The public sector needs civil servants with the right skills to address increasingly complex problems. Competency management helps governments clarify the abilities (including skills, knowledge and behaviours) needed for a given position, and creates a standard against which to measure effective employee performance. Integrating competencies into a framework used to select, develop and promote civil servants allows human resources management (HRM) to develop strategic workforce planning, and employees to develop their career plans.
Competency management is a high priority in six of the nine SEA countries surveyed (Indonesia, Lao PDR, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore and Thailand), and a lower priority in Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia and Viet Nam. All also have a specific competency framework for senior managers, and eight countries (all except the Philippines) have a framework for civil servants.
The central HRM unit is responsible for preparing competency frameworks in most SEA and OECD countries. In Thailand, HR and departmental senior managers are also involved. In Brunei Darussalam, Cambodia, Thailand and Viet Nam, inter-ministerial working groups also contribute. The same is true in 43% of OECD countries. Japan and New Zealand are the only OECD countries where preparing a competency framework is the sole responsibility of inter-ministerial working groups. Trade union representatives are never involved in any of the SEA countries.
As countries adopt competency management approaches, in recognition that both hard and soft skills are crucial to civil service performance, a key question is whether civil services can map and develop the skills needed in their central governments. In SEA and OECD countries, the arrangements to promote learning for the central public administration vary widely. Cambodia, Indonesia and Malaysia each have a single government institution or national school of government with this function, such as Cambodia’s Royal School of Administration and the Indonesian National Institute of Public Administration. In Brunei Darussalam, the Philippines and Singapore, responsibilities for civil service learning are shared by several government institutions centrally. In Lao PDR and Viet Nam, these responsibilities are delegated to ministry/department/agency level. In the OECD countries in the region, there is usually more than one institution responsible for competency management. In addition, seven SEA countries have a civil service-wide training strategy to co-ordinate and align training across organisations. The same is true in 47% of OECD countries, including Australia, Korea and Japan.
The most frequently mentioned competencies in SEA countries suggest that civil servants are expected to be leaders and professionals with strong ethical values, which are also among the most common competencies in OECD countries. Seven of the eight SEA countries that include leadership in their competency frameworks (all except Viet Nam) prioritise training and coaching for the executive leadership and four prioritise training for middle managers (Cambodia, Indonesia, the Philippines and Singapore). Likewise, developing leaders’ competencies is one of the main priorities in Australia, Korea and New Zealand among OECD countries in the region; training for middle managers is a priority in Australia and Japan. Although most SEA countries prioritise the development of digital skills (six countries), investing in digital skills is not a priority for any of the OECD countries in the region (although it is for 12 OECD countries).
While monitoring and evaluation of training investment is a top priority in 34% of OECD countries (including Australia, Korea and New Zealand), this is not the case in any of the surveyed SEA countries.
Embedding learning in the culture and values of the public service goes beyond the existence of competency frameworks or training programmes, requiring employee competency development to be a core responsibility of public managers. Yet data suggests that workforce development is still among the lowest priorities for senior civil servants in SEA and OECD countries (with only 4 and 11 countries respectively noting civil service training as a key priority).