Executive Summary
National Audit Office Value for Money Report
- Corporate services provide vital support to the delivery of
effective and efficient public services that meet citizens needs.
They include activities such as finance and accounting, human
resources, procurement, information technology, facilities
management and estates management. These activities are usually not
highly visible at the front line, but they have a major impact on
the quality of public services. Corporate services are often least
visible to the citizen when they are at their most effective.
- Mechanisms to improve the efficiency and effectiveness of
corporate services include more streamlined processes, better
performance data, dissemination and adoption of best practice, and
outsourcing, in addition to shared services, which form the subject
of this report. Shared services involve the combination of
activities across different parts of an organisation, or across
separate organisations, in order to bring efficiency savings and
improve service. They require a customer focus and they give
organisations the opportunity to provide services to other
organisations. They do not represent an end in themselves, but they
provide a means, alongside other mechanisms, to greater efficiency
and effectiveness.
- The Cabinet Office estimates there is scope to save 1.4 billion
from annual expenditure on finance and human resources functions,
and to improve service quality, by implementing shared services
across the public sector. The figure is not a target for
departments and it does not form part of the 21 billion Efficiency
Programme target. It represents 20 per cent savings on an estimated
annual expenditure of 7 billion, which is in line with what other
organisations, mainly in the private sector, have already achieved.
There is a wide range of implementation options for shared
services, from provision that is in-house or shared among related
public bodies to fully outsourced arrangements.
- Shared services and streamlined processes are closely linked.
Some organisations use a move to shared services as a mechanism to
drive the streamlining of processes. The risk is that
inefficiencies can then become entrenched. Other organisations find
it sensible to streamline their processes before moving to shared
services. A combined approach, adopted for example by NHS Shared
Business Services, is to streamline as part of the process of
migration to shared services.
- We decided to report on shared services now because the
transition from the 2004 Spending Review to the 2007 Comprehensive
Spending Review [Footnote 4] is a critical point in the
development of shared services. Our report focuses mainly on
finance and human resources, which are the more developed shared
service areas in the public sector.
Shared services are progressing across government but reported
savings to date are relatively small.
- Central government as a whole made slow progress initially in
taking shared services forward after Sir Peter Gershon identified
their potential in 2004. Momentum has picked up over the last year
and there are various programmes under way, many not yet
sufficiently established to start delivering savings.
- The Cabinet Office has divided government into sectors in order
to provide focus in developing shared services. The sectors have
published plans for shared services. Most sectors now have some
level of operational shared services. A large number of local
arrangements dominate some sectors. In other sectors the emerging
pattern is of a single shared services centre being steadily
extended to cover more bodies within the sector. The least
developed sector is the central government sector of small
departments which includes, for example, the Department for
Culture, Media and Sport and the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.
- At March 2007, departments had reported savings across all
corporate service functions of 1 billion, of which 315 million
relates to finance and human resources. Some element of this has
been achieved through shared services but it is not possible to
determine how much because in many cases shared services form part
of broader corporate services transformation programmes. The
savings reported to date are relatively small and suggest that
there is substantial untapped potential for securing savings
through shared services and other means.
The Cabinet Office has promoted shared services but lacks a
clear overview of the benefits being secured by departments
- The Cabinet Office promotes shared services across government.
The Head of the Home Civil Service puts shared services on the
agenda of the Civil Service Steering Board when decisions need to
be taken across government and he has written to all Permanent
Secretaries to emphasise the need to move forward on shared
services. The Shared Services Team has played a key role in
promoting the development of shared services across government by
working with OGCbuying.solutions to enable some software licences
to be transferred cost effectively across government, providing an
internal consultancy service for government, building a
crossgovernment network of shared services professionals,
identifying and tackling barriers to shared services and allocating
central government bodies to sectors to provide focus. The Cabinet
Office does not have powers to force departments to adopt shared
services because accountability for generating savings through
measures like shared services rests with departments Accounting
Officers, there being no separate Accounting Officer for shared
services. The Cabinet Office has not prescribed any particular
models, for example on payment mechanisms or on whether
participation is voluntary or mandatory in any scheme that is made
available.
- The Cabinet Office Shared Services Team has systematically
identified a range of barriers to shared services in government and
has successfully tackled some of them. The most significant
barriers concern VAT and issues around buying and selling services.
Under fundamental VAT rules reflected in EU agreements, buying
services rather than providing them in-house may incur a VAT cost
that can reduce the attraction of shared services.
- This is not an issue for government departments and local
authorities because, as a result of measures introduced in the past
to remove disincentives to outsourcing or to ensure that VAT is not
a cost on local taxation, they can reclaim VAT in appropriate
circumstances. For other bodies, principally non-departmental
public bodies and the higher and further education sectors, VAT
incurred on buying in services may be an irrecoverable cost. The
Cabinet Office estimates that the VAT barrier is potentially
inhibiting 70 million in annual savings for non-departmental public
bodies. The potential benefit from removing the VAT barrier for
higher education and further education bodies is believed to be
tens of millions of pounds per year. Further work is being carried
out in the sector to provide a better estimate.
