The psychology of a state servant (civil servant) is shaped by a unique set of factors: the pressure of normative prescriptions, hierarchy, public responsibility, and the need to interact with a mass client. This gives rise to specific cognitive and behavioral patterns that may conflict with the demands of modern society for flexibility, customer-centricity, and digitalization. The correction of these patterns becomes a key task of public administration reform, requiring not only administrative measures but also a deep understanding of psychological mechanisms.
Based on the theories of Max Weber, Robert Merton, and modern organizational psychologists, a stable complex of traits characteristic of classical bureaucratic psychology can be identified:
Rigidity and hypertrophied formalism (ritualism). As Merton noted, a civil servant often replaces the original goal of the organization (solving public problems) with a means of achieving it – following the rules. The rule becomes an end in itself. This is a protective mechanism against uncertainty and personal responsibility, but it leads to the well-known "Mertonian dysfunction": the inability to respond to exceptional circumstances.
Depersonalization and deindividuation. The relationship "civil servant-citizen" is reduced to the interaction "official – applicant". This allows to minimize emotional expenditure and avoid accusations of bias, but it generates a feeling of insensitivity in the system among citizens.
Risk aversion and avoidance of responsibility (CYA-syndrome – "Cover Your Ass"). In a hierarchical system, an error is punished more severely than passivity. The ideal strategy is to minimize personal decisions, transferring them to superiors, colleagues, or formal instructions. This gives rise to a culture of endless coordination and bureaucracy.
Focus on internal processes rather than external results. Career growth and incentives often depend on compliance with internal procedures, not on the real satisfaction of citizens' needs. This forms an "introverted" organization focused on itself.
Cognitive closure and resistance to innovation. New practices are perceived as a threat to stability and accumulated experience. For example, digitalization may cause fear of losing the expert status based on unique knowledge of paper procedures.
This psychology is not a result of personal shortcomings but is reproduced by the institutional environment:
The KPI (Key Performance Indicators) system focused on the number of processed documents, not on the quality of problem-solving.
The legal and disciplinary system, which punishes for any deviation from the regulation, but rarely encourages initiative.
The absence of feedback from the "end consumer" – the citizen. The civil servant does not see the consequences of his actions and does not receive direct rewards for a positive outcome.
The correction of bureaucratic psychology requires a comprehensive approach that changes the environment and offers new models of behavior.
3.1. Institutional and technological interventions:
Introduction of service logic and quality standards. Transition from the "control" paradigm to the "service" paradigm (service delivery). Example: "Service Charter" (Citizen's Charter) in the UK in the 1990s, establishing standards of time and quality of services. This changes the focus of the civil servant from internal processes to external results.
Digital transformation as an objective format. Introduction of cross-cutting digital platforms (such as the Russian "Gosuslugi" or Estonian X-Road) automatically reduces the level of arbitrariness and formalizes processes. Psychologically, this shifts the role of the civil servant from the "keeper of secret knowledge" to the "navigator and operator" of a transparent system.
Change in the evaluation system. Introduction of metrics that take into account citizen satisfaction (NPS – Net Promoter Score), complexity of resolved cases, not just processing speed. Example: experiments in Singapore, where the advancement of civil servants is partially dependent on citizen and business feedback.
3.2. Psychopedagogical methods:
Empathy and customer-oriented communication training. For example, in Sweden and Finland, mandatory courses for civil servants in migration and social services teach them to listen, recognize the emotional state of the applicant, and work with complex cases that do not fit standard frameworks.
Development of adaptability and agile thinking. Introduction of project management methodologies (Agile, Scrum) in the public sector, as done by the UK Government Digital Service (GDS), teaches to work in conditions of incomplete data, experiment, and quickly receive feedback.
Combating burnout and developing resilience. Constant stress from working with citizens' complaints and pressure from above leads to emotional exhaustion and strengthening of protective formalism. The introduction of psychological support programs (as in leading corporations) is necessary to maintain mental health and prosocial motivation of employees.
Positive example: "School of Government" in Dubai (Mohammed Bin Rashid School of Government). It focuses on the development of leadership, design thinking, and innovation in the public sector, preparing not just executors, but agents of change.
Negative example as a warning: The reform of RAO UES in Russia in the 2000s. The attempt to introduce young "efficient managers" into the traditional bureaucratic environment without changing institutional rules often led either to their rejection by the system or to complete assimilation and adoption of old patterns of behavior.
The ultimate goal of correction is to form a new professional ethos that combines:
Procedural justice (fidelity to the law) with substantive justice (consideration of the circumstances of the case).
Responsibility to superiors with responsibility to the citizen.
Performance with reasonable initiative (the principle "anything is allowed that is not prohibited" for finding the optimal solution).
The psychology of a civil servant is a mirror of the institutional design of the state. Its correction in modern society is impossible through mere orders or penalties. This is a task of engineering reconstruction of the environment: changing the rules of the game, the system of incentives, work technologies, and professional training. Successful reforms in Singapore, Estonia, the UAE, and individual sectors in Western countries show that by consistently implementing the service paradigm, digital tools, and new management culture, it is possible to grow a generation of civil servants whose professional identity is based not on fear and formalism, but on competence, service to society, and the ability to adapt to changes. This is a long evolutionary process where psychological transformation is not a prerequisite but a result of deep institutional transformations.
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