Sue Robb of 4Children talks to Julie Laughton and Alison Britton from the Department for Education about the role of childminders in delivering the 30 hours free entitlement.
The Institute for Government has released a new report emphasising how bringing back services from the private sector to government hands can improve quality, increase reliability, and save money.
The Government Outsourcing paper identifies four circumstances in which the government should consider returning a service to the public sector: an unhealthy or uncompetitive market; the need for flexibility to make changes to the service; a lack of government commercial skills to manage an outsourced contract successfully; or a need to improve the service by integrating it with another.
The government has already cited the need for flexibility to respond to any ‘future challenges that Covid-19 presents’, having already decided to take on management of probation services from June 2021. The Institute for Government argues that the government should be prepared to intervene in other areas, too, to ensure high-quality services can be delivered.
It also assesses services that have been returned to government hands by local authorities, public bodies and government departments over the past decade. Many have been successful: the DVLA saved £60 million by taking back its IT, while several local authorities have made services more reliable or better quality – although in some cases higher spending was needed.
For four decades, successive governments have expanded the role of the private sector in delivering services, in many ways helping the public sector become more efficient. However, this report argues that government must reassess where it could run services better itself. The collapse of Carillion in 2018 demonstrated the dangers of the private sector taking on contracts it could not manage.
It also recommends that government bodies considering taking over management of a service should: begin planning for any insourcing at least two years before the transition; run a pilot scheme first if the service is of national scale or particularly complex; conduct a thorough review of how a service operates, its budget and staffing arrangements; and hire experienced managers to oversee the transition.
Sue Robb of 4Children talks to Julie Laughton and Alison Britton from the Department for Education about the role of childminders in delivering the 30 hours free entitlement.
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