The media beatings will continue until morale improves...
Just when you think the near relentless attempts by the
media to demoralise and demonise the Civil Service have reached a new low,
there was depressing news in the Telegraph blames the MOD for failing to cut
the number of Civil Servants, which apparently means the Armed Forces are being
denied the ability to raise funds for new equipment (LINK)
Reading this sort of ‘news’ is a damning indictment on just
how poor the levels of research and analysis are in many media outlets these
days, and how desperate they are for a story that tries to give ‘bad news’.
The actual story relates to the news in the 2015 SDSR which
imposed a nearly 30% cut on the overall headcount of the MOD Civil Service from
roughly 55000 to roughly 40000 in a review which was politically barred from
downsizing the Armed Forces, in order to save funds. The key point to note is
that an SDSR is the entry review to a five year process of actions and tasks –
and the commitment was to reduce numbers by 2020, not by 2017.
That this figure came as a shock to many in the Military was
a bit of an understatement – Humphrey recalls vividly their reaction when they
realised the reality of what reductions of this scale meant, and how difficult
it would be to achieve it.
This difficulty isn’t because the Civil Service was
reluctant Turkeys voting for Christmas and trying to prevent it happening, but
instead because the scale of cuts represented massive changes to the way
Defence had to do business, and at a point where it was also trying to generate
efficiency savings.
Its often forgotten that the MOD Civil Service is arguably
two distinct bodies – the ‘industrials / Skill Zone’ workers, who do a wide
range of practical work such as dockyards, munitions depots, and all manner of
physical and skilled work to directly support military units. Then there is the
wider non industrial civil servants, who do the policy work, office support,
intelligence analysis and all the other tasks required to support the armed
forces.
If you want to reduce your workforce by 30% you have two
real options – either stop doing stuff wholesale or do it differently or close
sites down and make lots of people redundant. If you want to stop doing stuff,
you need to identify what process is being done in Defence now that doesn’t need
to be done in future. Do you privatise elements of support, reducing the
headcount but not the money to spend on overseeing the work (e.g. could logistics
be done differently). Do you stop doing some kinds of policy work or close offices down – but what is being
done that is discretionary that can easily be stopped or merged?
The sort of change required is vast, it needs a lot of
clever thinking to ensure that work being done isn’t forgotten about – what happens
for instance if you fire all the people doing logistics contracts, but then
have no one left to manage said contracts? You cannot just overnight say to one
in three CS – ‘thanks chaps, don’t bother coming back in tomorrow’.
One only has to think back to the last big round of
departures back after the 2010 SDSR when over 10,000 civil servants took a
generous redundancy scheme and left. Morale was so low, and the terms reasonably
generous that they managed to hit the three year target for reductions in the
first year alone just with voluntary applications. This saw an exodus of very
experienced people who left for either early retirement or other work.
The consequences were challenging – one only has to look at
the near total dismembering of DE&S in Bristol to realise that a lot of
very good people had gone, often without replacement and before a credible plan
was in place to manage the work they’d left behind – usually it was a case of ‘gap
the vacancy and hope to divvy the work up’. This in turn led to skills loss and
an increasing reliance on contractors and consultants to do work at vastly
higher cost to the taxpayer than before, and in turn it damaged the ability of
the MOD to support the Armed Forces.
A further 30% reduction of staff in 2015, on top of a substantial
reduction in 2010 was the last straw for many civil servants, who felt fed up,
demoralised and tired of being blamed for the perceived failings of the
Department – which many of them had no control of influence over. Humphrey
recalls being a guest at a formal dinner a few years ago when the person to his
left blamed him personally for the failure of MOD to support the troops in
Afghanistan – it got to the stage for many of his friends where they were
almost ashamed to admit they worked for the MOD for fear of the response they’d
get.