- There has been confusion, particularly in the central
government sector of small departments, over which departments will
buy and which will sell. This was clarified in April 2007 when the
Civil Service Steering Board designated the Department for Work and
Pensions and HM Revenue & Customs as selling departments. There
are no clear financial incentives for organisations to choose to
sell services because, under rules designed to ensure departments
receive funding only as allocated by Parliament, surpluses are not
allowed to be made from transactions between departments, although
departments may gain by reducing their own average costs through
selling services. The designated selling departments have not yet
determined how they will set prices, nor whether they will compete
against other organisations, such as existing public sector shared
service providers. The Cabinet Office has resolved some incentive
issues, notably over who can claim headcount reductions. It has
also started a process potentially leading to the Cabinet Office
buying services from the Department for Work and Pensions. This,
however, is the only example of a commitment from a smaller
department to buy services from another department. It will be the
first test case of how a large department gives a good service to a
much smaller department buying its services. Some issues remain.
There are no clear mechanisms to push departments to buy or sell
shared services, so there is a risk of failing to benefit fully
from the economies of scale that exist within large departments.
- The Cabinet Offices figure of 1.4 billion for potential annual
savings from shared services is derived as 20 per cent of an
estimated expenditure of 7 billion on finance and human resources
and is not broken down into departmental elements. This makes it
difficult for the Cabinet Office to track meaningful progress
towards the overall figure. Sector plans do not contain sufficient
financial detail for the Cabinet Office to assess whether the sum
of individual projects will deliver savings on the scale required.
There is a lack of transparent data about the costs of public
bodies existing corporate services.
Shared services in the NHS and Prison Service are on course to
deliver savings but experienced early problems with customer
satisfaction.
- Two of the more established public sector shared services are
NHS Shared Business Services, operational since April 2005, and the
Prison Service Shared Service Centre, in place since April 2006.
- From our analysis of results and forecasts, we estimate that
NHS Shared Business Services will potentially deliver net present
value savings of 250 million over eleven years, of which 160
million is likely to occur over the first nine years, breaking even
after five years. On the same basis, we estimate that the Prison
Service Shared Service will deliver net present value savings of
120 million over nine years, with a break even point after five
years. Customers of NHS Shared Business Services are guaranteed
initial gross savings of at least 20 per cent in the cost of their
corporate services with further guaranteed cost reductions of two
per cent each year. The Prison Service Shared Service will release
savings ultimately equivalent to just over 30 per cent of the gross
costs of corporate services. Both sets of forecast business results
are estimates of future performance based on existing evidence and
are therefore subject to some uncertainty.
- Organisations receiving these shared services reported early
problems. This is a common experience with large transformation
programmes. Difficulties stem mainly from operational problems
associated with the challenge of implementing large and complex
systems and from the cultural changes necessary in customer
organisations. Evidence from NHS Shared Business Services is that
customer satisfaction levels rise over time.
- Shared services have brought other benefits. Those most common
non-financial benefits cited by customers of NHS Shared Business
Services are better management information, paperless transaction
processing, faster transaction processing and a step change in the
robustness of processes. Customers have also seen substantial
savings in procurement costs.
- Neither of the shared services are yet performing at leading
practice standards of efficiency but they are constantly pursuing
improvements. Leading practice performance standards rely on
characteristics such as invoices being consistently accompanied by
purchase orders, automatic approval of low value invoices with
retrospective audit checks, and passive authority where larger
invoices are paid automatically after an agreed period in which
there is no response to requests for authorisation. The Department
of Health is currently investigating the scope for automatic
payment of low value invoices that have had prior purchase
approval.
Value for money statement
- Existing shared services are on course to deliver substantial
financial savings but they need to make further progress in
tackling problems with customer satisfaction in order to
demonstrate value for money. It is not clear that wider shared
service activity across government is on a scale sufficient to
deliver value for money savings approaching the 1.4 billion
potential estimated by the Cabinet Office.
Recommendations
To improve the broader management of corporate services
- Issue: Public bodies will miss potential efficiency savings if
they do not streamline their processes, whether or not they move to
shared services. Public bodies should streamline their
corporate service processes in line with best practice and their
own specific requirements. They should identify and remove
processes and aspects of processes where costs outweigh benefits.
Streamlining will bring direct financial benefits regardless of any
subsequent action and will put public bodies in a strong position
to move to shared services if appropriate.
- Issue: Public bodies cannot quantify potential savings
from sharing corporate services when they lack cost and performance
data. They are unable to gauge whether their corporate services are
improving over time. Public bodies should improve how they
analyse the performance of their corporate services.
