Remarks by the Clerk of the Privy Council
And Secretary to the Cabinet
Dalhousie School of Public Administration
"Why Public Service Renewal Matters"
September 15, 2006
Introduction
Thank you for the invitation to address the Dalhousie School of Public
Administration.
As educators and researchers in public administration, you know the
importance of a strong and effective public service in a country’s long term
success. That is why I very much appreciate this opportunity to share with you
my views on why public service renewal matters.
Let me thank, in particular, the host for today’s lecture, David Wheeler,
Dean of Management at Dalhousie University, and David Stuewe, Visiting Professor
at the School of Public Administration. It is certainly an honour for me, with
my family roots in Nova Scotia, to address students and faculty at Dalhousie
University, which has trained so many for public service. Indeed, this province
and region have an extraordinary tradition of Canadian public service - whether
it be the military, the civil service, or elected public office.
Today, I want to focus my comments essentially on two broad points. First,
public service renewal and why it matters. And second, how do we ensure a public
service that reflects excellence and leadership.
In his book The Lexus and the Olive Tree, Thomas Friedman argues that
"in the globalization system…one of the most important and enduring
competitive advantages that a country can have today is a lean, effective,
honest civil service." In other words, public service matters, and an
effective, efficient, accountable public service can be part of a country’s
comparative advantage. This has certainly been Canada’s experience. Indeed,
the fact of the matter is that the democratic values, the ethic of serving the
public good, the professionalism, non-partisanship and commitment that
characterize the Public Service of Canada underpins its role as a fundamental
national institution.
A country’s economic, social and security outcomes are not preordained.
While they are inexorably affected by complex global influences, they are
importantly shaped by the strength of our public policies and institutions, the
quality of our human capital and the bounty of our natural resources.
For all countries, big and small, globalization and the knowledge revolution
are the realities of today. They are resulting in fundamental changes in the way
we work and live. In this new global environment, countries like ours, which are
relatively small and very open, have to understand global trends, issues and
opportunities better than our larger neighbours. Canadian success will depend on
our agility and flexibility; our capacity to learn from others; our ability to
Canadianize best global practices. We have to think globally to succeed
domestically.
For public servants, it means being ahead of this global curve. Thinking
through what it will take to increase Canadian competitiveness and productivity
growth on a sustained basis. Thinking about how to prepare to compete with the
new economic giants - China and India - in the coming decades. Thinking about
the crucial role of education and research in a knowledge-based global economy.
Our thinking and understanding needs to be as global as our economy is open and
our society is diverse.
Challenge of Public Service Renewal
Looking ahead, the question is how do we ensure that Canada continues to have
a strong public service, one geared to excellence, in the years ahead? The
challenge of public service renewal is a very real one. Like the Canadian
population, we are ageing, and at a faster rate in the public service. Like the
Canadian workforce, the public service is becoming more diverse, but we need to
better reflect the growing diversity of Canada. Like all employers, we are
experiencing the changing nature of work as technology is fundamentally altering
how we do things. Like everyone, we face the strongest national labour market in
over 30 years, with many career options for Canada’s best and brightest. At
the same time, we are uniquely facing an ongoing shift in public expectations
for public service, with more accountability, better management of tax dollars
and improved core public services at the top of their list. And, with all this,
the "public service brand" is probably less clear in the public’s
mind than in decades past.
So, while the forces of change are not unique to the public service, we need
to understand them and respond to them if we are going to be successful in
attracting and retaining Canada’s best and brightest to public service in the
years to come.
In tackling the challenge of labour force renewal, public service has a
strong advantage - it offers an incomparable range of fascinating and meaningful
jobs, and the prospect of multiple careers, all within the same institution. The
federal public service, for example, is Canada’s largest employer, with
230,000 employees; Canada’s most national employer, with over 1,600 points of
service across Canada; Canada’s most multi-skilled workforce, with more
occupational disciplines than any other employer; and, Canada’s most
international employer, with a presence in 115 countries around the world. This
scale and scope provide unparalleled opportunities for different careers in
different areas, all within the federal public service.
As in the private sector, renewal is not just an issue for executives but for
all employees, regardless of what jobs they do or where they work. I believe in
public service, and feel strongly that all of us have a stake in ensuring that
our public service is strong, vibrant and dynamic, both now and in the years to
come. And the Canadian public equally has a stake in this endeavour, as it is
they who benefit from an excellent public service.
How Changing Demographics Impacts Public Sector Renewal
To better understand the challenge of public service renewal at all levels of
government, we need to start with Canada’s changing population demographics,
and its changing labour market conditions.
