Absenteeism, Late Arrival Rampant in Govt Offices

Author: 
P.K. Abdul Ghafour, Arab News Staff
Publication Date: 
Tue, 2003-12-23 03:00

JEDDAH, 23 December 2003 — Sixty-nine percent of civil servants in the Kingdom stay away from work without a good reason while 54 percent come to work late, according to a recent study by the Institute of Public Administration.

Among the study’s more striking revelations was that the heads of departments rarely check if their staff keep their working hours, Al-Madinah Arabic daily reported yesterday.

Of those who came to work late, 39.4 percent were 15 minutes late, 24.1 percent 30 minutes, 17.8 percent just under an hour and 18.7 percent for more than an hour, the study said.

Employees with master’s and doctoral degrees arrived at work as much as three hours late, said the study based on interviews with 2,365 civil servants.

The study, which covered 181 government departments in different regions, revealed 42 percent of those with secondary school certificates or below went to work late.

Forty-seven percent of participants said their superiors never checked them while 18.4 percent said supervisors made only one or two rounds a month.

Among the government employees, schoolteachers were the most committed to their working hours, the study said, adding that health officials were particularly prone to leaving early.

Officials in the Hail region topped the list of absentees, the study said, while those in the Riyadh region were most often late. Civil servants in the Northern Region were most likely not to turn up at all.

Respondents agreed that tough measures were needed to discipline negligent officials. They said the Supervision and Investigation Authority was not doing enough to prevent civil servants from neglecting their duties.

The study showed that 69.1 percent missed one day of work a month, 21.8 percent two days, and 9.1 percent three days or more.

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