"In my life, I have worked in three banks — everything was great there, in three ministries and in one Saeima of Latvia, where it was also quite good, unfortunately, only for a short time, as well as in one ministerial bureau and several NGOs," writes Aiga on X.
Based on this experience, I firmly know: 30% of what ministries do is unnecessary. Simply unnecessary.
People there are burdened with meaningless work that creates nothing. Often, it is activity for each other: preparing documents for each other, gathering information for each other, initiating various processes that produce nothing and yield no results. This was especially evident in CFLA — endless nonsense for the sake of itself. All this needs to be managed,
but no one has the time to even see the problem, let alone change anything. As soon as a new minister arrives, they are overwhelmed with current affairs and political agendas to the point that there is no time left for anything else. I would say that even secretaries of state do not have the opportunity to sort everything out — objectively, there is simply no time for that. The whole problem lies one level down.
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