Digital transformation in government: addressing the barriers to efficiency

This is a House of Commons Committee report, with recommendations to government. The Government has two months to respond.

Seventieth Report of Session 2022–23

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Contents

Introduction

Central government departments spend around £400 billion each year on the day-to-day running costs of public services, grants and administration. Digital transformation and modernisation of government services and data are key to achieving significant efficiencies.

Improvements in government’s digital services over the last 25 years have focused on the citizen’s online experience without substantially modernising the ageing legacy systems that sit beneath departmental and government websites. There have been 11 government digital strategies during that time but examples of successful digital transformation of services at scale are rare.

In January 2021, the Cabinet Office created the Central Digital & Data Office (CDDO) to lead the digital, data and technology function across government. In June 2022, CDDO published Transforming for a digital future: 2022 to 2025 roadmap for digital and data (‘the Roadmap’) to address some of the underlying issues which had prevented previous strategies from achieving their aims. Departments have agreed a set of commitments to complete within the current Spending Review period, which CDDO has deliberately designed to be ambitious and yet realistic given the starting point, resources and timeframe.

Conclusions and recommendations

1. Government’s public services need fundamental reform but often lack a single service owner and timely metrics on costs and performance which are essential foundations for identifying existing costs and tracking efficiency improvements. Understanding the full costs of services is key to delivering efficiency and is considered foundational in the private sector. Business cases need to include basic costs of service provision and other details, such as numbers of staff needed to help run the service, to understand the baseline position and justify funding for improvement. There is a lack of visibility and control over end-to-end services with many requiring manual administrative effort and interaction between different systems. Only 10 of government’s ‘top 75’ services are at a ‘great’ standard and 45 require significant improvement, when assessed for how easy they are for people to use and how efficiently departments are providing them. Having a single owner with responsibility for the entirety of a service would give end-to-end visibility and accountability for how efficiently and effectively it is performing. CDDO agrees with the need for an end-to-end service owner to manage operations, gauge performance over time and plan effectively.

Recommendation 1:

a) Departments should identify a suitably senior and experienced single owner for each government service.

b) Service owners should be tasked with identifying the full costs of the services for which they are responsible and for identifying and tracking the benefits gained from transforming those services or the opportunity costs of not doing so.

2. Departments are mainly making piecemeal changes to legacy systems rather than investing in more efficient wider service redesign which would reap greater benefits. It is difficult to transform services where they are supported by poorly performing legacy systems and data. When government does not have the right resources and capabilities at all levels it tends to make more superficial incremental changes. This is a lost opportunity to fully redesign and transform services to achieve long-term efficiency benefits. CDDO has assessed the scale of legacy issues in 153 systems so far, across 16 departments. The highest-risk systems have been identified and remediation plans have been set up and funded. Some departments can describe the benefits gained from transformation, but many still struggle to systematically identify the opportunity costs of failing to transform. The Cabinet Office acknowledges that decision-makers will under-invest if they do not understand how transformation would reduce future operating costs. The consequences of not having enough capable resources are to defer opportunity and prolong the risks of continuing to rely on legacy systems.

Recommendation 2: As part of business cases, departments should explicitly set out how they will resolve issues cause by changes to old legacy systems and data and demonstrate how wider service redesign will reduce the future costs of the services they support.

3. The requirement for senior generalist leaders to have a better understanding of digital business has not been formalised, and training is not focused on how digital developments interact with the complex government operational environment. The continued engagement with digital transformation of departments at permanent secretary level is essential to maintain traction. Setting up the Digital and Data Board is a good start, although we have heard that some permanent secretaries have been sending deputies. Committees on their own do not deliver anything if the right people do not attend and take required actions. We were also surprised to see that while the standard appointment letter for permanent secretaries includes reference to their financial responsibilities, it does not include anything relating to digital responsibilities. Ongoing capability building and training for senior leaders is essential. Various training programmes are being delivered, but the Digital Excellence programme has only recently been piloted and is not yet widely rolled out. Government acknowledges this area needs continual attention. Suitably experienced non-executives in board roles in departments are an excellent way to guide and educate senior leaders in digital matters. Around half of non-executive directors in government consider they have digital expertise but those with a background in similar legacy environments to departments will be most valuable.

