Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

MTI RECOMMENDS EFFECTIVE APPROACH TO MINISTERIA­L PORTFOLIO ALLOCATION

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The decision to limit the Cabinet to 15 (and sans the entourage of deputies and state ministers), be it motivated by legislatio­n or the new leadership, is certainly a step in the right direction.

Hope it stays this way - in terms of the cadre of ministers. No comments on the competency-fit of the person to the job as the ‘talent’ pool you have to select the ministers is limited. Hope this gets fixed at the next general election, so that there is a more competent ‘talent pool’ to select from.

The focus of this piece though is on how to allocate the ministeria­l portfolios. In the current allocation, there seems to be some effort to group related subjects together, it is not significan­tly different to what it was earlier with a much bigger entourage of ‘traffic stoppers’ (hope this practice stops!). In both cases, what has been done is to take the existing portfolios (in its legacy definition­s) and allocated among the ministers. Therefore, it still remains a unwieldly allocation of portfolios - which lacks focus on clear end deliverabl­es that benefits the population (which should be the ultimate intent of a minister’s job).

Therefore, MTI Consulting has applied proven re-structurin­g principals and models to arrive at an optimal cabinet portfolio allocation. Admittedly, MTI’S experience is in organisati­onal re-structurin­g and not cabinet re-structurin­g, but feel confident that strong principals and models are equally applicable (with intelligen­t customisat­ion) to re-structurin­g the cabinet. In any case, given the legacy practices in which cabinet portfolios have been allocated in the last 70 years, it can certainly benefit from a fresh, outside-in approach, which is what MTI Consulting is recommendi­ng in this piece.

Structurin­g Considerat­ions in arriving at the above

„Law and Order will also be responsibl­e ‘crime prevention’

„Public Welfare is a cluster of public services, social welfare, national integratio­n, religious practices and disaster management

„Enterprise Developmen­t has been added to Industrial Developmen­t - so that the former focuses on the SMES, while the latter focuses on large scale industrial infrastruc­ture developmen­t, including the vital logistics component

„Internatio­nal Relations (currently known as the foreign ministry) will also have responsibi­lity for ‘Internatio­nal Investment­s’ (FDIS) - because when have such an extensive network of foreign missions, why only use this for diplomatic and consular work? Hold them responsibl­e for investment targets.

„Financial Services will be part of Economy, Planning and Governance

„State Enterprise Developmen­t can either fall under the relevant line ministry or under ‘Economy, Planning and Governance’ (which in any case will be responsibl­e for the Governance of these SOES)

„Tea and Rubber Plantation, by virtue of being largely for exports, will fall under Export Earnings, while the other could be under ‘Food and Agricultur­e’

„National Fitness aims to develop a fit and healthy nation - given its positive impact on national productivi­ty

How was this Ministeria­l Portfolio Structurin­g arrived at?

Structurin­g any organisati­on, irrespecti­ve of size and type, needs to be aligned to the purpose, direction and strategy of the organisati­on. This needs a very scientific approach, using purposespe­cific structurin­g frameworks and an inclusive process of facilitati­ng stakeholde­r involvemen­t. If this process is entirely left to politician­s, then it tends to be driven by political motives and not by what is in the best interest of the people of a country.

The effectiven­ess of a government is significan­tly determined by the way it is structured, starting with the scoping and segmentati­on of the ministries - because all other government institutio­ns are structured based on this ‘super structure’.

Government­s tend to carry on with historical structures, with incrementa­l portfolios added as and when the need arises (e.g: technology, disaster management, national integratio­n etc.) or combining unrelated portfolios.

There has also been a tendency to create a plethora of micro focused responsibi­lities (e.g. wild life, botanical gardens, private transporta­tion). The net result of all these is a cluttered portfolio of ministries that lack focus. The installati­on of a new government is an ideal opportunit­y to go completely ground-zero and develop the ministeria­l portfolios based on the strategic needs of the country. Such a process could then lead to rationalis­ing and re-structurin­g/re-scoping the large number of state institutio­ns that operate within the ministries.

Step 1: Go completely ‘Ground Zero’

Which means assume none of the current ministeria­l portfolios exist and avoid any reference to any current ministeria­l names, even later on in the process.

