Thursday, 21 October 2010
TPA Spending Review 2010 Briefing
This morning the TaxPayers’ Alliance released a new report on yesterday’s Spending Review at a media briefing. The report is now available online. It provides new evidence on the need for cuts, puts the cuts in context with the longer term pattern in each department and looks at the overall fiscal crunch facing families.
For more information on any of the issues covered in the briefing or the rest of the Spending Review, please keep an eye on this site for videos of the event and our commentary in blogs here and elsewhere.Wednesday, 20 October 2010
Wednesday, 20 October 2010
Time for councils to step up
The spending review cuts Whitehall's annual support for local councils by 26% in real inflation adjusted terms. And that's just the headline shown in the report - once account is taken of the new social care responsibilities they've picked up, the like-for-like funding cut is almost certainly even bigger. The cost of their loan funding has also been increased.
So it should surprise nobody if councils up and down Britain start screaming foul.
But as the Taxpayers Alliance has consistently pointed out, in most councils there is a significant margin of waste. And the best councils have already shown how better management can extract huge savings without undermining service standards.
At a recent TPA seminar (reported by the BBC here), the leaders of three flagship councils highlighted some key steps councils can take to drive increased efficiency. They include:
- Be more transparent - expose all spending to full scrutiny
- Don't compromise on quality - better to cut functions than accept second-rate services
- Outsource ruthlessly
- Pinch ideas from other councils
- Don't run arts centres - aka "stick to the knitting"
In these tough fiscal times, taxpayers everywhere should expect their local councils to learn from the best. And with the flexibility they have now been given over 80 previously ringfenced grants, councils should find it much easier to do what makes most sense locally, rather than what has been dictated from Whitehall.
What would not be acceptable would be councils failing to make these savings and instead racking up Council Tax.
Posted by Mike Denham at 03:36 PM | Permalink























