Quicker, Better, Cheaper? Managing Performance in American
Government
Edited by Dull Forsythe (Rockefeller
Institute Press: Albany)
Reviewed by Hyong Yi
The problem with management books, whether they are about reengineering,
reinvention, or any other organizational reform or improvement initiative,
is their often unambiguous proclamations of being silver bullets for
troubled organizations. In many ways, they are no different from vacuous
self-help books that promise a thinner you or a happier marriage in five
easy steps. In reality, how many management books really fulfill the promise
of their hype?
Not the Final Word
Fortunately, Quicker,
Better, Cheaper? Managing Performance in American Government does
not proclaim to be the final word on addressing an organization's
performance needs. Nor does it provide detailed directions to help
organizations implement a performance management system. But it is
the most comprehensive work to date on this important topic.
QBC? is a compendium on performance management with contributions
by heavyweight academics and practitioners. It is an overview of the
practice of performance management at all levels of government during
the last decade. If you are looking for silver bullets or a how to guide,
this is not the book for you. However, if your need is for a comprehensive
understanding of performance management from a historical perspective
sprinkled with some lessons learned, there might be some value in this
anthology. A major strength of this work is the list of contributors. While
not quite a who's who of public sector performance management, the authors
are definitely top rank.
Something for All Readers
QBC? has
a broad target audience. Opening with a 1999 article by Harry Hatry, an
expert in the field, that serves as a good primer on performance management,
it follows with pro and con pieces about performance management and the
decade old Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA). This is followed
by case studies on various federal programs, as well as state and local
experiences, and a summary by editor Forsythe.
On of the more intriguing aspects of QBC? is the chapter by
Allen Schick, "Getting Performance Measures to Measure Up." In
many ways, Schick's contribution can be seen as the logical sequel to his
1966 The Road to PBB: The Stages of Budget Reform, which appeared
in the Public Administration Review. In that message of nearly
40 years ago, he predicted how performance-based budgeting can transform
an organization when resources are linked to results—funding, for
example, to program performance.
In QBC?, he offers a retrospective on the last four decades
of performance-based management and budgeting, asserting that successes
are "exaggerations and the few genuine successes" are exceptions.
His optimism in 1966 soured to skepticism by 2002. Alas, his contention
that activity-based costing now holds the promise of transforming government
is for another article, hopefully soon.
Use Sparingly If Ambitious
Gerald Marschke supports Schck's skepticism asserting that performance
incentives are not a one-size-fits-all solution. He warns that the more
ambiguous an agency's mission is, the more sparingly performance incentives
should be used. If used improperly, dysfunctional outcomes are commonplace.
Yet, as Forsythe's tome marches on, it turns a little brighter. A decade
after the legislation passed, GPRA still is talked about positively as
a tool toward helping Congress manage agency performance. Virginia Thomas
concludes with the theme of how accountability for performance results
can improve governmental integrity as a future benefit instead of a
present reality. The case study on the Social Security Administration by
Walter Broadnax and Kevin Conway also reinforces the belief that GPRA can
and will change government management.
QBC? seeks to provide greater insight into federal performance
management with case studies examining welfare, food stamps, health insurance,
empowerment zones, and intergovernmental relationship. Unfortunately,
these will strike some as rounding up the usual suspects. Advocates of
performance management have been using the same examples for a decade
to prove that agencies can make performance management work.
States and Municipalities
The federal experience is followed with how states and municipalities
have fared. Here, the case studies seem a little more balanced-in other
words they show a path towards implementation that is fraught with perils.
The state and local landscape, too, is littered with limited successes
and limited failures.
The only unequivocal success is the New York City Police Department's
COMPSTAT, used to revolutionize police management, a well-known example
for anyone familiar with performance management. However, a decade-old
sliver of success can't possibly overcome 600 pages of ambiguous successes.
The Final Blow
After nine case studies on performance management, Ann Blalock as well
as Barnow and Forsythe deliver the coup de grace. Blalock and
Barnow reinforce the message that while performance measurement has benefits,
it may be misguiding decision making on social programs. Forsythe's summary
only reinforces the conclusion that the jury is still out on performance
measurement. Truth lies between the skeptics and the enthusiasts.
As history, QBC? is an excellent resource, but it falls short
on current examples. Where is the next unequivocal performance management
success or the next innovative application? For example, it would have
been intriguing to examine how performance management could be implemented
in the service delivery models that President Bush is pushing-the use
of religious organizations to provide public services and the collaboration
between governmental and nongovernmental agencies for service delivery.
And it would have been nice to see an assessment of how performance management
could change a poorly performing agency or one that has conflicting missions
and contradictory mandates.
Perhaps the Most Intriguing
But perhaps the most intriguing issue is the question mark in the book's
title. In short, is the goal of performance management in fact faster,
better, cheaper? Few would debate the importance of improving governmental
efficiency or the desirability of linking resources to results. But does
that mean the ultimate management goal of government is an endless quest
for faster, better, cheaper? The National Aeronautics and Space Administration,
in the 1990s, made that its organizational mantra and now has abandoned
it.
The road to better government, like the road to hell, is paved with good
intentions-and missteps, failures, half-hearted implementations, and
mixed success. Quicker, Better, Cheaper? is one of the latter
and shows how far there is yet to go on that road to better government.
Hyong Yi is director of operations and policy for
the District of Columbia's Office of Budget and Planning.