Reducing the Size of the Federal Civilian Work Force


Book Description

Reducing Fed. employment levels has become an important element in efforts to improve the efficiency of government and reduce its costs. This study examines different methods of reducing Fed. employment and compare them on the basis of cost and their effects on the work force. Contents: costs and savings of cutting employment; long-term costs and savings of different approaches to reducing employment; managing employment reductions using the traditional methods: experience at the DoD; and use of separation incentives at the Postal Service and the DoD.










Downsizing the Federal Government


Book Description

The main focus of downsizing has shifted from the private to the public sector. The cutbacks began in the Department of Defense. Now the goal is a federal civilian workforce reduction of 12 percent by the year 2000. This pioneering study looks at the management of workforce reductions in the public sector both in theory and in practice. Three case studies -- of the Defense Logistics Agency, the Bureau of Reclamation, and the Food and Drug Administration -- illustrate the organizational, managerial, and human dimensions of attempting to improve performance with reduced resources. The author draws on extensive interviews with senior executives and middle managers in the three agencies; at the General Accounting Office, the Office of Personnel Management, and the National Performance Review; the Senior Executives Association and the Federal Managers Association; and scholars and researchers. In a larger sense, this work pushes the boundaries of knowledge concerning organizational change and makes a significant contribution to organization theory. It offers important new insights not only for public sector managers but for organization theorists and management specialists whose work on downsizing has been presumed but not shown to be applicable to the public sector.




The True Size of Government


Book Description

In this book-- the first that attempts to establish firm estimates of the shadow work force-- Paul C. Light explores the reasons why the official size of the federal government has remained so small while the shadow of government has grown so large.







Changes in Federal Civilian Employment


Book Description

In its continuing efforts to control costs, the federal government has repeatedly targeted its civilian workforce of approximately 2 million people for reduction. From the beginning of his administration, President Clinton made employment cuts a priority. In Executive Order 12839 of February 10, 1993, the President instructed agencies to cut employment by 100,000, representing a reduction of about 5 percent from the levels at that time. The National Performance Review recommended reform in personnel, procurement, and other federal management activities that it argued would permit additional cuts in employment totaling around 150,000. Building on those initiatives, the Federal Workforce Restructuring Act of 1994 set limits on employment that would reduce the government's civilian workforce through 1999 by more than 250,000. The legislative branch has not escaped such efforts either. The new Republican majority in the Congress has made reducing employment in that branch of government one of its priorities. By almost any measure, the trend in federal civilian employment is down.







Comprehensive Plan for Reforming the Federal Government and Reducing the Federal Civilian Workforce


Book Description

"Despite growing citizen dissatisfaction with the cost and performance of the Federal government, Washington often crafts costly solutions in search of a problem. Too often the focus has been on creating new programs instead of eliminating or reforming programs which are no longer operating effectively. The result has been too many overlapping and outdated programs, rules, and processes, and too many Federal employees stuck in a system that is not working for the American people. Through the actions described below, President Trump aims to make government lean, accountable, and more efficient"--Purpose and scope




Budget options


Book Description