“…At all levels of government, HRM malpractices such as those identified by Dwiyanto et al (2002Dwiyanto et al ( , 2003 and Turner et al (2009Turner et al ( , 2011 lubricate patronage and are grist to its mill, enabling patrons to do more or less as they please. Examples include little or no formal human resource planning; staffing decisions that are made centrally with no match to local need (Heywood and Harahap, 2009); non-transparent appointments, concealing widespread job purchase, nepotism and influence-peddling (Nugroho, 2011); staffing proposals from local governments that do not specify types or levels of expertise needed; thousands of civil service casual workers employed-as teachers or clerks or in other skilled occupational categories-without formal selection; 'a uniform written test for doctors, teachers, health workers, computer operators, clerks, and no examination of applicants' skills in relation to jobs' (Turner et al, 2009, p. 238); appointments based on ethnicity and kinship and 'feudalism' or hereditary privilege (Dwiyanto et al, 2003); little or no performance appraisal of staff and advancement on the basis of tenure in the job and/or other informal factors, including 'achievements in irregular income generation' (Kristiansen and Ramli, 2006, p. 225) and bribes (Nugroho, 2011); appointments to senior positions beyond retirement age and outside of the formal structure on the basis of 'personal links and loyalty'; where the so-called 'fit-and-proper' tests for employment have been introduced on paper, they are derided as 'fee and prosper tests' in practice (Turner et al, 2009, p. 239); training whose purpose is to generate income for related parties (firms) and travel and accommodation allowances (sometimes from government and donors simultaneously) for government officials; little or no relationship between performance and remuneration; discretionary allowances paid to staff that constitute considerably more than the base pay and that are 'non-transparent and prone to abuse'; few meaningful job descriptions; high absenteeism (particularly among teachers and health care workers) (Chaudhury, Hamme, Kremer, Muralidharan, and Rogers, 2006); conversions of contract to permanent staff that have little or no effect on performance because they are not part of a coherent overall plan (Heywood, Harahap, and Aryani, 2011) 16 ; many 'ghost workers' (Kristiansen and Ramli, 2006); around one million people who have informal contractual arrangements-so-called 'honorary employees'-who are not subject to civil service rules (Kristiansen and Ramli, 2006); and a strictly enforced code of secrecy that is an effective deterrent to whistle-blowing (Nugroho, 2011).…”