Recommendation 3:

a) Digital responsibilities, such as improving digital services and addressing the highest risk legacy systems, should be included in letters of appointment at the most senior levels in all departments. The Cabinet Office should set out the steps it will take to work with civil service HR and other relevant stakeholders in writing to the Committee by December 2023.

b) All Departments should appoint at least one non-executive director with relevant digital, data and technology transformation expertise to their Board.

4. Digital skills shortages, including those self-inflicted through headcount cuts, risk costing government much more in the long run because opportunities to transform are foregone, and delays increase the risks of prolonging legacy systems. Government estimates it has under half the number of digital, data and technology professionals it needs, when benchmarked against comparable organisations. Yet departments are constrained in what they can pay and, while they try to offer more for specialist roles, cannot fully compete with the private sector in hard-to-recruit roles such as data architects and cyber security experts. Despite offering interesting opportunities, and the new possibility of digital career progression to executive committee level, departments are vulnerable to trading on the goodwill of staff if pay is consistently lower than outside the civil service. Departments are also rationing digital headcount, such as apprenticeships, when they are struggling to recruit and retain the skilled people they need. Such shortages are a risk to achieving the Roadmap’s aims.

Recommendation 4:

a) CDDO should support departments to avoid counter-productive digital headcount cuts when they are seeking to double the size of the digital, data and technology profession in the civil service.

b) Departments should, as part of its Treasury Minute response, quantify the impact of the under-resourcing of digital skills both on their ‘business-as-usual’ operations and change programmes, and take action to address these such as by scaling back programmes and being explicit about delays and missed opportunities.

5. Central functions, such as procurement, have not made significant progress in treating digital programmes differently from physical infrastructure programmes. The Infrastructure and Projects Authority is responsible for assuring major programmes across government and has started to appoint people with digital expertise onto review teams. However, CDDO is working with the central functions on some of the broader challenges associated with understanding and embedding digital thinking into the areas for which they are responsible, aiming to address these by 2025. The civil service is more specialised than it was 10 years ago but is still quite generalist and policy-driven overall. The types of challenge are:

  • Departments find it easier to secure capital funding than for ongoing resource allocations to run services. However, limiting resource expenditure on systems can be a false economy. Cuts can have a devastating future impact and exacerbate existing problems with legacy systems.
  • Procurement processes are considered inflexible and do not comfortably fit with the complexities and uncertainties of digital programmes. Departments often cannot precisely define and scope their requirements yet continue with procurements and expect suppliers to make priced proposals as if these uncertainties were not a problem. Once awarded, contract lots are not always allocated to best fit the delivery plan and focusing on cost minimisation rather than best outcome can lead to defensive behaviours from all parties rather than constructive partnership.

Recommendation 5: Central functions should write to CDDO by December 2023 to describe their strategy and plans to achieve the necessary digital reforms to central processes so CDDO can identify what blockers and disagreements exist, and how to resolve them.

6. We are unconvinced that departments will be able to maintain commitment to the agreed Roadmap activities in the face of competing pressures and priorities. Departments must buy in to the long-term advantages of following the digital change agenda. CDDO can monitor progress from the centre, but departments must continue to play their part in completing the agreed activities in the Roadmap. Lack of sustained leadership engagement is a risk to delivery that needs to be taken seriously and CDDO must continue to push for priority with senior leaders. We agree that overall pressures on spending in the current climate require better delivery for improved efficiency at lower cost. Competing pressures and changing priorities will present challenges to the delivery of the Roadmap despite CDDO’s best endeavours. Effective and timely reporting is necessary to hold departments accountable for completion of the agreed Roadmap activities, and CDDO must ensure it maintains suitable levers to keep progress from stalling.

Recommendation 6: CDDO should report to Parliament in six months’ time, and 6-monthly thereafter, on each department’s progress towards achieving the Roadmap commitments they have agreed to. We note that the first 6 monthly report has been published.

