Statecraft

Four Ways to Fix Government HR

Aug 21, 2025
Judge Glock, an economic historian and Director of Research at the Manhattan Institute, dives into civil service reform, spotlighting state-level reforms since the 1990s that enhance hiring and firing flexibility. He discusses how states like Texas and Florida have adopted at-will employment, contrasting this with the rigid federal hiring process. Judge emphasizes the improved effectiveness seen in state governments, while addressing the lack of politicization that federal reforms fear. His insights challenge conventional wisdom about government HR practices.
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INSIGHT

State Reforms Outpaced Washington

  • Many states since the 1990s adopted radical civil service reforms like at-will employment and broadband pay.
  • These reforms generally improved manager satisfaction and state performance without widespread politicization.
INSIGHT

The Dog That Didn't Bark

  • The feared politicization after loosening civil service rules largely didn't occur in reform states.
  • Surveys show only a small share (around 5–10%) perceive political preferences influencing hiring.
ADVICE

Let Managers See Candidates Earlier

  • Integrate subject-matter hiring managers into the application review instead of isolating decisions in HR.
  • Use laws like the Chance to Compete Act to bring managers and experts into job descriptions and evaluations.
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