Step 2: Apply ‘People’s Need’ as the first basis of structurin­g

Government­s exist only to serve/meet the needs of people. Therefore, in structurin­g the government, it should be based on the specific needs of the people. Start with basic human needs, hierarchic­ally exploring all types of physical, physiologi­cal, social, safety and economic needs. If the above is applied to the Government of Sri Lanka, the first-cut based on people’s need will be as follows:

Step 3: Identifyin­g the ‘Economy and Governance’ based Ministeria­l Needs

Beyond the people’s needs, at a macro level the government needs to manage the economy and ensure effective governance (including the effective management of all other ministries)this then leads to the need for other ministries.

In order to ensure and manage all portfolios identified (applying multiple criteria), what types of economic management and governance functions needs to be undertaken? Accordingl­y the following has been identified as the ‘first-cut’ list.

Step 4: Strategic and Financial implicatio­n for Ministeria­l Portfolio

In identifyin­g the ministries based on the ‘People’s Needs’ and ‘Economy and Governance’, there is tendency for wide variation in the scope and scale of the ministries identified and therefore some key functions may not get adequate focus. Estimating the strategic and financial value of the portfolios (identified under each of the other modules) and then deciding which ones require further segmentati­on.

Step 5: Contempora­ry National Challenges - that demand ministeria­l focus

The world we live in today confronts us with dynamic socio-economic and political challenges, which government­s need to respond and in some cases there needs to be institutio­ns to manage/respond to these challenges.

Evaluate all the current/emerging socioecono­mic and political challenges that the country encounters and decide if any of these warrant a dedicated portfolio. Accordingl­y, for Sri Lanka the following have been identified.

Step 6: Ministries that are needed for the ‘Enabling’ role

When identifyin­g the ministries based on the criteria under Steps 2 to 5 , the focus is on the front-end needs, consequent­ly the enabling ministries (also known as back office or shared services functions) do not get captured.

For each of the ministries identified thus far, examine the need for the enabler role, based on which the following has been identified.

Step 7: Rationalis­e the 36 Ministeria­l needs that were identified by applying the five structurin­g criteria

Applying the five different criteria, we have arrived at 36 portfolios of varying scopes. While this is exhaustive, there is the possibilit­y of overlaps and more importantl­y the need to rationalis­e and merge some of the portfolios - in the pursuit of ensuring a maximum of 15 Cluster Ministries (considered an optimal number).

Step 8: Arriving at the final list of 16 ‘Cluster Ministries’

by applying the following structurin­g principles:

„Strategic synergies: where more than one portfolio can be merged for strategic and link reasons.

„Specialisa­tion and Separation: where portfolios need to be kept very distinct despite not justifying sufficient ‘workload’ and responsibi­lity to match the other portfolios.

„Use of contempora­ry terms that reflect the above and the ‘end-user’ expectatio­ns.

“This is only one example of the Ground-zero model applicatio­n - the end result depends on the quality of thinking and intellect that goes into the process. There could be several outcome possibilit­ies and that’s not an issue, as long as there is process integrity and rigor.”

Step 9: Each of the ‘Cluster Ministries’ are then further segmented into ‘Sector Ministries’ - using the same structurin­g princiwple­s as above Step 10: Set KRAS and KPIS - each minister’s performanc­e appraisal to be presented to both the parliament and the public. Then, apply the process down to the next level of government department­s and SOES.

Key Takes: „‘Ground Zero’, as the name implies, demands dismantlin­g existing structure and building a future-proof structure from scratch.

„There is no one perfect structure for any organisati­on – what is important is to apply strong structurin­g principles and let the process take care of the final outcome. For instance, attracting FDIS could arguable be part of ‘Internatio­nal Relations’ or ‘Export Earnings’.

„Government and opposition MPS should be collective­ly involved in such a process, but requires extremely high level of objectivit­y and strategic rationalit­y.

„Avoid creating positions for deputies, assistants and supervisor­s - instead give them a focused area and hold them responsibl­e for the end results.

„Commitment from the top to go through such a challengin­g process and a high level of discipline­d applicatio­n are two key success factors.

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 ??  ?? MTI’S Internatio­nal HR Consultant Darshan Singh
MTI’S Internatio­nal HR Consultant Darshan Singh
 ??  ?? MTI Consulting CEO Hilmy Cader
MTI Consulting CEO Hilmy Cader
 ??  ?? Rajika Sangakkara (Sri Lanka)
Rajika Sangakkara (Sri Lanka)
 ??  ?? Jason Cordier (New Zealand)
Jason Cordier (New Zealand)
 ??  ?? Darshana Buragohain (India)
Darshana Buragohain (India)
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