1 Leadership, skills and capacity

1. On the basis of a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General, we took evidence from the Cabinet Office about how digital transformation is progressing across government and what is being done to address the barriers and challenges.1

2. Government currently spends around £400 billion each year providing services, grants and administration. If government can improve how it provides these, there is huge potential for both financial savings and better services. Digital transformation and modernisation of government’s services and data are key to realising this potential.2

3. Improvements in government’s digital services over the last 25 years have focused on citizens’ online experience, without substantially modernising the ageing legacy systems that sit beneath departmental and government websites. These have resulted in services which, although they might look good on the surface, are costly and problematic to run. This is because they have not properly addressed the baked-in inefficiencies caused by working around the limitations of existing legacy systems and data. There have been 11 government digital strategies since 1996, all seeking to address usability, efficiency and legacy systems, but examples of successful digital transformation of services at scale are rare.3

4. In January 2021, the Cabinet Office created the Central Digital & Data Office (CDDO) to lead the digital, data and technology function across government. In June 2022, CDDO published Transforming for a digital future: 2022 to 2025 roadmap for digital and data (‘the Roadmap’) to address some of the underlying issues which had prevented previous strategies from achieving their aims. Departments have agreed a set of commitments to complete within the current Spending Review period, which CDDO has deliberately designed to be ambitious yet realistic, given government’s starting point, resources and timeframe.4

Maintaining commitment in the face of competing pressures

5. Departments need to buy in to the digital change agenda and to securing its long-term benefits. CDDO can act as an enlightened digital centre, helping departments and monitoring progress from the centre.5 However, departments must complete the activities in the Roadmap that they have agreed to undertake.6 This needs the right level of engagement from departments, and they need to both show leadership and build the skills base in their senior ranks.7

6. Lack of leadership engagement is a risk to delivery that needs to be taken seriously. CDDO recognises this and told us that it must continue to push for priority with senior leaders, as well as improving capability in the senior leadership group.8

7. Pressures on spending in the current climate require better delivery for improved efficiency at lower cost.9 However, competing pressures and changing priorities will present challenges to the delivery of the Roadmap, despite CDDO’s best endeavours. CDDO is using quarterly assessments, supported by its digital dashboard, to monitor progress against commitments and identify where departments may be going off track and the steps needed to correct this.10 CDDO must maintain suitable levers to keep progress from stalling.11 As a committee, we believe in transparency as a means of holding people to account and in our view CDDO should publish updates to keep departments to the tasks they have committed to.12

Senior leadership understanding of digital

8. Only a small proportion of senior decision-makers in government have first-hand experience of digital business and senior digital leaders in departments struggle to communicate their messages effectively because their wider leadership teams lack sufficient knowledge of digital issues.13 The continued support of departments at permanent secretary level is essential for maintaining traction and setting up the Digital and Data Board is a good start. However, we have heard that some senior leaders have been sending deputies and have had to be reminded that they are expected to attend in person.14 Boards and committees are only effective if the right people attend and commit to the agreed actions.15

9. We were also surprised to see that the standard appointment letter for permanent secretaries makes no mention of their responsibilities for improving digital services, despite including others such as managing public money. Including reference to digital responsibilities would make clear the importance of the area.16 For example, it would mean permanent secretaries are fully aware of their responsibilities to address legacy systems.17

10. Ongoing capability building and training for senior leaders is essential. It is being progressed through various training programmes but requires continual attention.18 We heard that a Digital Excellence programme has been piloted recently, although not yet widely rolled out. So far 300 people have been trained but this represents less than 5% of the senior civil service so far, against the target of 15% by September 2023.19 CDDO itself recognises it will take sustained effort and focus from senior leaders across government to meet the target of 90% set out in the Roadmap, so in our view this is unlikely.20 We would also expect this training to include detailed coverage of government’s digital operating environment and the existing constraints and issues associated with legacy systems and data.21

11. The use of advisers and non-executive directors with digital experience in board roles in departments is an excellent way of educating senior leaders in digital matters. Around half of current postholders consider they have digital expertise. However, those with a background in similar legacy environments to government will be of most value as they will be best placed to understand how digital developments interact with government’s complex operational environment.22

Digital skills shortages

12. There is a major digital skills shortage in the UK and skilled digital professionals command a premium in the market, making it hard for departments to recruit.23 Government estimates that the number of digital, data and technology professionals in the civil service is around 4.5%, less than half the number it needs when compared to an equivalent industry average of between 8% and 12%, and so the number will need to double.24 Departments are facing particular shortages in roles such as data architects and cyber security experts, which are difficult to recruit and where the skills command a premium in the market.25 Government is trying to improve pay for specialist roles, and considers that this is improving the situation.26 However, the Roadmap’s aims will not be achieved and the cost to government will be much more over the longer term if opportunities to transform are delayed or foregone and reliance on legacy systems is prolonged.27

