Executive Summary
National Audit Office Value for Money Report
The Department's progress in delivering the targets of the
Review
- The Department of Health (the Department) funds arms length
bodies (ALBs), such as NHS Blood and Transplant and the Healthcare
Commission, to deliver specialised services and functions. In 2004
the Department announced its ALB Review, which aimed to reconfigure
and streamline the ALB sector so that it would be able to deliver
its services more efficiently. As a result of this more efficient
configuration, the Review would deliver, by 2008-09:
- savings of £0.5 billion (comprising £250 million savings in ALB
operating costs, and £250 million savings in procurement of items
across the NHS secured through the National Contracts Procurement
programme run by the NHS Purchasing and Supplies Agency);
- a 25 per cent reduction of the number of posts in the sector;
and
- a reduction in the number of bodies from 38 to 20.
The Department would also ensure that 850 posts in the ALB
sector would be relocated out of London and the South East by
2009-10.
We examined the Department's management of the Review and its
progress towards these efficiency targets. Our methodology is
summarised in Appendix 2.
- We found that, over the four years 2003-04 to 2007-08, the
number of ALBs in the sector, and the total resources devoted to
them, in terms of their funding from central government and the
number of whole time equivalent posts they employ, has decreased.
There have also been increasing procurement savings in NHS Trusts
year on year on the items covered by the National Contracts
Procurement programme.
- Using the metrics set for the Review the Department has already
achieved expenditure cuts of £555 million, exceeding the target of
£0.5 billion. This is made up of a £207 million reduction in
grant-in-aid compared to the baseline in 2003-04, and procurement
savings of £348 million, as shown in Figure
1.
- The Department has reduced grant-in-aid funding by £207 million
by setting up appropriate governance arrangements for delivering
the Review, which have led to tighter financial management across
the ALB sector than had been the case before the Review. It has
ensured the efficiency programmes that ALBs had in place or had
planned were actually delivered, so that ALBs could operate within
reduced central funding limits. Considerable savings have also been
made by closing down some ALBs.
- The Department has, through the NHS Purchasing and Supply
Agency, encouraged NHS Trusts to make greater use of centrally
negotiated contracts for procurement in areas such as
pharmaceuticals, telecommunications equipment and laundry services,
with the total spend on such contracts rising from £202 million in
2005-06 to a projected £1.7 billion in 2007-08, yielding total
savings of £348 million in comparison with baseline expenditure in
these areas, as Figure 1 shows.
- The Department has encouraged ALBs to make use of its provider
of shared financial services to deliver efficiencies. ALBs were
expected to use this service unless they could demonstrate that
alternative arrangements would be more efficient. Most ALBs are not
currently using the shared financial services, for example because
their transaction volumes are too small to realise efficiencies
through moving to shared services, or because their specialised
requirements would involve the shared services provider in
prohibitive development costs. In all cases the ALBs provided
evidence to justify the value for money of retaining their existing
arrangements.
- The Department has also put in place arrangements to monitor
ALBs' performance on a consistent and regular basis, allowing the
ALB Business Support Unit within the Department to identify issues
or concerns relating to the performance of the sector as a whole,
and to inform regular accountability meetings between ALBs and
their departmental sponsors on operational and financial
performance, and on future business planning. It was beyond the
scope of our study to examine the performance of individual ALBs in
detail. Our examination of the Departments performance monitoring
system did not reveal evidence of a decline in performance, since
the monitoring was brought in, across the ALB sector as a whole;
and our discussions with the larger ALBs also confirmed that they
were managing to deliver their services and functions within the
budgetary constraints imposed by the Review. The Department
collected substantial information on the performance of ALBs before
and during the Review. But it would have been helpful if it had
collected baseline information for the complete set of metrics it
is currently using to measure performance to provide an assessment
of any overall change in performance across the sector for the
complete period of the Review.
- The expected number of ALBs in place during 2008-09 will be 22
(Figure 2), plus a new ALB, the Alcohol Education
and Research Council, which was transferred from the Department of
Culture, Media and Sport to the Department of Health in 2007. The
Department plans to reduce the number of ALBs by a further 3 by the
end of 2008-09, which would mean that the number of ALBs in place
by 2009-10 would be 20, the original target number of bodies
envisaged in the Review.
Figure 1: Central funding for ALBs has reduced,
and procurement savings have been made
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Total grant-in-aid (m) to ALBs over the Review period
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Procurement savings from the National Contracts Procurement
programme during the Review (m)
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Source: National Audit Office analysis
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Figure 2: The number of ALBs has reduced since the
start of the Review
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Number of ALBs over time
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Source: National Audit Office analysis
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- The principal reasons that the reduction in the number of ALBs to 20 will not
be achieved until 2009-10 are:
- the time required to create the planned new overarching health and social
care regulator through the merger of the Commission for Social Care Inspection,
the Healthcare Commission and the Mental Health Act Commission;
- delays in obtaining the necessary primary legislation for the transfer of the
National Institute for Biological Standards and Control to the Health Protection
Agency; and
- the cancellation of the planned merger of the Human Fertilisation and
Embryology Authority and the Human Tissue Authority.
