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Title: Breakout Session 4: Expenditure Slide 1


1
Regional Policy What Works?Ramside Hall,
Durham, 16 November 2004
  • Professor David Heald
  • (Management School, University of Sheffield)
  • Breakout Session 4 Expenditure

2
The Latest PESA Data, 2002-03
3
A If there is a UK territorial finance
problem, what is it?
  • Many suggestions that the present devolution
    funding system is unsustainable (there must be
    something better), though these criticisms come
    from opposed positions.
  • Opinion in all the territories (ie Scotland,
    Wales and Northern Ireland) believes they are
    badly treated, yet opinion in England (and in the
    London and English regional media) considers them
    feather-bedded. The Barnett formula is
    criticised from all angles. There are legitimate
    concerns about the fiscal accountability of
    sub-national politicians, but canvassed solutions
    often lack credibility and practicability

4
  • Learning to cope with the rough and tumble of
    intergovernmental fiscal relations, and not to
    regard every incident as a terminal crisis
  • How the political system copes with party and
    financial asymmetry, especially when it is no
    longer possible for the UK government to close
    down the debate about money
  • Limited capacity and willingness to absorb
    lessons from other jurisdictions - but working
    out which are the correct lessons is more
    difficult than it seems

5
  • The impact of the 1997 Labour Governments public
    expenditure strategy two years of (overstated)
    famine followed by five years of (initially
    exaggerated) feast (NB UK priorities now pushing
    unexpected amounts of money through the Barnett
    formula mechanism)
  • Continued lack of transparency comparable
    English expenditure to the devolved Assigned
    Budgets is still not available despite improved
    explanations in the Treasurys Funding Policy
    document (original in 1999, now revised after
    each biennial Spending Review)

6
B How England is Affected
  • What would happen in England after devolution in
    the territories?
  • nothing
  • stronger (in a political sense) English regions
  • England asserts itself as a political unit
  • At what spatial level, and by whom, should
    expenditure-switching discretion be held? The
    territorial blocks were important precursors of
    devolution, ironically being formalised after the
    1978 scheme fell

7
  • English regional devolution, if embracing
    expenditure on, say, education and health, would
    be much more radical than in the territories
    where existing administrative structures and
    territorially- engrained political loyalties
    could be built upon
  • There is some evidence that, looking at the
    relevant expenditure aggregates (ie not
    identifiable expenditure as a whole),
    convergence is occurring (Goudie, 2002). If
    evidence of rapid convergence in the territories
    emerges, decisions will have to be taken on
    formula modification (the Barnett formula was
    never intended to drive relatives to UK 100).
    If there is a Needs Assessment for the Devolved
    Administrations, it is likely to also involve
    examining need at the English regional level.

8
  • Explicitly for 25 years (and there were echoes of
    the Goschen formula before that), there has been
    a mechanism for regulating changes in the
    territorial blocks with reference to changes in
    total expenditure in England on comparable
    services. However, the regional pattern of
    spending in England has never been planned, being
    a by-product of within-England distribution
    systems for particular services (eg health and
    local government). Expenditure-switching
    discretion operates within London-based
    functional departments, not at the regional level
    (where Government Offices for the Regions have
    limited functions and status)

9
C Why Expenditure Data Went Missing
  • John Shorts seminal 1970s work on English
    regions, including the In and For distinction
  • Note Shorts unsuccessful 1985 attempt to revisit
    the data and the Treasury Civil Service
    Committees unsuccessful prompting of the
    Treasury in 1989
  • Heald and Shorts (2002) concern that English
    regional data had gone backwards from the 1970s.
    Without political pressure and/or a supportive
    administrative structure, unlikely to get good
    regional data. Conditions existed in territories,
    but not in English regions

10
D The Prospect of Better Regional Data
  • Now connected into a substantive regional policy
    agenda, in which differences in regional economic
    performance are presumed to have cultural,
    demographic and geographical roots - therefore
    getting ministerial and policy-makers attention
  • McLean Report has raised the profile of English
    regional data as a policy issue, reinforcing the
    impact of the Allsop Review
  • A momentum of improvement may now develop, but
    the absence of English regional political
    institutions means that continuity of attention
    will depend heavily on officials

11
D1 How the Treasury Referred to McLean Report in
Spending Review 2004 (para 4.43)
12
D2 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 1
  • All Departments that make returns in the PESA
    exercise should study good practice across
    government. DONE. The Treasury have circulated
    examples of good practice as part of the guidance
    for departments for the next regional data
    collection exercise
  • ODPM, in conjunction with HM Treasury and ONS,
    should arrange seminars for senior departmental
    managers to explain why data on the flow of
    domestic and European public expenditure into the
    English regions are needed and how they should be
    collected. DONE. The Treasury have led in
    organising a series of seminars for this purpose,
    in advance of the launch of the regional data
    collection exercise for PESA 2004. Principal
    Finance Officers (PFOs) and Statistics Heads of
    Profession (HoPs) were invited to attend, or to
    nominate representatives

13
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 2
  • The Treasury should amalgamate the present TA
    (Territorial Analysis) and RA (Regional Analysis)
    exercises, and give departments more time than at
    present to produce their returns. DONE. These
    exercises have now been combined and renamed as
    the Country and Regional Analysis (CRA) and will
    be run together in this way in future, beginning
    with the CRA exercise for PESA 2004 ...