13. CDDO told us that government can offer interesting and rewarding opportunities, and the possibility for digital career progression up to levels of seniority that were almost unheard of several years ago.28 It believes this can make a career in the civil service a more attractive proposition.29 Nevertheless, we are still concerned that, if pay is consistently lower than outside the civil service, government is over-reliant on the goodwill of staff.30

14. Headcount reductions can be counter-productive at a time when government knows it needs to double its digital, data and technology capability and is struggling to recruit the staff it needs. We were therefore disappointed to hear that apprenticeships had been a victim of departmental decisions on headcount culls.31 Government should continuously invest in staff development for clear long-term benefit.

2 Addressing inefficiencies and transforming legacy services

Single service owners and timely metrics

15. A single director-level owner for each service, with accountability for its end-to-end operation and decision-making authority for continually improving the service, would enable departments to form a complete and joined-up view of their services and associated costs.32 Understanding the full cost base of an existing service is key to delivering efficiency. CDDO told us that in the private sector, information such as unit costs, time to serve and error rates is ‘foundational’. Without good information on a service’s starting point, it is very difficult to make a business case for improvement, and provide a baseline for tracking those improvements.33 Government has some visibility of the digital, data and technology element of a service’s costs. However, it is challenging to get a full picture from the point where a user begins to interact with a service through to the final decision. This is a core aim of CDDO’s ‘top 75’ programme.34

16. We heard that the lack of a single service owner makes it very difficult to answer questions about the costs of providing a service more widely across government.35 There can be many handovers between different teams delivering a service – policy, operations, digital and transformation. Furthermore, not all services are fully digital and require manual administrative effort to switch between different systems.36 Only 10 of government’s ‘top 75’ services are at a ‘great’ standard, when assessed for how easy they are for people to use and how efficiently departments are providing them.37

17. CDDO found that, for half the services it has evaluated, there is no single senior individual who has ownership of the full service, encompassing both the online citizen-facing portals and the back-office systems that perform the other processing. Instead, many different programme directors, operational leaders and digital leaders are involved.38 CDDO agrees the need for an end-to-end service owner to address the need for full visibility and end-to-end accountability for a service.39

Piecemeal changes to legacy systems

18. Across government, legacy systems are a key source of inefficiency and a major constraint to improving and modernising government services. Legacy systems are difficult and expensive to run and maintain and there are substantial hidden costs from additional business processes to overcome their limitations.40 CDDO has assessed the scale of legacy issues in 153 systems so far, across 16 departments. The framework provides a consistent way of ranking legacy systems across government.41 The highest-risk systems have been identified and remediation plans have been set up and funded.42 The framework is expected to be rolled out to remaining departments by April 2024.43

19. Government has a low level of maturity in the transformation of digital services and the benefits to be gained from a more fundamental approach are estimated to be three or four times the current level.44 Past approaches have focussed on improving websites and front-end screens , making services “look good but not be good”, whilst not addressing the limitations posed by the existing legacy systems and data.45 The tendency to tweak rather than re-engineer is a lost opportunity to transform services and gain efficiency benefits.46 Piecemeal legacy system development introduces unwanted additional complexity and can increase costs.47

20. Government recognises that the scale of the challenge on data is also enormous. It hopes that its data maturity framework will help address data maturity challenges across government. However, the committee has taken evidence many times on the challenges on data yet government has made little dent in addressing the issues in the last decade.48 One of the challenges to joining up citizen data is that it is not seen as a priority for one department to do work to benefit another department when compared to their own pressing priorities.49

21. Redesigning services requires a more fundamental look at processes, not just the digital and technology elements.50 CDDO recognises this needs people not just with skills in technology, but also those who understand end-to-end processes, have the ability and willingness to analyse organisational structures, and the right capability and credibility to make the level of change required.51 Some departments can describe the benefits gained from transformation but struggle to systematically identify the opportunity costs of failing to transform.52 Incremental change is government’s fall-back response to things which are deemed ‘too difficult’ and when transformation gets de-scoped.53 If senior leaders do not understand how transformation would reduce future operating costs, they will continue to under-invest.54