- The Department is making good progress towards its target for
relocating ALB staff outside London and the South East. By December
2007 it had achieved 745 post relocations, against the target of
850 to be achieved by 2009-10, and it has identified further
potential relocations. There will be risks to be managed in
delivering these, with concerns being raised by some of the ALBs
concerned about business continuity if the proposals go ahead. The
Department is working to identify further relocations in ALBs that
have already contributed to the target and in the others.
- There have been costs associated with implementing the Review.
The Department spent £61 million over the Review period, over and
above grant-in-aid to ALBs, in transition costs. Redundancy costs
arising from headcount reductions accounted for £47 million of this
(and some ALBs met additional redundancy costs from within their
grant-in-aid allocations). Ring-fenced transitional funding was
made available to ALBs for the period of the Review, and further
funding will be provided in 2008-09 for a final year. From 2009-10
onwards transitional funding will cease and the full savings
achieved through the Review will be realised.
- Headcount reductions have been achieved across the sector, as
shown in Figure 3. Many of these are transfers of
staff to other parts of the NHS. For example, around half of the
total headcount reduction in the ALB sector has come from changing
the status of NHS Direct from an ALB to an NHS Trust. NHS Direct
employees, many of whom are nurses, remain Government employees,
and continue to provide the same services to patients, but are now
defined as frontline staff rather than as part of the ALB
sector.
Wider efficiency issues across government
- To assess the effectiveness of the ALB Review as an efficiency
programme, rather than simply checking whether the targeted levels
of savings and post reductions were delivered, it is necessary to
consider the extent to which any of the savings or headcount
reductions would have occurred, in any case, had the programme not
taken place the so-called counterfactual scenario.
- In defining how the targets for the programme would be
realised, the Department used as its counterfactual for
grant-in-aid reductions a constant year-on-year total grant-in-aid
allocation to the sector at 2003-04 levels, to make it clear to
ALBs what the baseline figure was against which savings would need
to be delivered. This is equivalent to assuming that, without the
Review, there would have been an annual real-terms decrease in
total grant-in-aid from 2004-05 to 2006-07. This is a conservative
estimate of what would probably have happened, during a period of
increasing expenditure on the health sector, if the Review had not
taken place. Indeed, Treasury guidance for counting efficiency
savings suggests that inflation effects should normally be factored
in. Assessing against a counterfactual that was adjusted for
inflation would have suggested a higher level of grant-inaid
savings attributable to the Review.
Figure 3: Number of posts in ALB sector over the
Review period
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Number of posts in the ALB sector over the Review period
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Source: National Audit Office analysis
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- On the other hand, the counterfactual used to assess
procurement savings assumes that none of the savings that have
arisen as a result of NHS Trusts changing to cheaper, generic
versions of pharmaceutical products when they come off patent would
have occurred without the National Contracts Procurement programme.
It seems likely that at least some hospitals would have realised
some of these savings if the programme had not been in place.
Assessing against a counterfactual that takes account of this would
have suggested a lower level of procurement savings attributable to
the Review. However, NHS PASA has worked with NHS Trusts and other
organisations to deliver savings by ensuring that purchasing is
responsive to price movements in the pharmaceuticals market.
Conclusion on value for money
- The Department is on track to meet the key targets set for the
ALB Review in 2004. Definitions of how the Reviews targets would be
measured were clear, agreed with Ministers, and in conformity with
the prevailing criteria for assessing efficiency savings at that
time. Figure 4 summarises the high-level results
so far.
Figure 4: High-level results of the ALB Review so
far
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The targets set were to reduce, between 2003-04 and
2008-09:
- expenditure by £500 million (£250 million on centrally funded
operating costs and £250 million on procurement costs);
- the number of posts in the sector by 25 per cent; and
- the number of ALBs in the sector from 38 to 20.
By the end of 2007-08, and by the metrics set for the
exercise:
- expenditure will have been cut by £555 million (£207 million in
centrally funded operating costs and £348 million on
procurement);
- the number of posts in the sector will have decreased by 27 per
cent; and
- the number of ALBs will have reduced, through mergers and
reconfigurations, from 38 to 23.
In terms of target achievement the exercise has been a
success.
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NOTE: Figures exclude the Alcohol Education and Research
council, which did not form part of the original Review.
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Source: National Audit Office Analysis
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- In the years since the 2004 Comprehensive Spending Review,
guidance on measuring efficiency savings in the public sector has
been developed to include requirements to consider alternative
counterfactuals when necessary, and to measure efficiency gains net
of the costs of achieving them. The Department of Health spent £61
million over the Review period on implementation costs such as
redundancy costs associated with the Review, and expects there will
be further costs in 2008-09. According to current guidance on
measuring efficiencies, these would be deducted from the savings
figures. Transition funding will cease from 2009-10, so the full
recurrent savings will be achieved from that year onwards.
- In order for the savings that have been achieved to count as
efficiency improvements, it must be demonstrable that the quality
of performance in the ALB sector has been maintained since the
beginning of the Review. Our examination of the Departments
performance monitoring system did not reveal evidence of a decline
in performance, since the monitoring was brought in, across the ALB
sector as a whole; and our discussions with the larger ALBs also
confirmed that they were generally managing to deliver their
services and functions within the budgetary constraints imposed by
the Review. The Department did collect significant performance data
from ALBs, however, not always in a form which permits direct
comparison of current and baseline performance, so that it is not
always possible to establish whether performance has been
maintained in comparison with 2003-04.
