
Modernizing the Federal Government : Paying for Performance.
Title:
Modernizing the Federal Government : Paying for Performance.
Author:
Montoya, Silvia.
ISBN:
9780833044419
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (55 pages)
Contents:
Cover -- Preface -- Contents -- Figure -- Tables -- Summary -- Abbreviations -- Part One - Introduction -- Part Two - Pay for Performance: Social Science Perspective -- Part Three - PFP: Different Forms -- Part Four - The Appraisal System: A Source of Concern -- Personal Characteristics -- Rater Training -- Part Five - PFP in the Public Sector: Evidence -- Pay for Performance in the State Systems -- Part Six - PFP in the U.S. Federal Government -- The GS Structure -- How Are Employees Evaluated? -- Is Performance Evaluation Linked to Pay? -- Measuring Substandard Performance in the Federal Government -- Is It Necessary to Modify the GS System? -- Part Seven - Some Departures from the GS -- The DoD PFP Demonstration Projects -- What Is Broadband Pay? -- Air Force Research Lab (AFRL) -- Navy Research Lab (NRL) -- Army Research Lab (ARL) -- Lessons from PFP Demonstrations -- The SES -- FDIC and IRS -- Part Eight - Proposals to Change the GS -- Part Nine - Burgeoning Opposition to PFP -- The TSA -- Opposition to the DoD's PFP Scheme -- References -- Related Readings.
Abstract:
Enhancing the performance of the civil service has been a central objective of the United States since the Civil Service Reform Act of 1978 authorized a performance-based component to federal salary structures. In 2003, the National Commission on the Public Service, also known as the Volcker Commission, recommended that explicit pay-for-performance (PFP) systems be adopted more broadly throughout the federal government. The authors compare several proposals aimed at enhancing the role of PFP in the federal government: a White House proposal (the Working for America Act), which recommends that the entire federal workforce be converted to PFP systems by 2010; and three bills in the 110th Congress. This occasional paper examines the advantages and pitfalls of explicit PFP schemes compared with the largely seniority-based salary system that still covers more than half of federal civil servants. The authors consider why using PFP in the public sector is challenging, what can be learned from the social science literature, recent practical experience, and growing congressional opposition to PFP.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Genre:
Electronic Access:
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