3 Reform of finance, procurement and policy processes

Central functions’ understanding of digital

22. Digital change requires specific ways of investing, funding and procuring digital services and requires upskilling and capability-building to introduce and adapt new approaches. Processes which work for other programmes are not always well-suited for digital programmes. But government central functions have not made significant progress in understanding what makes digital programmes different from infrastructure or construction programmes or reflecting this in policies and procedures which departments are required to follow.55 We heard that the Infrastructure and Projects Authority now includes a digital expert on review teams and reviews digital projects differently from other types of project.56 Nevertheless, the civil service is still quite generalist.57 All central functions should continue to engage with CDDO to address process challenges and shape the future of digital government.58

23. Departments find it easier to secure capital funding for new developments than ongoing resource funding to maintain systems and keep them up to date.59 Moving services to cloud-based providers introduces new pricing models with an increasing emphasis on ‘pay-as-you-go’, which transfers traditional capital requirements to resource expenditure.60 Limiting resource expenditure means that departments can struggle to maintain services adequately once they have been built, and this can be a false economy. Cuts to maintenance budgets can have a devastating impact on the ability to maintain services in the longer term and risk undoing all progress on legacy systems.61

24. Procurement processes are considered inflexible and do not take account of the complexities and uncertainties of digital programmes, as set out in the C&AG’s report on The challenges in implementing digital change.62 Departments often cannot precisely define and scope their requirements yet continue with procurements and expect suppliers to make priced proposals as if these uncertainties were not a problem. Once awarded, contract lots are not always allocated to best fit the delivery plan and focusing on cost minimisation rather than best outcome can lead to defensive behaviours from all parties rather than constructive partnership.63

25. The civil service is still quite generalist and led by people with a primarily policy background rather than by those with direct experience of digital business operations.64 Policy professionals do not have sufficient understanding to develop policies which work well in a digital organisational environment.65 There is low integration between policy teams and those teams involved in change, operations and services leading to policies and legislation that are difficult to implement digitally. Lack of a single service owner worsens this situation because there is no single point of focus for policy teams to interact with. Appointing single service owners will help to improve cross-functional working66 but digital capability building for policy people is needed.

Formal minutes

Thursday 7 September 2023

Members present:

Dame Meg Hillier

Olivia Blake

Ben Lake

Sir Geoffrey Clifton-Brown

Mr Mark Francois

Anne Marie Morris

Digital transformation in government: addressing the barriers to efficiency

Draft Report (Digital transformation in government: addressing the barriers to efficiency) proposed by the Chair, brought up and read

Ordered, That the draft Report be read a second time, paragraph by paragraph.

Paragraphs 1 to 25 read and agreed to.

Summary agreed to.

Introduction agreed to.

Conclusions and recommendations agreed to.

Resolved, That the Report be the seventieth of the Committee to the House.

Ordered, That the Chair make the Report to the House.

Ordered, That embargoed copies of the Report be made available, in accordance with the provisions of Standing Order No. 134.

Adjournment

Adjourned till Monday 11 September at 3pm.


Witnesses

The following witnesses gave evidence. Transcripts can be viewed on the inquiry publications page of the Committee’s website.

Monday 22 May 2023

Alex Chisholm, Chief Operating Officer Civil Service and Permanent Secretary, Cabinet Office; Megan Lee Devlin, Chief Executive, Central Digital and Data Office, Cabinet Office; Paul Willmott, Chair of the Central Digital and Data Office, Cabinet OfficeQ1–80


Published written evidence

The following written evidence was received and can be viewed on the inquiry publications page of the Committee’s website.

DGE numbers are generated by the evidence processing system and so may not be complete.

1 DXC Technology (DGE0004)

2 Finlay, Mr John (DGE0001)

3 Finlay, Mr John (DGE0007)

4 medConfidential (DGE0006)

5 Splunk (DGE0002)

6 Verdin, Dr Rachel (University of Sussex Business School); and O’Reilly, Professor Jacqueline (University of Sussex Business School) (DGE0005)


List of Reports from the Committee during the current Parliament

All publications from the Committee are available on the publications page of the Committee’s website.

