HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Chancellor announces progress on work for the next Spending Review [July 2003]
The press release issued by HM Treasury on 7 July 2003.
Further details on the key reviews that will form the backdrop to the next Spending Review were announced in the House of Commons today by Chancellor Gordon Brown.
The terms of reference for three reviews were announced today:
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The Devolving Decision Making Review which will examine how best to achieve decentralised delivery and responsive local and regional services. This will be done in a way that is consistent with equity and efficiency, and against a clear framework of national standards.
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The Childcare Review which will consider whether the long-term projection for childcare and early years education is sufficient to meet the Government’s aims for employment and educational attainment. It will look at how fast the sector can expand and what more needs to be done in particular areas such as childcare for school age children and the role of extended schools.
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The Child Poverty Review will set out what further action is required to halve child poverty by 2010 and eradicate it by 2020. It aims to ensure the welfare system and the range of public services work together to avoid the waste and poor outcomes which still occur all too often. Among the specific issues it will look at are increasing employment opportunities; improving the effectiveness with which current investment in public services tackles material deprivation; improving life chances; and dealing with the crisis points that families often face, all with an eye to the particular issues facing families in deprived areas.
The Review of the Voluntary and Community Sector will focus specifically on five public service areas: Health and Social Care; Crime and Community Cohesion; Education and Employment; Housing and Homelessness; and Children and Families. It will build on the foundations laid in last year’s Cross-Cutting Review of the Role of the Voluntary and Community Sector in Service Delivery and will make practical recommendations about specific areas where Government, the voluntary and community sector and social enterprise can work together even more closely to deliver world class public services.
The Chancellor also announced today that the first stage of the Review of Efficiency in Public Services will be completed later this month. The Review examines new ways of providing Departments, their agencies and other parts of the public sector with incentives to exploit efficiency savings, and so release more resources for front line delivery. It will make proposals for strengthening the drivers of efficiency and offer examples of existing good practice in the wider public sector. The Review will lay the basis for a continuing programme of work to improve efficiency.
Paymaster General Dawn Primarolo, will lead the Review of Financial Support for 16-19 year olds. The review is examining the incentives for young people to participate in education and training and the interaction between this support and any new minimum wage for 16 and 17 year olds. The review will look at ways of improving the system of financial support in order to increase young people’s participation in education and training and at ways to simplify the system radically in the long-term. The Paymaster General will work with children’s groups, the Local Government Association, the Low Pay Commission and in consultation with young people and their parents. It will report in spring 2004.
Sir Michael Lyon’s review on the scope for relocating public sector activities from London and the South East is conducting a public consultation on the impact of previous relocations and the economic effects of decentralization. In parallel Government Departments are preparing proposals for relocating activities and contributing to the Review.
In addition to the reviews that will feed into SR2004, Derek Wanless has been asked to provide an update on the long-term challenges in implementing the “fully engaged” scenario to improve population health as set out in his 2002 report. The terms of reference will be published in due course.