As demographer David Foot has demonstrated, Canadian society is ageing. For
example, the proportion of Canadians in the 15 to 24 age cohort has been on a
declining trend over the last 25 years, and the number of Canadians in the key
25 to 44 employment cohort is actually lower now than in 1991. At the same time,
reflecting the sharp increase in the 55 to 64 age cohort, the proportion of
working age Canadians to total population is close to its historical peak, and
will begin declining after 2010 as a consequence of the growing retirement boom
over the next decade.
Shifting demographics go beyond population ageing. Both the supply of labour
and the sectoral distribution of work have been changing as well. Labour force
participation rates are near historical peaks, but entirely due to a sustained
rise in female participation rates. In fact, not only are male participation
rates lower today than 25 years ago, but high school drop out rates for males
are twice as high as female levels. On the skills side, the demand for knowledge
workers in the Canadian economy is rising rapidly, and in all sectors.
Sectorally, it is service sector employment that has grown enormously over the
last 25 years, now accounting for over 75% of all employment in the
economy.
In this broader Canadian context, what are the demographics of the federal
public service? Well, they show similar trends, but ageing is more pronounced.
Fifteen years ago, federal employees in the 25 to 44 age cohort made up over 60%
of the public service, with under 30% in the 45 to 64 age cohort. Today, it is
largely reversed, with 50% of public servants in the 45 to 64 age cohort while
just over 40% are in the 25 to 44 age cohort. The ageing in the public service
is also prevalent in executive ranks, with the average age of Assistant Deputy
Ministers now 53 years, and the average age for all executives ranges from
nearly 50 years (EX-1s) to 52 years (EX-3s). Put differently, almost 10% of
public servants today have at least 30 years of pensionable years, a near
three-fold increase since just 2000.
Add to these trends the current cyclical strength of the labour market, where
the unemployment rate is near a 30-year low, and the employment rate, which is
at an
all-time high. The bottom line: it is a very competitive but ageing labour
market, where governments face much greater competition for today’s young
knowledge workers who increasingly are female and visible minorities, and have
more opportunities than ever before.
Public Policy and Public Service Matters
At the same time, let’s not forget people join the public service to
advance public policy, to make a societal difference. In that context, it is
useful to reflect back over the last 25 years and the extent to which
public policy has helped shaped the present. Let me give you four specific
examples, which speak for themselves:
- Twenty-five years ago, the federal deficit was 4Ľ% of GDP, debt was
skyrocketing, federal spending was more than 17% of the economy, taxes were
rising, and the CPP/QPP was in deficit. Today, the federal budget is
balanced, debt is being repaid, government spending is 13% of the economy,
taxes are falling and the national pension system is actuarially sound.
- Twenty-five years ago, the Canadian inflation rate was 12% and mortgage
rates were approaching 20%. Today, we have inflation target of 1% to 3%, low
and stable inflation, and long-term mortgage rates of under 6%.
- Twenty-five years ago, Canada was a $0.3 trillion (U.S.) economy, with a
chronic current account deficit, rapidly rising foreign indebtedness, and a
large productivity gap with the U.S. Today, we are a $1.3 trillion (U.S.)
economy, an integral part of NAFTA with a current account surplus and a
lower foreign indebtedness than the U.S., but the productivity gap still
constrains us.
- Twenty-five years ago, security concerns related to the Cold War,
terrorism was not a global concern and our spending on defence and security
was on a long term decline. Today, the Cold War is over, international
terrorism is our key security challenge, defence and security budgets are
rising and Canadian women and men are fighting in Afghanistan.
The general point that emerges from these examples is that public policy can
have a profound effect on a country’s present and future prospects. And,
public servants have the opportunity to help governments shape this public
policy - whether it is in the fields of science policy, competition, health,
environment, energy, international trade, social programs, etc. What we do
affects our prospects as a nation to realize our potential.
In a more immediate sense, public service offers the opportunity to make a
difference in people’s lives. Consider, for example, the recent evacuation of
Canadian citizens from Lebanon, or our aid workers in Afghanistan where we are
building schools for a generation, particularly women, who were denied
education.
What is the Public Service Brand
In the context of public service renewal, the brand matters. We need to
consider what Canadians think about public service, and why? We need to focus on
what students think about government as a career choice, and how we can make
public service a more attractive option. And, we need to understand what public
servants think about the career choice they have made, and how can we improve
the retention of our best?