14
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 3
  • Each Department's Head of Profession for
    Statistics should draw up a protocol for the
    collection and return of territorial and regional
    expenditure data for the Department, and the
    Department should ensure that a senior manager is
    in charge of the process. AGREED AND DONE IN MOST
    PART. As part of a campaign to raise awareness
    in departments of the issues regarding their
    regional public spending data, prior to the
    launch of the next regional data collection
    exercise, the Treasury Managing Director
    responsible wrote to all PFOs, informing them
    about the forthcoming exercise and the programme
    of seminars, explaining the importance of good
    regional spending data in the context of the
    Government's regional policy agenda, and
    reminding PFOs of the research report and its
    findings Treasury passed the idea of a protocol
    on to departmental HoPs, but it is for individual
    departments as to whether or not they implement
    this idea

15
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 4
  • The Treasury and ONS should jointly produce a
    memorandum on the rules for coding expenditure as
    for and in and publish it for consultation
    with users of National Statistics on the
    technical issues involved in the definitions of
    expenditure in and for, in but not for and
    neither in nor for a particular region. AGREED
    AND BEING DONE. The Treasury and ONS are
    producing a memorandum on measuring government
    expenditure by region, and Treasury have drawn on
    the draft of this memorandum in compiling the
    detailed guidance on concepts and definitions
    which has been circulated to departments for the
    2004 CRA data collection exercise...

16
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 5
  • Each Department should ensure that all regional
    boundaries used for reporting its own and its
    agencies expenditure conforms to the NUTS
    (Nomenclature of Units for Territorial
    Statistics) hierarchy. AGREED AND TAKEN FORWARD,
    but any action is for individual departments.
    Treasury letters to PFOs and HoPs drew this
    recommendation to departments attention, and
    made it clear that, whilst we recognise that
    administrative boundaries may vary, the Treasury
    nevertheless expects all departments to be able
    to supply regional spending data conforming to
    NUTS1 regions

17
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 6
  • ONS and other contributing departments should be
    fully funded to produce regional statistics of a
    quality sufficient to enable the productivity
    performance of the under-performing regions of
    England to be measured and analysed accurately.
    AGREE IN PRINCIPLE, and in respect of all
    regions, not just the underperforming
    regions...

18
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 7
  • The UK Government reviews the responsibility for
    the monitoring of the flow of European public
    expenditure into the English regions, with a view
    to locating the responsibility in just one
    Department. DISAGREE. Monitoring flows of EU
    spending into regions is the responsibility of
    the department with lead responsibility for the
    policies that EU funding supports, eg. DEFRA for
    CAP and DTI for Structural Funds. Treasury is
    responsible for monitoring and reporting
    aggregate flows between EU and UK, ie net
    payments to the EC. ODPM and H M Treasury do not
    see any strong reason for changing the present
    arrangements

19
D3 How ODPM Responded to McLean Report 8
  • The European Commission decides which of its DGs
    is responsible for monitoring the additionality
    of European funds spent by general governments in
    Member States and to make that DG responsible
    for producing annual tables of expenditure
    outcomes for each programme in each Member State.
    DISAGREE the arrangements on additionality in
    Structural Funds programmes were agreed in 1999
    and will apply for the rest of the existing
    programming period to 2006. However the UK is
    keen to see Structural Funds programmes
    simplified and better concentrated on key policy
    objectives in future, and we have put forward a
    wide-ranging approach to reform (the proposed EU
    Framework for Devolved Regional Policy) that we
    feel would achieve the necessary flexibility and
    outcome-focus...

20
E What does the future hold?
  • Undoubted prospect of better data for English
    regions but note need for caution
  • While the concept of public expenditure "for" a
    particular area is straightforward enough in
    services of a personal nature, and in some
    clearly local services (such as refuse
    collection), there are conceptual difficulties as
    to who benefits from other services such as
    transport,agricultural subsidies, tertiary
    education and some public order and safety
    services
  • Regions involve a lot of internal averaging - eg
    impoverished parts of inner London and superior
    performance within Yorkshire Humberside of
    Leeds and York over Bradford and Hull
  • But the smaller the geographical area, the
    greater the incidence of cross-border flows in
    personal services and the more disaggregated
    the functional split, the greater the risk of
    misallocation (or real difficulty in allocation)

21
  • Relationship of the difference between In and
    For to political debates. Much political
    concern is about the employment (and expected
    multiplier effects) of where expenditure is
    incurred. In questions were simpler to analyse
    when there was less out-sourcing by government
    and by its suppliers. This is where regional
    policy becomes involved both with UK Government
    efficiency agendas (eg Gershon) and with EU
    competition policy (eg liberalisation of public
    procurement)

22
  • Institutional structure of England
  • whether rejection of political devolution in the
    North East leads to continued centralisation of
    expenditure authority in London or to
    explicit/implicit English regional blocks
  • the creation of some sort of accountable
    administrative structure is a necessary
    precursor. Whoever has expenditure-switching
    discretion must have accounting responsibility
    for that expenditure
  • Government Offices for the Regions are not
    equipped for that role. UK departments
    effectively have had expenditure blocks since
    1992 and a wide degree of discretion over
    allocation (though just at the planning stage, as
    was the pre-devolution position with territorial
    blocks) amongst sub-functions. These blocks are
    not formula determined, and only operate for
    major functions. It is arguable that resulting
    departmental freedoms have been eroded by Public
    Service Agreements, which have reinforced
    vertical accountability

23
  • Continuing controversy about expenditure per
    capita within England and in relation to the
    territories
  • what is the proper basis of comparison - London
    performs functions on behalf of other English
    regions that are self-contained in the
    territories?
  • whether rejection of political devolution in the
    North East leads to continued centralisation of
    expenditure authority in London or to some form
    of explicit/implicit English regional blocks
  • whatever the merits of the criticisms of the
    Barnett formula in terms of levels of regional
    expenditure (cf Iain McLean of Oxford University
    and Arthur Midwinter of Strathclyde University),
    expenditure-switching discretion definitely
    advantages the Devolved Administrations
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