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Workplace Productivity in the State Services

Workplace Productivity in the State Services sits within the following framework:

State Services Development Goals
In March 2005 the Government agreed an ambitious set of Development Goals for the State Services.  The Goals provide a framework for delivering the next generation of State Services.

The overarching goal is to build a system of world class professional State Services serving the government of the day and meeting the needs of New Zealanders.

The overarching goal is supported by six Development Goals:

Achieving the Development Goals will need the momentum and support of State servants across the whole State Services.  Transformation of the way State servants see and undertake their diverse roles, the way agencies design and deliver services and the way systems and networks are structured will present many challenges.  This will only be possible if State servants engage with the challenges collectively.

Partnership for Quality Agreement
The Partnership for Quality (PfQ) Agreement, between the government, Public Service employers and the Public Service Association (PSA), is a commitment to build quality jobs and quality public services.  This relies on genuine engagement of government, employers and the PSA.

The third PfQ Agreement was signed in May 2007.  As well as strengthening the commitments in the previous agreements, this agreement recognises productivity initiatives as a priority.  A productive and responsive public service must include:

These features are encapsulated in the PSA’s strategic agenda Democracy at Work.

For more information about the PfQ Agreements see the PSA website (www.psa.org.nz), the State Services Commission website (www.ssc.govt.nz) or the Democracy at Work publication.

Managing for Outcomes
Managing for Outcomes is the public management system for creating public value.  It frames organisational outcomes from the perspectives of citizens and asks how government can achieve better outcomes. 

This includes:

How productivity is measured in the State Sector
In the private sector, value is created by selling goods and services.  Success is based on the volume and prices of goods and services sold and productivity is increased when a greater amount of private value is achieved per unit of input.    
In the State Sector, value is created by promoting the public good and by delivering excellent services to citizens.  There are generally no market prices attached to the services delivered and volumes are often difficult or impossible to compare.  This means that it is hard to include the public sector in the official Statistics New Zealand measures of productivity across the economy. 

Ministers and government agencies regularly reassess their outcomes/objectives and evaluate the extent to which their current mix of outputs is achieving the desired outcomes/objectives.  This can be complex given the interaction of outputs from both public and private investment.

Government agencies also measure their efficiency and effectiveness in delivering outputs, including:

While measuring State Sector productivity is not without its challenges, the quest for public value has created impetus to improve data collection and measurement methodology in this area.  There is substantial scope for innovation and learning from collaboration to improve outcomes measurement in the State Sector over time.

In developing projects it is worth thinking about the measures you will use to gauge success.  Some examples are:

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