
This article discusses the qualities of
leadership and contrasts the role of a leader with that of a manger. It
analyses the impact of the New Public Management (NPM) regime's
performance management strand on leadership in the public sector. The
achievement of targets is seen as a measure of political success and
analysis is made of the manner in which this is reinforced throughout
public organisations. The effects of ‘robust’ performance management
techniques are examined and examples given of the negative impacts of
quantitative targets. It is argued that the function of the leader is
reduced to that of managing the attainment of these centrally set goals.
As a result risk-taking and innovation are constrained to that which is
required for the achievement of these goals. This is seen as an
explanation for the current prevalence of ‘gaming’ ploys and is linked
to a drop-in integrity in the pursuit of outputs. It is further argued
that the target regime sees the ‘Sovietisation’ of the public sector and
a return to the Taylorian values of an industrial past. A brief case
study of social service provision illustrates the potential for negative
outcomes that may result. This article concludes that when a ‘tick in
the box’ is allowed to suffice the qualities of public sector leadership
are inevitably reduced and confined to the panopticon of centralised
targets.
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