A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh

This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in Governance and Development, 2013.

Dettagli Bibliografici
Autore principale: Rahman, Roksana
Altri autori: Khan, Niaz Ahmed
Natura: Tesi
Lingua:English
Pubblicazione: BRAC University 2014
Soggetti:
Accesso online:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3511
id 10361-3511
record_format dspace
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language English
topic Governance and development
Civil servant
Civil service
Motivation
De-motivation
Efficiency
Job satisfaction
District level civil servant
spellingShingle Governance and development
Civil servant
Civil service
Motivation
De-motivation
Efficiency
Job satisfaction
District level civil servant
Rahman, Roksana
A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
description This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in Governance and Development, 2013.
author2 Khan, Niaz Ahmed
author_facet Khan, Niaz Ahmed
Rahman, Roksana
format Thesis
author Rahman, Roksana
author_sort Rahman, Roksana
title A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
title_short A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
title_full A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
title_fullStr A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
title_full_unstemmed A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh
title_sort study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in bangladesh
publisher BRAC University
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3511
work_keys_str_mv AT rahmanroksana astudyonthefactorsinfluencingmotivationofselecteddistrictlevelpublicofficialsinbangladesh
AT rahmanroksana studyonthefactorsinfluencingmotivationofselecteddistrictlevelpublicofficialsinbangladesh
_version_ 1814309166685093888
spelling 10361-35112019-09-30T03:54:57Z A study on the factors influencing motivation of selected district level public officials in Bangladesh Rahman, Roksana Khan, Niaz Ahmed Institute of Governance Studies, BRAC University Governance and development Civil servant Civil service Motivation De-motivation Efficiency Job satisfaction District level civil servant This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters of Arts in Governance and Development, 2013. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis. Includes bibliographical references (page 65 - 67). In the context of strikingly limited research on the causes of inefficiency of civil servants and the motivational status of public officials in Bangladesh, the main objectives of this study are to identify and trace the factors (as well as their manifestations) which influence the motivational level of the district level civil servants. The relevant literature was reviewed to develop an analytical framework and selected theories of motivation and job dissatisfaction, job satisfaction (especially content and process theories) were applied to analyses the collected data for this study. In this research de-motivating factors and motivational status of the civil service were measured by twelve independent variables i.e. (1) Inadequate salary, (2) Lack of standardization in promotion system, (3) Lack of standardization in posting, (4) Lack of effective career planning, (5) Inadequate emphasis on innovation, (6) Lack of political commitment and long term vision regarding civil service, (7) Unsupportive working environment, (8) Negative political pressure, (9) Lack of subject specific training, (10) Nepotism, (11) Partisan influence and (12) Lack of integrity. Primary and secondary data were used for the study. Primary data were collected through a survey with formal questionnaire. The secondary data were gathered from journals, books, reports, etc. The level of motivation and de-motivation was measured by a structured questionnaire. The Statistical Package for Social Science (SPSS) tools was used for data analysis. The results of the study indicate that the civil servants, who are now working at the District level, are moderately de-motivated. The most important factors responsible for de-motivating district level civil servants are inadequate salary, lack of standardization in promotion system, lack of standardization in posting system, lack of effective career planning, inadequate emphasis on innovation and lack of political commitment and long term vision regarding civil service. This study also showed that the factors negative political pressure and nepotism have a strong significant relationship with the overall de-motivation of district level civil servants in Bangladesh. One interesting and encouraging findings is that all respondents noted that they were motivated by such factors to join the civil service as desire to serve the people, prestigious job, job security, social status of the job rather than to earn money. Moreover, most of the respondents opined that nepotism and negative political pressure were xvi significantly responsible for inefficiency of civil service and because of these factors the civil servants often could not take any free and faire decision. The results of this study provide an insight into the broader picture of the motivational status of civil servants working at the district level in Bangladesh and may assist the relevant policy formulation process towards enhancing staff motivation which in turn may improve civil officials’ efficiency as well as service delivery. Further research is needed especially to investigate into the potential relationships and effects of the variables studied in this research and other extraneous variables. Roksana Rahman M. Governance and Development 2014-08-31T08:48:48Z 2014-08-31T08:48:48Z 2013 2013-02 Thesis ID 12172023 http://hdl.handle.net/10361/3511 en BRAC University thesis reports are protected by copyright. They may be viewed from this source for any purpose, but reproduction or distribution in any format is prohibited without written permission. 97 pages application/pdf BRAC University