Public service is about values, and it is about accomplishment. We must
emphasize excellence, leadership and teamwork in everything we do. Canadians
should expect nothing less than excellence in their public service, and we
should accept nothing less from ourselves. The best and brightest don’t want
to work for an average organization, and average public policy will not propel
Canada to the front ranks of nations.
Creating a high performing organization requires a relentless focus on
ensuring a stimulating work environment. When employees are enthusiastic about
where they work and engaged in what they do, obstacles seem smaller, difficult
problems give way to innovative solutions, and exceeding expectations happens
with regularity. A culture of teamwork is part of that. We must never lose sight
of the importance of ensuring that the team is diverse; good public policy is
helped by a diversity of views - linguistically, geographically and culturally.
We also need to think about how well we do our work, and what benchmarks we
set for ourselves. Here attitudes matter. I believe we should make excellence
our quest, and our brand. To manage for excellence, to foster effective teamwork
in a creative, dynamic work place, we need leadership. Leadership that spots
talent, rewards performance, sets the agenda, focuses energies, takes risks and
acts as a role model.
Moving Ahead on Renewal
The foundations for public service renewal have been established by a number
of comprehensive public service initiatives over the last 15 years. Beginning in
1990,
PS 2000 launched a broad-based renewal exercise. This was followed by Program
Review in 1994-1995 as government significantly downsized employment to help
eliminate its chronic fiscal deficit. In 1997, La Rélève
put an emphasis on modernizing compensation, restarting external recruitment,
and improving executive training. By 2001, the focus shifted to strengthening
the machinery of public service management, with a new Public Service
Modernization Act (2005) and several restructured human resource management
agencies.
In considering how best to move ahead on public service renewal today, our
approach will be focused, pragmatic and geared to concrete results. To drive
this process, we’ve established a new Deputy Ministers’ Committee on Public
Service Renewal and made renewal a priority for all senior managers.
We believe that the main priorities for this targeted, pragmatic,
results-oriented approach should include:
- Rethinking our recruitment model: we face unprecedented competition for
Canada’s best and brightest graduates and we can’t be a passive
recruiter of talent. Recruitment must become a senior executive priority,
and task, not a function delegated to the Human Resource department. If our
competitive advantage is the exciting and diverse nature of the jobs we
offer, then we have to take this message to universities and community
colleges.
- Rethinking our development model: we live in a era of technological
innovation where the only constant is change. We need to better personalize
our professional development approaches, and put more focus on management
development skills. We need to manage for excellence. We need to better
incorporate the new Canada School of Public Service into career-long
development strategies.
- Rethinking our retention model. People entering the workforce today are
seeking rewarding professional experiences, not jobs-for-life. We need to
accommodate a more flexible workforce in the public service, with more
mid-career hiring, more interchanges, more diversity, more mobility and
better succession planning at all levels of the public service.
- Improving our human resource management toolkit. We need a toolkit that
better supports effective human resource management; one that is flexible
and agile; one that delegates wherever possible consistent with public
service values and objectives; one that better utilizes mentoring for
succession and knowledge-transfer.
In all this, public service renewal can benefit significantly from support by
those outside government. We would benefit from more interchanges with the
private sector, universities and NGOs to broaden our perspectives and help
develop our next generation of leaders. We would benefit from greater focus in
Canada’s schools of public administration and public policy on public sector
management and human resource issues. We would benefit from the experience of
leaders in other sectors, particularly senior business executives, in leading
edge management and human resource practices and how they might be adapted and
applied to the public sector. And we would benefit from better dialogue with the
Canadian public.
Conclusion
In conclusion, ladies and gentlemen, I think it is an exciting time to be a
public servant. Now more than ever, we have the opportunity to play a key role
in helping move Canada forward.
Public servants are on a journey together, with both challenges and
opportunities before us. We will be rethinking how we do business on an ongoing
basis, trying to do it better each day. We will balance long-term policy
development with addressing real-time practical needs, and do it together as a
team. We will work to enhance the image of the Public Service of Canada by
assuring Canadians that we know how to combine pragmatic common sense, new ways
of thinking and a focus on excellence.
I accepted the Prime Minister’s invitation to become Clerk of the Privy
Council because I believe in the value to Canada of a strong and effective
public service. I take my responsibilities as Head of the Public Service of
Canada seriously, and no more so than the challenge of strengthening this
important national institution.
Thank you for this timely opportunity to talk about public service. I hope
that some of you will take up the challenge of a career in the Public Service of
Canada.
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