Annex D: Note on channels
Annex A |
Annex B |
Annex C
|
Annex D |
Annex E
Principles
Government bodies’ use of the three channels (procurement,
grant, grant-in-aid) available for funding the activities of TSOs
has been highly inconsistent in relation to TSOs. There are a
number of reasons for this:
- Many actual cases do not fit neatly into any one of the three
channels
- Until recently, there has been little good guidance to funders
and commissioners on the appropriate circumstances in which to use
a particular channel
- In recent years, for good policy reasons, governments have
extended the concept of grant to include grant with conditions
about levels of service and grants awarded following competition
between potential recipients. This has blurred the distinction
between grant and procurement.
In addition, funders and commissioners use terminology loosely,
in two ways:
- Following procurement, the government body and the provider
reach a financial agreement known in law as a ‘contract’. Because
of this, the procurement channel is widely referred to as ‘contract
funding’. Following the award of a grant, the government body will
send the provider a ‘grant letter’, ‘award letter’ (or a
similarly-named document. For grant-in-aid, a formal financial
memorandum will set out the terms and conditions. However, the
courts may well decide that a grant or grant-in-aid is a contract,
if it has the legal substance of a contract, whatever it is
called
- The term ‘service level agreement’ (SLA) is sometimes used to
describe an agreement between funder and recipient. SLA is not a
term with any specific status. Both contracts and grant letters may
contain agreements on service levels to be delivered by the
recipient [Footnote 1].
Funders and commissioners sometimes do not know which channel
they are using or believe that they are using one channel when they
are in fact using another.
EU law has had a major impact on UK procurement law, and the
knock-on impacts on other channels are still being fully worked
through. The Treaty of Rome covers all public sector procurement
contracts within the European Union and sets down principles of
non-discrimination, equal treatment and transparency. The new EU
procurement Directives 2004/18/EC and 2004/17/EC, which were
implemented in UK law on the 31 January 2006, support the Treaty
principles with detailed provisions relating to specifications,
selection and award of contracts above certain
thresholds.
The situation continues to develop: for example, the NAO’s
recent report on government’s financial relationships with TSOs
suggested that, as more TSOs established strategic partnerships
with government, grant-in-aid might become more widespread for
funding TSOs [Footnote 2].
In principle, the distinction between financial channels is
technical: all the money in question is public funding. However,
there are practical consequences. In particular:
- When you choose the procurement channel, your decisions are
governed by a large and detailed body of EU and UK law. Guidance
from the Office of Government Commerce (OGC) explains both this and
the government’s Value for Money policy [Footnote 3]
- Grant and grant-in-aid can allow more flexibility and
discretion to the funder to vary the required outputs;
- The choice of channel affects what recipients are able to do
with any surpluses (i.e. whether or not the funder will seek to
‘claw back’ surpluses) [Footnote
4]
- The VAT position may differ: sometimes the amount of
irrecoverable VAT incurred by the TSO may be less under the
procurement channel. You should seek advice on your position from
HM Revenue and Customs.
There is no hard-and-fast rule as to which funding channel is
appropriate for a particular situation. However, some factors tend
to make procurement more suitable while others favour grant or
grant-in-aid. Procurement is often favoured where:
- Funding is being provided primarily for specific service or
project objectives, rather than for ‘development’ or ‘strategic’
purposes
- The market of potential suppliers is well-developed – there are
several potential suppliers to choose from, who have the capability
to meet your objectives, can respond easily to new demands and
where there is little risk of market failure during the period of
your programme. A well-developed market should also mean that price
benchmarks for the service will be available.
Conversely, grant or grant-in-aid is often more suitable where
development or strategic funding is emphasised. Other factors which
tend to favour grant or grant-in-aid are:
- A desire for innovative or experimental products or
services
- Outcomes (the desired end results) rather than outputs (the
measurable or numerical results of a given input) are to be
specified.
Grant-in-aid is particularly favoured where the funding
situation is ‘non-contestable’, i.e. where there is a unique
supplier.
Notes