Around the world, public administration has been an extremely
important discipline. In China, the discipline of public
administration has been gradually popularized and is becoming
increasingly important since its reform and opening-up to the
outside world.
Among other sectors, the public sectors are dominant ones in
China. The public sectors in China consist of government
departments, Party departments, state-owned non-profit units, and
government-led social associations. With a total of 105.3 million
people, China has the largest public administration sector in terms
of number and scope.
This area has been expanding even though governments at all
levels appeal to downsize and streamline the number of employees in
the public sectors. The public sectors hold the most powerful
political and economic power in society and attract numerous social
elites.
Owing to the special importance of the public sectors in the
social and political life in China, research in public
administration in China has been springing rapidly in recent years.
Originally deriving from the disciplines of political science,
economy, and sociology, public administration has already developed
into an independent discipline. And with its increasing importance
in status, public administration has become an influential and
popular discipline in social sciences.
In more than a decade of its development process in China, we
have witnessed many inspiring and exciting reform practices from
which we can trace some positive trends.
First, public administration is becoming more and more
professional. People working in public sectors have, in fact,
become quite an independent professional estate. Government has put
forward specific professional requirements for management people in
public sectors, and has established corresponding standards
covering human resource recruitment, performance evaluation and
promotion. For example, all people who want to work in the
government sector must take State-organized qualification
examinations for civil servants.
Second, public administration has embarked onto the path of
managing government according to the law. Governing by law has
become an important goal of the Chinese government. In recent
years, China has passed a series of important laws to manage public
sectors such as Administrative Licence Law, Administrative
Litigation Law, State Compensation Law and Law on Civil Servants. A
legal system for public administration has been gradually taking
shape.
Third, the areas of public service delivery have been expanded,
and the quality of public service has been upgraded. In recent
years, the Chinese government has set forth the goals of building
service government and adopted a series of individual measures to
improve public service quality, such as simplifying administrative
approval procedure, administrative decentralization and one-stop
service.
Fourth, the accountability of public sectors has been enhanced.
The practices of "chief executive accountability system," "service
delivery promise system" and "accountability investigation system"
at various levels of governments are the specific indicators in
building up an accountable government.
Fifth, efficiency of public administration has been greatly
enhanced. Some local governments called the reform of improving
efficiency as "efficiency revolution."
Sixth, transparency of public administration has been increased.
The Chinese government regards the opening to the public of
administrative affairs as an important task of reform. The central
government has established a "national leadership task force for
opening to the public administrative affairs" to promote
transparency of the public administration. Some practices in recent
years such as "opening to the public policies system," "information
opening system," and "system of government spokesmen" are the
important steps for enhancing the degree of transparency in public
administration.
All these reforms and progress in the area of public
administration reflect three trends in the changes of public
administration in China: democratization, institutionalization and
decentralization.
In spite of the positive changes in public administration in
China, many serious problems still exist. The phenomena of
corruption in public sectors are very common; quality of public
service is comparatively poor; cost of public administration
remains terribly high; efficiency of public administration is
commonly low; functions of public administration are
inappropriately divided, and demarcation between duty and
responsibility is often not clear.
Compared to the problems existing in public administration,
generally research in public administration is comparatively
backward. It boasts little academic research, and the research
methodologies used are either old or simply borrowing Western
methods to analyze the society in China without in-depth research.
In theoretical capacity building, there is more of an introduction
of Western public administration theories and less theoretical
abstraction according to the Chinese context in public
administration.
In the area of application research, many policy suggestions are
overly idealized without practical uses. Still, many subjects are
worthy of study for public administration researchers study whether
they are the experiences and patterns of public administration
reform, or problems and lessons.
The author is a professor in political science, and director
of the Center for Chinese Government Innovation, Peking
University.
(China Daily May 8, 2006)