The creatives trying to fix Germany's bureaucracy
Most nights, the Festsaal Kreuzberg is a concert venue in one of Berlin's cooler districts, but this week it was taken over by bureaucrats. But
Most nights, the Festsaal Kreuzberg is a concert venue in one of Berlin's cooler districts, but this week it was taken over by bureaucrats. But not just any bureaucrats โ these were "creative bureaucrats," a term that sounds like more of a paradox than it should, since the public sector has seen much innovation in recent years. That at least is the view of the attendees of the Berlin's Creative Bureaucracy Festival, now in its ninth year, which claims to be the world's largest festival for public service innovation. Some might say there's an irony to the fact that the event has found a home in Berlin, whose creaky and underfunded bureaucracy has become a hoary joke. But the home feels natural, as the venue was filled young people with an optimistic attitude: The Creative Bureaucracy Festival had a sunny garden where an acoustic guitar duo was playing summery hits, there were workshops about how to make bureaucracy more empathetic, and special "Creative Bureaucrat" pins for festival-goers to wear. "Here at this festival you'll find people who want to do administration better," said Theresa Twachtmann, CEO of PD, a German in-house consultancy for the public sector serving the federal government, states, municipalities, and institutions. "It's an intrinsic motivation. A lot of the people here could be working in business and probably make more money, but they consciously chose to make a contribution in public administration." Not only that, Twachtmann was one of many participants pointing out how important a functioning bureaucracy is for a democratic state: "Against the background of Germany's competitiveness and the question of how big people's trust in democracy is, of course a functioning bureaucracy is the be-all and end-all," she told DW. "Roads that you can drive on, bridges you can cross, the building of a new school, the simple digital application form." Theresa Twachtmann said there have been more public services innovations than people realize Image: Ben Knight/DW Can bureaucracy be creative?
Accordingly, the festival's many stages were filled with keynotes and panel discussions demonstrating examples of public servants getting things right (for a change): Florian Kling, Social Democrat mayor of the southern German town of Calw, was celebrated for his apparently successful efforts at digitalizing bureaucratic decision-making, with the result that other local authorities have been calling him for advice. Amongst other things, he got rid of his own personal office, opened up new multifunctional "creative" work spaces, so that the Calw town hall began to resemble what local newspapers called a co-working space. His talk began with a well-honed anecdote about how one of Calw's old town halls almost literally collapsed under the weight of paper files it had to hold. Now, he said, almost process is paperless. "I'm always very concerned about our democracy when the perception increases that our state isn't functioning anymore," he told DW. Some of the innovations that Kling introduced were forced on him by demographic changes, as a third of his staff went into retirement during his first term in office. "I had to create new processes, I had to digitalize, so that the employees I still could perform better quality work for the citizens, and are not occupied with serving envelopes and boxes of files." Mayor Florian Kling transformed the Calw town hall Image: Ben Knight/DW Bureaucratic frustration equals political frustration But scaling the Calw model up to fit a country of 83.5 million people is obviously a different challenge. When Chancellor Friedrich Merz announced an "autumn of reforms" last year, he was effectively promising to blow a fresh wind through all of Germany's public systems: From health care to unemployment benefits to pensions to taxes, everything was going to made more efficient, more "digital," and save the state more money.