Session 2022–23

Number

Title

Reference

1st

Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy Annual Report and Accounts 2020–21

HC 59

2nd

Lessons from implementing IR35 reforms

HC 60

3rd

The future of the Advanced Gas-cooled Reactors

HC 118

4th

Use of evaluation and modelling in government

HC 254

5th

Local economic growth

HC 252

6th

Department of Health and Social Care 2020–21 Annual Report and Accounts

HC 253

7th

Armoured Vehicles: the Ajax programme

HC 259

8th

Financial sustainability of the higher education sector in England

HC 257

9th

Child Maintenance

HC 255

10th

Restoration and Renewal of Parliament

HC 49

11th

The rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine programme in England

HC 258

12th

Management of PPE contracts

HC 260

13th

Secure training centres and secure schools

HC 30

14th

Investigation into the British Steel Pension Scheme

HC 251

15th

The Police Uplift Programme

HC 261

16th

Managing cross-border travel during the COVID-19 pandemic

HC 29

17th

Government’s contracts with Randox Laboratories Ltd

HC 28

18th

Government actions to combat waste crime

HC 33

19th

Regulating after EU Exit

HC 32

20th

Whole of Government Accounts 2019–20

HC 31

21st

Transforming electronic monitoring services

HC 34

22nd

Tackling local air quality breaches

HC 37

23rd

Measuring and reporting public sector greenhouse gas emissions

HC 39

24th

Redevelopment of Defra’s animal health infrastructure

HC 42

25th

Regulation of energy suppliers

HC 41

26th

The Department for Work and Pensions’ Accounts 2021–22 – Fraud and error in the benefits system

HC 44

27th

Evaluating innovation projects in children’s social care

HC 38

28th

Improving the Accounting Officer Assessment process

HC 43

29th

The Affordable Homes Programme since 2015

HC 684

30th

Developing workforce skills for a strong economy

HC 685

31st

Managing central government property

HC 48

32nd

Grassroots participation in sport and physical activity

HC 46

33rd

HMRC performance in 2021–22

HC 686

34th

The Creation of the UK Infrastructure Bank

HC 45

35th

Introducing Integrated Care Systems

HC 47

36th

The Defence digital strategy

HC 727

37th

Support for vulnerable adolescents

HC 730

38th

Managing NHS backlogs and waiting times in England

HC 729

39th

Excess Votes 2021–22

HC 1132

40th

COVID employment support schemes

HC 810

41st

Driving licence backlogs at the DVLA

HC 735

42nd

The Restart Scheme for long-term unemployed people

HC 733

43rd

Progress combatting fraud

HC 40

44th

The Digital Services Tax

HC 732

45th

Department for Business, Energy & Industrial Strategy Annual Report and Accounts 2021–22

HC 1254

46th

BBC Digital

HC 736

47th

Investigation into the UK Passport Office

HC 738

48th

MoD Equipment Plan 2022–2032

HC 731

49th

Managing tax compliance following the pandemic

HC 739

50th

Government Shared Services

HC 734

51st

Tackling Defra’s ageing digital services

HC 737

52nd

Restoration & Renewal of the Palace of Westminster – 2023 Recall

HC 1021

53rd

The performance of UK Security Vetting

HC 994

54th

Alcohol treatment services

HC 1001

55th

Education recovery in schools in England

HC 998

56th

Supporting investment into the UK

HC 996

57th

AEA Technology Pension Case

HC 1005

58th

Energy bills support

HC 1074

59th

Decarbonising the power sector

HC 1003

60th

Timeliness of local auditor reporting

HC 995

61st

Progress on the courts and tribunals reform programme

HC 1002

62nd

Department of Health and Social Care 2021–22 Annual Report and Accounts

HC 997

63rd

HS2 Euston

HC 1004

64th

The Emergency Services Network

HC 1006

65th

Progress in improving NHS mental health services

HC 1000

66th

PPE Medpro: awarding of contracts during the pandemic

HC 1590

67th

Child Trust Funds

HC 1231

68th

Local authority administered COVID support schemes in England

HC 1234

69th

Tackling fraud and corruption against government

HC 1230

1st Special Report

Sixth Annual Report of the Chair of the Committee of Public Accounts

HC 50

2nd Special Report

Seventh Annual Report of the Chair of the Committee of Public Accounts

HC 1055

Session 2021–22

Number

Title

Reference

1st

Low emission cars

HC 186

2nd

BBC strategic financial management

HC 187

3rd

COVID-19: Support for children’s education

HC 240

4th

COVID-19: Local government finance

HC 239

5th

COVID-19: Government Support for Charities

HC 250

6th

Public Sector Pensions

HC 289

7th

Adult Social Care Markets

HC 252

8th

COVID 19: Culture Recovery Fund

HC 340

9th

Fraud and Error

HC 253

10th

Overview of the English rail system

HC 170

11th

Local auditor reporting on local government in England

HC 171

12th

COVID 19: Cost Tracker Update

HC 173

13th

Initial lessons from the government’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic

