Why oversight recommendations fail: examining the implementation gap in public service commission recommendations in South Africa
This paper explores the persistent non-implementation of recommendations by South Africa’s Public Service Commission (PSC), constitutionally mandated to promote accountability, ethical governance, and efficiency. Despite sustained oversight, PSC reports from 2010–2024 highlight recurring governance...
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| Format: | Article |
| Language: | English |
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Taylor & Francis Group
2025-12-01
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| Series: | Cogent Social Sciences |
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| Online Access: | https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/23311886.2025.2548016 |
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| Summary: | This paper explores the persistent non-implementation of recommendations by South Africa’s Public Service Commission (PSC), constitutionally mandated to promote accountability, ethical governance, and efficiency. Despite sustained oversight, PSC reports from 2010–2024 highlight recurring governance failures across national and provincial departments. The study examines whether this stems from PSC’s institutional weaknesses, resistance from line ministries, or both. Guided by Institutional Theory, it argues that entrenched organisational norms, bureaucratic inertia, and political-administrative dynamics drive non-compliance. A qualitative content analysis of 40 PSC reports reveals recurring barriers, including weak consequence management, poor financial controls, fragmented leadership, and failure to institutionalise reform. Limited enforcement powers, resource constraints, and overlapping mandates further weaken PSC’s impact. While based solely on documentary analysis, the study reflects systemic administrative shortcomings. It recommends legislative reforms to strengthen PSC authority—aligned with the 2023 PSC Bill—and a renewed focus on accountability and leadership development in line with the 2022 Professionalisation Framework. By narrowing the analysis to the PSC’s institutional role, the paper deepens understanding of oversight challenges and offers targeted governance reforms to address persistent implementation failures in South Africa’s public administration. |
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| ISSN: | 2331-1886 |