal to properly regulate live sheep exports perfectly fitted the view of former minister Barnaby Joyce, who boasted of restoring the trade. If there’s no disincentive for underperformance, then underperformance becomes inevitable — and all the more so if the underperformance is actually endorsed from the Secretary or Minister downward.

43 thoughts on “Does anyone in the Australian public service get held to account?”
Arky
April 17, 2018 at 2:46 pmIt’s hard to know how much is incompetence and how much just following orders from the malicious or the incompetent.
[email protected]
April 17, 2018 at 3:00 pmSince leaving the public service in 2012 I have watched as successive cuts have taken their toll on the people who entered as career public servants who loved their work. Not all of them geniuses admittedly, but many loyal and clever people were put out the door before their time. In my opinion the heavy cutting at the mid-range PS level means that there is a dearth of people with corporate knowledge and research skills; particularly those who might save senior public servants from making and arse of themselves in estimates.
Judy Hardy-Holden
April 17, 2018 at 3:09 pmI remember when the Public Service (I’m nearly 80) was held in high regard. Slow, nit-picking, thorough, trusted and usually right in the end. What happened? John Howard, happened with his great idea that he sacked any Departmental head that had worked for the previous government. Tenure was predicated on who was in power. Now, instead of ‘speaking truth to power’ a well grounded public servant ‘speaks whatever needs to be said to whoever needs to hear it’.
Some of them might have been a bit moribund but they knew right from wrong and watch out if anyone tried a swifty on them.
old greybearded one
April 17, 2018 at 3:11 pmThe people who run the departments Bernard are not Public Servants in the real sense. They are parachuted flunkies of the minister’s choosing and therefore, since they are from outside, do not seem to suffer the problems. Even in misconduct cases. Quadvlieg should have been out on his arse at once, as would Joyce have been were he in the service. But they are the darlings of the minister, so they have to really go off track and create a scandal before they go.
AR
April 17, 2018 at 4:12 pmThis thread is a wonderful example of the dilemma in which we, as a community, find ourselves.
It starts of with magisterial one-one-on-tuther burbling, replete with rabble-soothing bromides, a couple of ‘hear, hear’, then the usual partisans, followed amid field by the world weary cynics and coming up the rear the truly worrying, well meaning misguided.
Poor Bugger, my Country.
PS. Cleanse the palimpsest.
Ruv Draba
April 17, 2018 at 5:37 pmAR, I think the key value of information is in supporting better decisions. Much of the reporting in Crikey is unactionable by its readers, and hence much of the conversation about it is too, so we seldom get to the point of making actionable decisions.
However, the topics can be used to explore critical thought, share methods to explore and reason about our world, test our conclusions and exchange insightful references. (I suppose you could also try to persuade other people to vote differently, but does that even work?)
Beyond that, what do you see as being the benefit of these articles and their ensuing discussions? Based on your sense of the benefit, how could we conduct them better?
Martin
April 17, 2018 at 4:28 pmThe public service is more hidden from scrutiny these days because there’s not so many investigative journalists, the traditional media is smaller than it once was. Public servants themselves aren’t going to jeopardize their career, after all they have bills to pay like everyone else.
Exposing mismanagement is more difficult than ever.
Karen Hutchinson
April 17, 2018 at 6:22 pmAs you say Martin, exposing mismanagement is more difficult than ever…
For my sins please see; https://independentaustralia.net/life/life-display/comcare-how-our-workplaces-ostracise-sexual-harassment-victims,11392
kyle Hargraves
April 17, 2018 at 5:30 pmBernie, as conveyed on previous occasions, you are going to have to buy a new 2″ (50mm) brush an discard your old 6″ (150mm) brush because the latter misses too many places and leaves streaks all over the wall. The photograph in conjunction with the “report” suggests that cronyism (among over virtues) of Quaedvlieg is the average that one can expect and not the exception – whereas Quaedvlieg’s conduct was extreme by any measure (almost amounting to that of a few parliamentarians of late).
Most would be familiar with the expression : “the speed/behaviour/ethics/outlook/example of the boss is that of the shop” – irrespective of occupation. The “boss”, given the Westminster system is the government. Adding to what Ruv, Smit and Judy (in order of appearance) have conveyed we have a system where there is only a pretense of responsibility.
Let’s assume that Minister Cash lost her portfolio (despite a lame defense of her by Crikey some months ago); does anyone think that she would not be “rewarded” with some cushy public sector position which is unlikely to have any relationship to her knowledge-base?
The Public Service was a curious mixture of good, bad, mediocre, pretty (qua show-ponies) and ugly – at least when I had a managerial position in it. In the days of Permanent Heads (Smit & Judy above) the government of the day DID receive impartial advice. Now the CEOs of departments are glorified toadies to a particular party or ethos. In fact the PS, despite the incessant waste, has beaconed the trimmings of a corporate model (somehow superior to a previous PS model) by virtue of the re-naming of its positions (e.g. Director Corporate Services). Having written that, on a sufficiently large scale, the public sector is not inherently less effective than the private sector. Senor managers within the private sector has similar stories to those of their counterparts in the public sector.
As to funds – I’ve seen managers moved sideways for NOT spending their allocation or by spending it more effectively and thus saving resources for the same strategic or operational goal. Any senior PS manager has a story or two on tendering for services bordering on or perhaps entailing corruption.
The product one receives from the PS nowadays is no better than what one receives from the media – and for more or less the same reasons. While I did not agree with the policy directions of John Stone (as Permanent Head of Treasury) he was a model Public Servant. Publish some of his essays on the subject for a considerably more comprehensive assessment and even AR might be happy.
Peter Schulz
April 17, 2018 at 8:03 pmGood article, Bernard, especially the last paragraph. Bureaucracies (both public and private) encourage conformity and sycophancy towards those above oneself in the bureaucracy – hence the power of the person/government in charge to set the culture. If bureaucrats know the minister/government wants them to be derelict in their duty, 90% of the noddy-dogs will oblige. The other 10% will burn themselves out, leave, or be ostracised. The modern, corporatized bureaucracy has exacerbated this tendency greatly. I know this from working as a professional in a state health department. In the 1970’s, diverse opinions based on professional ethics were understood and valued. By the 2000’s calling out the emperor’s obvious nakedness was considered disrespectful, failing to follow a reasonable directive, not being a team player, etc.
RoscoHill
April 17, 2018 at 8:28 pmGreat Comment Peter Schulz, How can we fix this how can the culture change. Its obvious we need great Leaders in the Profession but where to find them with the right committment and drive
RoscoHill
April 17, 2018 at 8:28 pmGreat Comment Peter Schulz, How can we fix this how can the culture change. Its obvious we need great Leaders in the Profession but where to find them with the right commitment and drive