The Centrelink Experiment
Innovation in Service Delivery
Authored by: John Halligan , Jules WillsPlease read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
Description
Centrelink was established in 1997 as part of the Howard government’s bold experiment in re-framing social policy and re-shaping service delivery. Centrelink was the embodiment of a key tenet of the Howard vision for public service: a specialised service delivery ‘provider’ agency separated from the policy functions of the ‘purchaser’. Carved out of a monolithic Department of Social Security, Centrelink was established along ‘business lines’ operating 320 service centres and delivering payments to 10 million Australians. Although enjoying ‘monopoly provider’ status, the organisation was required to deliver services to many different clients on behalf of its ‘purchasing departments’ (up to 25 in total) under the terms of quasi-contractual service agreements. It was meant to demonstrate a greater level of both transparency and accountability for the administration of payments amounting to over $60 billion of Commonwealth expenditure. For many years there was a real ‘buzz’ around the Centrelink experiment and staff and clients were generally enthusiastic about the transformation. However, after around eight years, the experiment was reined in and Centrelink was placed under closer ministerial direction and under a new managing department. The experiment continues, but its trajectory reflects the different pressures impacting on such dedicated ‘services delivery agencies’.
John Halligan, Professor of Government at the University of Canberra, is a foremost Australian expert on public sector governance and has published extensively on the evolution, form and behaviour of the public sectors in Australia and overseas. This volume is the culmination of an exhaustive empirical study of the origins and experience of ‘the Centrelink Experiment’. I commend this book to researchers, policy practitioners and students with an interest in policy innovation, change management and the realpolitik of public sector reform.
John Wanna, Sir John Bunting Chair of Public Administration, The Australian National University
Details
- ISBN (print):
- 9781921536427
- ISBN (online):
- 9781921536434
- Publication date:
- Dec 2008
- Imprint:
- ANU Press
- DOI:
- http://doi.org/10.22459/CE.12.2008
- Series:
- Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG)
- Co-publisher:
- The Australia and New Zealand School of Government (ANZSOG)
- Disciplines:
- Arts & Humanities: History; Social Sciences: Social Policy & Administration
- Countries:
- Australia
PDF Chapters
Please read Conditions of use before downloading the formats.
- Preliminary Pages (PDF, 135KB)
- Professor John Halligan (PDF, 106KB)
- Preface (PDF, 77KB)
- Acknowledgments (PDF, 78KB)
- Introduction: Centrelink as a field of study (PDF, 105KB)
- Designing a delivery agency (PDF, 128KB)
- Centrelink’s development (PDF, 357KB)
- Strategies and management structure (PDF, 193KB)
- Leading and managing change (PDF, 231KB)
- Reinventing service delivery (PDF, 409KB)
- Governance (PDF, 129KB)
- Relationships with client departments (PDF, 162KB)
- Entrepreneurship and challenging boundaries (PDF, 1.1MB)
- Lessons from Centrelink’s formative years (PDF, 129KB)
- Epilogue: Back to the future (PDF, 127KB)
- Appendix 1. The study (PDF, 77KB)
- Appendix 2. Social welfare developments (PDF, 109KB)
- Appendix 3. Strategic directions (PDF, 54KB)
- Appendix 4. Comparing strategic directions (PDF, 52KB)
- Appendix 5. CEO lessons (PDF, 55KB)
- Appendix 6. Tables (PDF, 118KB)
- Appendix 7. Roles of DFaCS and Centrelink in Business Alliance Agreement 2004 (PDF, 79KB)
- Bibliography (PDF, 134KB)
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