Management Boards should expect to receive clear information on the
cost and performance of corporate services, drawing on performance
indicators such as those published by the public sector audit
agencies. [Footnote 5] As part of this, bodies
should regularly benchmark their performance, with support from the
Cabinet Office to encourage consistency and comparability.
- Issue: Public bodies cannot assess whether their corporate
services are delivered in the most cost-effective way if they do
not make comparisons with alternative options. Public
bodies should review regularly whether there are more
cost-effective ways to obtain their corporate services.
They should carry out rigorous reviews of performance against what
is possible through alternative approaches such as shared services.
They should plan future corporate services provision in line with
the results of these reviews. If public bodies choose not to adopt
shared services, they should demonstrate clear business cases
showing why shared services are not the most suitable option. This
approach could be termed share or explain.
- Issue: The Cabinet Office is not well placed to drive
improvements on corporate services through the use of shared
services when there is a lack of clear information on the relative
performance of departments existing corporate service provision.
Departments should increase the public transparency of
corporate service performance. Departments should publish
an overview of their corporate services performance, including
analysis of costs by corporate function, and showing performance
against centrally agreed benchmarks in either their annual report
or Autumn Performance Report. Such reporting would help the Cabinet
Office, for example which leads on the information technology and
human resources professions, to become a broader force for
corporate service improvement, extending beyond the shared service
agenda. Based on the Cabinet Offices estimate of spending on
finance and human resources alone, a 10 per cent improvement by the
least efficient 10 per cent in central and local government would
release annual savings of 70 million. To improve the take-up of
shared services
- Issue: Recent machinery of government changes have split some
previously existing departments. It is important that these changes
do not result in a proliferation of corporate services. The
Cabinet Office should work to encourage newly formed departments to
adopt shared services unless they can present compelling business
cases for not doing so. Departments and other public
bodies affected by machinery of government changes should review
their corporate service provision and identify opportunities to
share services.
- Issue: Smaller departments are not yet buying their corporate
services from larger departments that can bring economies of scale
such as HM Revenue & Customs and the Department for Work and
Pensions. Departments within the central government sector
of small departments should perform a business case evaluation of
buying corporate services from one of the two designated sellers,
or provide clarity about their way forward towards shared
services. Preparing such a business case is a significant
undertaking and the capacity to undertake the work in both buying
and selling departments will need to be taken into account. The
estimated annual cost of finance and human resource corporate
services within the central government sector of small departments
is 130 million. If two thirds of these services by value moved to
one of the designated sellers and secured 20 per cent cost savings,
this would release around 17 million of annual savings. The selling
departments consider this level of savings to be conservative,
particularly when wider benefits such as improved management
information and process control are taken into account.
- Issue: HM Revenue & Customs and the Department for Work and
Pensions facilities could increase their capacity enabling them to
sell shared services to smaller public sector bodies but there is
some uncertainty around their incentives to do this. The
Cabinet Office and HM Treasury should examine whether existing
incentives to sell shared services are sufficient and whether
further action is required. The market for shared services
has not yet developed across departmental boundaries, leaving
untapped a potentially large source of savings. Providing greater
incentives may encourage departments designated as sellers to be
more active in designing products to attract customers.
- Issue: Despite rapid growth, the majority of NHS bodies are not
using shared services. Where service provision is retained
in house, boards of NHS organisations need to be clear that this
represents better value for money than alternative options such as
NHS Shared Business Services or outsourcing. This approach
would respect devolved responsibility and accountability while
explicitly emphasising the requirement on every NHS body to secure
value for money. It would challenge reasons for resisting change
that are based on perception or anecdote rather than careful
analysis. A business case evaluation would quantify the financial
and non-financial benefits that could be secured by a move to
Shared Business Services and provide the criteria from which a
decision can be made. Shared Business Services current market
share, at 21 per cent, is forecast to deliver 16 million annual
financial benefits in 2007-2008. An increase in market share to 30
per cent would realise additional annual benefits of 7
million.
- Issue: For some organisations, buying shared services incurs
irrecoverable VAT. This provides a potential disincentive to moving
to shared services. HM Treasurys current financial
evaluation of the VAT barrier should assess the degree to which
irrecoverable VAT is preventing sharing of corporate services
across government and the cost of removing the barrier. HM
Treasury should take firm action in the light of that cost benefit
analysis. Any solution would need to be consistent with EU law, the
normal principles of public funding and the Governments wider
position on irrecoverable VAT.
4.
[
back from
footnote 4] The Comprehensive Spending Review is a long-term
and fundamental assessment of government expenditure, including the
identification of departmental spending allocations for years
2008-09, 2009-10 and 2010-11.
5.
[
back from footnote 5] Value for Money
in public sector corporate services, a joint project by the UK
Public Sector Audit Agencies, National Audit Office, 2007.