Ko te amorangi ki mua, te hāpai ō ki muri
1/7/2018
These are difficult days in corporate and public sector governance.
Difficulties play out daily and impact anyone who works in or around the governance and management divide – very few organisations are unaffected.
The once smooth relationship between governors and senior executives is strained by unprecedented change.
This change plays out in ways that feel intrusive to managers – requests for more information, more evidence, more reporting, additional presentations and more meetings – all requiring time, effort and attention.
My headline advice to officials and board members is this: leadership to the fore; you all have important roles to play.
To officials, I say this: without question, balancing the interests of shareholders and the Board is difficult, especially in the public sector where monitoring agents demand more and more. While it can feel like monitoring agents want more and more control without any of the responsibility, a good executive has to keep in mind that shareholders and boards themselves are responding to the escalating demands to exercise unprecedented oversight in ways that sometimes blur the traditional distinctions between governance and management.
I offer this to board members new to public sector governance: public and private sector governance are broadly alike except in three ways.
Disclaimer
These are my evolving thoughts, rhetorical positions and creative provocations. They are not settled conclusions. Content should not be taken as professional advice, official statements or final positions. I reserve the right to learn, unlearn, rethink and grow. If you’re here to sort me neatly into left vs right, keep moving. I’m not the partisan you’re looking for. These in...
Read moreAhakoa he iti kete, he iti nā te a …
Kia ora, and welcome I’m starting a blog. I’m as surprised as you are. This is a place to jot down my evolving thoughts about public administration, policy, and delivery in Aotearoa: beneath the surface and between the relays of elected and unelected officials. It will be about the undercurrents. Not the tired critiques or the glossy promises, but the patterns, tensions, compromises,...
Read moreTime to Retire “Bad Apples …
A plea from Ōtautahi. Can we stop using the phrase "bad apples" when discussing institutional problems? It is a tired cliché that has outlived whatever usefulness it might have once had. The idiom "one bad apple spoils the whole barrel" initially warned about how quickly rot spreads. Yet in contemporary discussions about institutional accountability, we've flipped its meaning to isolate and ...
Read moreGetting Regulation Right: Being Res …
Regulation often gets a mixed reputation. Some see it as unnecessary red tape, slowing things down and making life harder for businesses and communities. Others worry that it's too weak and fails to properly protect people and the environment. What both views have in common is frustration with regulation that seems disconnected from the real world. But good regulation doesn't have...
Read moreThe Implosion of the US Administrat …
The collapse of the US administrative state is not just an American problem, it carries important lessons for Aotearoa New Zealand. As Washington grapples with political dysfunction and the erosion of public institutions, we should pay attention to how a weakened state apparatus invites economic instability, political turmoil, and diminished democratic control. For Aotearoa New Zealand, th...
Read more