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OECD’s Engagement in Promoting Good Governance Martin Forst Public Governance and Territorial Development Directorate Plenary meeting of the Annual Conference “Development of Public Governance in Russia. The Present and the Future” Moscow, 22 March 2012 WHAT IS THE OECD? OECD: who are we? Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development • 34 countries worldwide • Cooperation with both member and non-member countries • Russia is negotiating to become a member • Close relations with Brazil, China, India, Indonesia South Africa and MENA countries through “enhanced engagement” • 12 departments • About 250 committees, working groups and expert groups • About 2 500 staff Our mission: to promote policies that will improve the economic and social well-being of people around the world Who drives the OECD’s work? Council Oversight and strategic direction Representatives of member countries and of the European Commission: decision taken by consensus Committees Discussion and Implementation Representatives of member countries & countries as observers work with Secretariat on specific issues Secretariat Analysis and proposals Secretary-General Deputy Secretaries-General Directorates Public Governance Family of Committees Territorial Development Policy Committee Network of Senior Officials from Centers of Government Working Party of Senior Budget Officials Network of Parliamentary Budget Officials Network on Performance and Results Network on Financial Management Public Governance Committee Network on Public Sector Integrity Network on EGovernment Regulatory Policy Committee Network on Public Employment and Management Global Forum on Public Governance WHAT DOES OECD DO IN PUBLIC GOVERNANCE? New governance solutions: OECD as the path-finder • Observatory of Public Sector Innovation • Open government and transparency • Evidence – based policy making • Transparency and integrity in lobbying • Performance of justice and regulatory institutions • Innovation in administrative justice OECD Governance Tools 1. Standards and instruments 5. Capacity building and implementation 4. Policy dialogue 2. Evidence and benchmarks 3. Taylor made policy advice and solutions Standards and evidence Policy standards and guidelines Other guidelines & best practices • 1998 Recommendation on Improving Ethical Conduct in the Public Service • Open Government • E-government 2003 Recommendation on Guidelines for Managing Conflict of Interest in the Public Service • Budgeting • OECD – APEC checklist on regulatory performance • 2008 Recommendation on Enhancing Integrity in Public Procurement • Human Resources Management • 2010 Recommendation on Principles for Transparency and Integrity in Lobbying • • 2012 Guiding Principles for Regulatory Quality & Performance Comparative Evidence • Government at a Glance • Regions at a Glance • Indicators of regulatory management • Public Governance Databases Tailored policy advice and dialogue Governance Peers Reviews Policy dialogue • • Access to networks of officials in OECD countries • Global Forum on Public Governance • Meetings at Ministerial Level • • Horizontal governance reviews (France, Poland, Ireland, Finland, Estonia) • A whole of government approach • Comprehensive view of reforms Sectoral reviews (Brazil, US, Mexico) Capacity building & implementation • Human resources • Advisory sessions • Budgeting • Peer-to-peer workshops • E-government • Study visits • Integrity • Regulatory Reform • Reform roadmaps: sequencing and staged implementation Territorial Development reviews (South Africa, Russia) OECD Public Procurement Review of the Mexican Institute of Social Security Increasing savings through better streamlined and innovative procurement processes Remaining challenges Selected Proposals for Actions • Procurement function considered an administrative task •Changing the perception of the procurement function • Consolidated procurement data are not available •Improving the current information system capacity • Reactive and urgent processes •Developing the capabilities to deliver (IT integration, professional workforce) • Poor performance of suppliers • High amount of bid challenges Public Governance Review of France Country features • Important place in the world • Management is not flexible and reform of HRM is difficult • Competent country • High deficit and public debt OECD review and recommendations • Indicators in public service delivery • Strengthen government wide vision • Enhance inclusive policy• No consensus on the size of public making service & level of HRM flexibility • Advance strategic use of egovernment Public Administration Reforms • Support choices with limited funds • Openness & transparency • Modernisation of HRM • Inter-ministerial coordination and management • Citizen-focus RUSSIA’S ACCESSION TO THE OECD Accession Roadmap Timeline to-date Accession roadmap • 1992 – beginning of the OECD co-operation with Russia • 23 OECD Committees • November 2007 the OECD Council approved the roadmap to accession for Russia • February 2012 – accession to the OECD’s Anti-Bribery Convention • Key criteria – Acceptance of Acts of the Organisation – Acceptance of OECD standards (accepted by OECD Members) – Coherence with member country policies and practices, including public governance • Milestones met WTO accession Accession to the OECD’s Anti-Bribery Convention • Final decision – by the OECD Council Public Governance Building BlocksAccession Assessment Structure and Coordination of Government Budgeting Two OECD committees Public Governance Committee Regulatory Policy Committee Human Resources Management Integrity in the Public Sector Open and Accountable Government E-government Management of Regulatory Quality & Administrative Simplification Multi-level Governance Thank you for your attention! Большое спасибо за внимание! Contacts: [email protected]