Secretariat of State for the Civil Service

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Secretariat of State for the Civil Service
Secretaría de Estado de Función Pública

Palace of the Countess of Adanero, headquarters of the SEFP
Agency overview
FormedJuly 4, 1977; 46 years ago (1977-07-04)
TypeSecretariat of State
Jurisdiction Spanish government
Headquarters7 Santa Engracia Street
Madrid
Annual budget2,042 million
Minister responsible
Agency executives
  • Lidia Sánchez Milán, Secretary of State for the Civil Service
Parent departmentDepartment for Digital Transformation and Civil Service
Child agencies
  • Institute for the Evaluation of Public Policies
  • National Institute of Public Administration
Websitewww.mptfp.gob.es(in Spanish)

The Secretariat of State for the Civil Service (Secretaría de Estado de Función Pública, SEFP) is a component of the Spanish Department for Digital Transformation and Civil Service responsible for the government policy on General State Administration's civil servants and other policies regarding civil servants of the regional and local administrations. In the past, it also exercised the powers related to e-administration.

The SEFP is integrated by three major departments, the Directorate-General for the Civil Service, the Directorate-General for Public Governance and the Conflicts of Interests Office; and a minor department, the Strategic Planning Office.

History[edit]

The SEFP was created in July 1977 as Secretariat of State for the Public Administration, being one of the first modern Secretariats of State to be created in Spain.[1] In April 2009 it was renamed as Secretariat of State for the Civil Service. The government reform of that year integrated the responsibilities on civil servants in the Ministry of the Presidency, which formerly had the Ministry of Public Administrations through its Secretariat of State for Public Administration.[2] The SEFP was integrated by the secretary of state and the directors-general for the Civil Service, for the Promotion of Electronic Administration, and of Administrative Organization Procedures.[3]

In October 2010, the Ministry of Territorial Policy and Public Administration is recovered and it re-assumes the powers on the civil service by assuming the Secretariat of State.[4] This dependency hardly lasts a year because at the end of 2011 the change of government causes the abolishment of the ministry and the secretariat of state that is integrated into the Ministry of Finance and its powers are transferred to the Secretariat of State for Public Administrations.[5]

The 2016 government reform recovers once again the Secretariat of State for the Civil Service and it increases its powers by adding to its structure the Directorate-General for Public Governance, the Conflicts of Interests Office and the General Secretariat for Digital Administration.[6]

In June 2018, the Ministry of Territorial Policy is recovered and it assumes the Secretariat of State. In 2020, the secretariat of state is abolished and its powers were transferred to the Secretariat of State for Territorial Policy.

In July 2021, the body was recovered.

Officials[edit]

As of 2022, the SEFP officials are:[7]

Official Title Portfolio
Lidia Sánchez Milán Secretary of State Overall responsibility for the department.
María Isabel Borrel Roncalés Director-General for the Civil Service Setting guidelines on remuneration and jobs, planning and study of human resources policies, the preparation of public employment offers, national and international relations in the field of public employment and with trade union organizations, advice on public sector human resources, authorization and management of mobility processes, provision of jobs, acquisition of public employee status and management of employees.
Clara Mapelli Marchena Director-General for Public Governance Inspection and improvement of public services, establish quality procedures, advice public administrations and its agencies on organization and procedures, facilitate the access of citizens and business to public services, open government, transparency affairs.
Flor María López Laguna Director of the Conflicts of Interests Office Ensure compliance with the law of incompatibilities of high-ranking officials and civil servants.

Agencies[edit]

From the Secretariat of State depends:

  • The General Mutual Benefit Society of State Civil Servants.
  • The National Institute of Public Administration.
  • The Independent Administrative Authority Transparency and Good Governance Council.
  • The Institute for the Evaluation of Public Policies.

Budget[edit]

The Secretariat of State for the Civil Service has a budget of 2,042,389,420 for 2022. Most of the budget is destined to defray benefits to state civil servants, through the General Mutual Benefit Society of State Civil Servants (Mutualidad General de Funcionarios Civiles del Estado). According to the 2022 General State Budget, the SEFP participates in six programs:

Budget of the Secretariat of State for the Civil Service for 2022
Program No. Program Amount Ref.
222M Economic benefits of the Mutual Benefit Society
through the General Mutual Benefit Society of State Civil Servants
€328,107,800 [8]
312E Healthcare of the Mutual Benefit Society
through the General Mutual Benefit Society of State Civil Servants
€1,574,174,030 [9]
921N Management and organization of the Public Administration €19,543,500 [10]
921O Training of Public Administration staff
through the National Institute of Public Administration
€108,163,080 [11]
921X Evaluation of the public activity transparency
through the Council for Transparency and Good Governance
€3,003,110 [12]
92KC Digital Transformation and Modernization of the State Administration €5,898,950 [13]
Total budget €2,042,389,420

List of secretaries of state[edit]

The Secretary of State for the Civil Service chairs the Coordination Committee of Inspectorates-General of Services of the ministerial departments, the Open Government Forum and the Sectorial Committee on Open Government. It may also, where appropriate, preside over and by delegation of the Minister responsible, the ICT Strategy Committee.

Since 2009:

  1. Carmen Gomis Bernal (2009–2010)
  2. María Consuelo Rumí Ibáñez (2010–2011)
  3. Elena Collado Martínez (2016–2018)[14]
  4. José Antonio Benedicto Iruiñ (2018–2020)[15]
  5. Lidia Sánchez Milán (2021–)

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Real Decreto 1558/1977, de 4 de julio, por el que se reestructuran determinados Organos de la Administración Central del Estado". www.boe.es (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-09-16.
  2. ^ "Royal Decree 542/2009, of April 7, which restructures the ministerial departments". boe.es. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  3. ^ "Royal Decree 640/2009, of April 17". boe.es. pp. 36000–36007. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  4. ^ "Royal Decree 1313/2010, of October 20, which restructures the ministerial departments". boe.es. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  5. ^ "Royal Decree 1823/2011, of December 21, which restructures the ministerial departments". boe.es. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  6. ^ "Royal Decree 424/2016, of November 11, which establishes the basic organic structure of the ministerial departments". boe.es. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  7. ^ "Secretaría de Estado de Función Pública: Ministerio de Hacienda". www.hacienda.gob.es. Retrieved 2021-10-04.
  8. ^ "Program 222M - 2022 Budget" (PDF).
  9. ^ "Program 312E - 2022 Budget" (PDF).
  10. ^ "Program 921N - 2022 Budget" (PDF).
  11. ^ "Program 921O - 2022 budget" (PDF).
  12. ^ "Program 921X - 2022 Budget" (PDF).
  13. ^ "Program 92KC - 2022 Budget" (PDF).
  14. ^ "Real Decreto 437/2016, de 11 de noviembre, por el que se nombra Secretaria de Estado de Función Pública a doña Elena Collado Martínez". www.boe.es. Retrieved 2019-12-01.
  15. ^ "El santanderino José Antonio Benedicto Iruiñ, secretario de Estado de Función Pública". El Diario Montañes (in Spanish). 15 June 2018. Retrieved 18 August 2018.