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Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

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4.2
  • 1,000 - 50,000 employees

The Office of Best Practice Regulation’s Graduate Virtual Experience

Location details

On-site

  • Australia

    Australia

  • Online/remote

    Online/remote

Remote

  • Any location

    Remote work

Location

Australia, Online/remote

Opportunity expired

What is this?

Welcome to The Office of Best Practice Regulation’s Graduate Virtual Experience.

The Office of Best Practice Regulation (OBPR) works to ensure new proposals coming forward to Government for decision are supported by the best possible evidence and analysis.

Their role is to work with departments and agencies to produce detailed, evidence-based assessments of complex policy issues. They coach them through the impact analysis process, which includes analysing the pros and cons of multiple policy options to best address the policy problem at hand. Ultimately, their focus is on the quality of the evidence and analysis.

Secretary's Message - Impact Analysis empowers all policy makers | OBPR (pmc.gov.au)

In this virtual experience, you will try to analyse the impact of a real problem and propose actions the government can do to mitigate the problem.

Why should you do this?

duration

This Virtual Experience Program is self-paced and should take only 0.5 hours to complete.

free

This Virtual Experience Program is free for all students.

earn

When you complete the Virtual Experience Program, you’ll earn a digital badge and certificate you can share on Linkedin and include on your resume.

real work

In this virtual experience you will be given the opportunity to analyse what the impacts on Australian businesses, individuals and the community would be if greater restrictions were placed on the availability of nicotine-containing e-cigarettes. This is part of the role of The Office of Best Practice Regulation (OBPR) on impact analysis of real world problems.

What skills will I gain?

tickmark Learning more about the process in an important area of work at PM&C

tickmark Understanding why government intervention is necessary in certain instances

tickmark Analysing and evaluating policy options given a real life scenario

tickmark Considering the views of stakeholders when analysing policy

What you will do?

 

Module 1: Impact analysis to consider how best to tackle nicotine- containing e-cigarettes (0.5 hours)

Analyse what the impacts on Australian businesses, individuals and the community would be if greater restrictions were placed on the availability of nicotine- containing e-cigarettes.

Ready to get started?

Click Register to begin.

Work rights

The opportunity is available to applicants in any of the following categories.

Work light flag
Australia
Australian CitizenAustralian Permanent ResidentInternational Student/Graduate VisaAustralian Work Visa (All Other)Visa Sponsorship Included

Qualifications & other requirements

You should have or be completing the following to apply for this opportunity.

Degree or Certificate
Study field
Study field (any)

Hiring criteria

  • Experience requirementNo experience required
  • Working rights
    Australian Citizen
  • Study fields
    Business & Management
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Reviews

user
Graduate
Canberra
5 months ago

Mostly engaging with stakeholders and other teams in the department

user
Graduate
Canberra
5 months ago

A day in the life of an Adviser at PM&C will involve working on several different work items, often to short timeframes. The work could include writing briefs for senior decision-makers to meeting, meeting with other agencies to discuss work progress, contributing to Cabinet processes, providing policy advice on your subject area to other internal teams, making corporate contributions through the PM&C Social Club or employee Networks, and working with highly intelligent and experienced colleagues from all walks of life.

user
Graduate
Canberra
a year ago

Varied roles, but often similar basic tasks such as answering correspondence, responding to tight turnaround consults by other work areas, writing briefs for various classifications above you (director, (First) Assistant Secretary, Deputy Secretary, Secretary, Prime Minister, Assistant PM, Prime Minister's Office (PMO)), preparing meetings, research and analysis tasks, working toward long-term projects

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About the employer

logo-dep-of-prime-minister-480x480-2024.jpg

Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

Rating

4.2

Number of employees

1,000 - 50,000 employees

Industries

Government & Public Service

We are the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, or PM&C for short. Our role is to provide fresh thinking and sound advice to government.

Pros and cons of working at Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C)

Pros

  • The best thing about PM&C is by far the visibility provided over the entire remit of Government work.

  • Being exposed to the Cabinet process, great people.

  • PM&C has an excellent culture which filters from senior leadership all the way to lower APS classifications.

  • Flexible working is supported, and many colleagues work their preferred hours, work from home at least one day per week, or have other arrangements.

  • The promotion opportunities at PM&C are various, and there are often internal EOIs going which allows everyone to move internally at will.

Cons

    • The turnaround time for pieces of work is often very short generally ranging from a fortnight to less than an hour.

    • PM&C owns very little policy and you will not develop experience in carrying a policy, project, or initiative from inception to implementation.

    • Having to relocate for it.

    • The speed interview stage was definitely the most challenging.

    • The pay might be considered a bit below market value for certain roles or work areas.