Management, Organizational Performance, and Task Clarity: Evidence from Ghana’s Civil Service

Author:

Rasul Imran1,Rogger Daniel2,Williams Martin J3

Affiliation:

1. University College London and the Institute for Fiscal Studies

2. World Bank Research Department

3. University of Oxford

Abstract

Abstract We study the relationship between management practices, organizational performance, and task clarity, using observational data analysis on an original survey of the universe of Ghanaian civil servants across 45 organizations and novel administrative data on over 3,600 tasks they undertake. We first demonstrate that there is a large range of variation across government organizations, both in management quality and in task completion, and show that management quality is positively related to task completion. We then provide evidence that this association varies across dimensions of management practice. In particular, task completion exhibits a positive partial correlation with management practices related to giving staff autonomy and discretion, but a negative partial correlation with practices related to incentives and monitoring. Consistent with theories of task clarity and goal ambiguity, the partial relationship between incentives/monitoring and task completion is less negative when tasks are clearer ex ante and the partial relationship between autonomy/discretion and task completion is more positive when task completion is clearer ex post. Our findings suggest that organizations could benefit from providing their staff with greater autonomy and discretion, especially for types of tasks that are ill-suited to predefined monitoring and incentive regimes.

Funder

International Growth Centre

World Bank’s i2i trust

UKAID

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Marketing,Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science

Reference51 articles.

1. Policy stability and organizational performance: Is there a relationship?;Andersen;Journal of Public Administration Research and Theory,2010

2. Bureaucratic investments in expertise: Evidence from a randomized controlled field trial;Andersen;Journal of Politics,2016

3. The allocation of authority in organizations: A field experiment with bureaucrats;Bandiera;Mimeo,2019

4. State capacity, bureaucratic politicization, and corruption in the Brazilian state;Bersch;Governance,2016

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