- Around half of the reduction in posts has been achieved by
reassigning existing posts to new categories. Nurses working for
NHS Direct who have been reassigned to the frontline count as staff
reductions even though their duties remain as they were.
- Consequently, the exercise has certainly cut costs, posts and
the number of bodies, and in this sense has improved value for
money in ALB sector and secured some notable savings. In the wider
context of developments in efficiency measurement since 2004, there
remain some areas in which further evidence would be required to
quantify unequivocally the overall value for money achieved.
- For the future, to ensure that further efficiencies are
delivered in accordance with the requirements of the 2007
Comprehensive Spending Review, the Department will have to work
within the tighter requirements for demonstrating efficiency gains
that have been announced by the Government since the previous
Spending Review. We make a number of recommendations below to help
in taking this forward. These will also be of interest to other
government departments in managing their arms length bodies to
deliver efficiencies.
Recommendations
For departments generally, on using targets to deliver
efficiencies
If targets are used to deliver efficiencies they should be
clear, unambiguous and informed by sector knowledge, focused on
delivering value for money improvements and measurable.
- The value for money
improvements delivered by the ALB Review have largely been driven
by the savings target, less by the headcount reduction or number of
bodies target. The headcount reductions have been achieved partly
by redefining organisations; and the number of bodies itself is not
key to delivering value for money in the sector. If targets
are used in efficiency programmes they should focus on value for
money defined in terms of total resources used and performance
quality, rather than on input measures.
- Initially the targets
lacked clarity and caused some confusion over what they would mean
in practice. This meant that there was uncertainty in the ALB
sector and delays in getting started on the necessary reforms.
However, once the Department ensured that the definition of the
targets was clear ALBs began working towards them.
Departments must be clear about what targets mean in
practice, including how they will be calculated and what the
counterfactual will be, when announcing them to bodies responsible
for their delivery.
- The need to meet a
predetermined target for the number of ALBs has led to instances
where, in the opinion of the ALBs concerned, mergers have taken
place without a clear business logic. Decisions to merge or
reconfigure bodies should be based on an Impact Assessment, which
identifies and assesses the costs and benefits of change. Moreover,
post merger, work should be carried out on the merged organisations
to determine what costs and benefits have arisen from their
reconfiguration.
- Savings and headcount
reductions targets for individual ALBs were sometimes less
challenging than they might have been, for example where ALBs had
internal change programmes aimed at delivering greater savings than
their allocated targets. Departments intending to deliver
efficiencies through their arms length bodies should map out their
ALB sector and understand the individual circumstances of their
ALBs, to maximise the effectiveness of targets that are cascaded to
bodies.
- As the Department does not
have a set of comparable performance metrics for the full period of
the Review we cannot reach a definitive conclusion on changes on
performance in the sector during the Review. When
undertaking major change programmes, Departments should establish
baseline performance and financial metrics, in order to assess the
before and after effect. In the case of the ALB Review, this would
have provided a greater level of assurance that savings achieved
represented genuine efficiencies, and not just reductions in
expenditure.
For the Department of Health, on managing the arms length
relationship
Efficiency improvements have to be delivered by the ALBs
themselves. The role of the Department should be to create the
right environment for efficiencies to be realised.
- If sponsors ask ALBs to
take on extra work without approaching the central ALB finance team
to secure and agree funding, it will not have been allowed for in
ALB budgets. This may result in sponsors finding funding through
other routes, which can lead to confusion for ALBs as to who within
the Department has overall operational responsibility for their
budgets. Sponsors or other parts of the Department should
not commission new work from ALBs without prior discussion with the
central ALB finance team to ensure that funding is
available.
- It is clear that prior to
the ALB Review the Departments financial scrutiny of ALBs was
variable. There were also mixed standards in business planning and
performance monitoring. The implementation of the ALB Review has
improved the Departments overall governance of its ALBs.
The Department should ensure that ongoing efficiency
requirements on ALBs and the existing good practice governance
arrangements are maintained after the conclusion of the ALB Review
in 2008-09. This might entail, for example, ensuring that the
current ALB Business Support Unit continues to provide independent
challenge to future business plans and budgets proposed by ALBs and
their sponsors.
- Between 1999 and 2004 the
number of Department of Health ALBs grew from 25 to 38. The ALB
Review called into question the value for money of several of the
bodies established during this period and recommended their
closure. After the ALB Review concludes in 2008-09, the
Department should ensure that the robust arrangements now in place
for assessing the purpose and value for money of ALBs are applied
whenever new bodies are proposed. The current ALB Business Support
Unit could take on this gatekeeper role.
- The Department has made
good progress towards its relocation target, however some risks
remain to be managed if the full quota of relocations is to be
delivered by 2009-10. The Department should continue
encouraging ALBs to identify potential relocations and ensure that
ALBs are committed to those identified within the
programme.