Today the authors sense is that many good civil servants
have left, others are biding their time. Part of the challenge in restructuring
and downsizing will be trying to keep as much of the department as intact as
possible – which is likely why no voluntary redundancy scheme has yet been announced
– the uptake would be enormous and the loss of people hard to sustain.
This is perhaps the real problem – too many out there think
of the MOD as supernumeraries who add nothing and do little. There is no real understanding
of the value they bring, the skills they offer or the loyalty they show to the
armed forces. It all comes down to tired clichés and silly arguments about ‘equivalent
rank’ or fundamentally failing to understand that a civil servant is a civilian
and not a military officer – one of the (several) breaking points for Humphrey
was an poorly judged intervention by a junior staff officer outside London when
he was sitting outside having a conversation with another civilian and failed
to ‘come to attention’ as a very senior serving officer walked past him –
apparently being a civilian wasn’t an acceptable excuse for not bracing up.
Until it is possible to have a sensible discussion that
recognises the huge skill set in Defence, that the workforce has been through
near constant change and reduction now for years and without much sense of a
coherent ‘light at the end of the tunnel’ its going to be hard to raise morale of
civil servants. Many are tired of being whipping boys in articles like this, many more are fed up of
low pay, an until recently appallingly designed and implemented performance
management system that seems designed to insult the intelligence of anyone who
suffered it (friends who are HR professionals described the MOD appraisal
system as arguably the single worst system they had ever seen), and finally a
sense that the CS is the convenient whipping boy to protect ‘our brave boys’
from any form of criticism or attack, regardless of who was to blame, with no
one willing to step in and stand up for them.
It is absolutely right to hold publicly funded organisations
to account, but the relentless attack on the MOD CS is having a dangerous
effect on the nations defences. People we need to have working in the system
due to their skills, knowledge and experience are leaving. Recruitment is down
meaning its impossible to replace them – at a time when much of Government is
growing to handle Brexit, the MOD is reducing its staff by ever greater
numbers. The overwhelming sense on leaving though is one of relief in walking
away from an organisation that seems to go out of its way at times to devalue
the efforts of its workforce.
The irony is that the savings from these reductions will be
minimal – given the inability to reduce military headcount, it means the work
will still need to be done, but the military left will be doing the work on top
of their existing jobs, and at vastly higher cost to the taxpayer. Until the
uncomfortable reality is accepted that military personnel costs are enormous,
and that the only way to save money is to reduce headcount, this situation will
continue. Comparing capitation rates and average salaries, we seem to be
replacing people on one salary with someone on three times the total capitation
rate to do exactly the same job – how does that make much sense?
Had MOD just made 30% of the workforce redundant in 2016
post SDSR, there would have been chaos today and it would be under attack for
failing to show proper strategic workforce planning. But by trying to do this
sensibly and work out what changes, what stops, and what has to be done
differently in order to meet these targets, it is attacked for failing to make 30%
of its workforce redundant in 2016…
Great article as ever, thank you! And its refreshing to see someone fight the corner of the MOD CS.
ReplyDeleteOne of the biggest mistakes of SDSR 2015 was ring-fencing the number of Army personnel.
Engaging Strategy recently posted an article, suggesting possible paths the Army should take post-Afghan to better use its manpower and resources to match rquired levels of capability.
http://engagingstrategy.blogspot.ie/2017/08/beyond-sangars-towards-post-afghanistan.html
I myself have supported the idea of "The Exquisite Army" for sometime.
Good article Sir H.
ReplyDeleteIt's a brutal time to be a Civil Servant, except perhaps in one or two favoured departments. I work with Schools which have seen 15% cuts, local authorities 40% cuts, adult social care is a mess, the NHS can't cope with the ever increasing number of older people and so on. We've gone through all this pain and yet the government is still in deficit, with very little real expectation that we'll pay of our national debt any time soon!
There's no easy solutions unfortunately. It would be nice if MOD CS are appreciated but I have to say that CS across the board aren't, so that's unlikely to change either.
JG