How Creating Semiautonomous Agencies Affects Staff Satisfaction

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Structural reforms such as the creation of autonomous agencies are a widely heralded solution for a multitude of problems in the public sector. These reforms have effects on public employees. This article shows how the structural disaggregation of ministries into autonomous agencies affects staff satisfaction with the organization. The article discusses three cases, where Dutch public organizations were either disaggregated from a ministry or reaggregated to the ministry. These structural reforms constitute a quasiexperimental setting where effects on agency staff and parent ministry staff are compared. In one case, creating the agency led to a decrease in staff satisfaction with the organization as compared to the staff that remained within the ministry. A second case showed that these negative effects linger and can last for more than eight years. An inverse organizational change—reaggregation—caused inverse effects: increasing satisfaction with the organization.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)433-460
JournalPublic Performance & Management Review
Volume43
Issue number2
Early online date12 Jun 2019
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Keywords

  • agency creation
  • Difference-in-differences
  • public management reform
  • staff satisfaction
  • synthetic control method

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