HC 175

14th

Windrush Compensation Scheme

HC 174

15th

DWP Employment support

HC 177

16th

Principles of effective regulation

HC 176

17th

High Speed 2: Progress at Summer 2021

HC 329

18th

Government’s delivery through arm’s-length bodies

HC 181

19th

Protecting consumers from unsafe products

HC 180

20th

Optimising the defence estate

HC 179

21st

School Funding

HC 183

22nd

Improving the performance of major defence equipment contracts

HC 185

23rd

Test and Trace update

HC 182

24th

Crossrail: A progress update

HC 184

25th

The Department for Work and Pensions’ Accounts 2020–21 – Fraud and error in the benefits system

HC 633

26th

Lessons from Greensill Capital: accreditation to business support schemes

HC 169

27th

Green Homes Grant Voucher Scheme

HC 635

28th

Efficiency in government

HC 636

29th

The National Law Enforcement Data Programme

HC 638

30th

Challenges in implementing digital change

HC 637

31st

Environmental Land Management Scheme

HC 639

32nd

Delivering gigabitcapable broadband

HC 743

33rd

Underpayments of the State Pension

HC 654

34th

Local Government Finance System: Overview and Challenges

HC 646

35th

The pharmacy early payment and salary advance schemes in the NHS

HC 745

36th

EU Exit: UK Border post transition

HC 746

37th

HMRC Performance in 2020–21

HC 641

38th

COVID-19 cost tracker update

HC 640

39th

DWP Employment Support: Kickstart Scheme

HC 655

40th

Excess votes 2020–21: Serious Fraud Office

HC 1099

41st

Achieving Net Zero: Follow up

HC 642

42nd

Financial sustainability of schools in England

HC 650

43rd

Reducing the backlog in criminal courts

HC 643

44th

NHS backlogs and waiting times in England

HC 747

45th

Progress with trade negotiations

HC 993

46th

Government preparedness for the COVID-19 pandemic: lessons for government on risk

HC 952

47th

Academies Sector Annual Report and Accounts 2019/20

HC 994

48th

HMRC’s management of tax debt

HC 953

49th

Regulation of private renting

HC 996

50th

Bounce Back Loans Scheme: Follow-up

HC 951

51st

Improving outcomes for women in the criminal justice system

HC 997

52nd

Ministry of Defence Equipment Plan 2021–31

HC 1164

1st Special Report

Fifth Annual Report of the Chair of the Committee of Public Accounts

HC 222

Session 2019–21

Number

Title

Reference

1st

Support for children with special educational needs and disabilities

HC 85

2nd

Defence Nuclear Infrastructure

HC 86

3rd

High Speed 2: Spring 2020 Update

HC 84

4th

EU Exit: Get ready for Brexit Campaign

HC 131

5th

University technical colleges

HC 87

6th

Excess votes 2018–19

HC 243

7th

Gambling regulation: problem gambling and protecting vulnerable people

HC 134

8th

NHS capital expenditure and financial management

HC 344

9th

Water supply and demand management

HC 378

10th

Defence capability and the Equipment Plan

HC 247

11th

Local authority investment in commercial property

HC 312

12th

Management of tax reliefs

HC 379

13th

Whole of Government Response to COVID-19

HC 404

14th

Readying the NHS and social care for the COVID-19 peak

HC 405

15th

Improving the prison estate

HC 244

16th

Progress in remediating dangerous cladding

HC 406

17th

Immigration enforcement

HC 407

18th

NHS nursing workforce

HC 408

19th

Restoration and renewal of the Palace of Westminster

HC 549

20th

Tackling the tax gap

HC 650

21st

Government support for UK exporters

HC 679

22nd

Digital transformation in the NHS

HC 680

23rd

Delivering carrier strike

HC 684

24th

Selecting towns for the Towns Fund

HC 651

25th

Asylum accommodation and support transformation programme

HC 683

26th

Department of Work and Pensions Accounts 2019–20

HC 681

27th

Covid-19: Supply of ventilators

HC 685

28th

The Nuclear Decommissioning Authority’s management of the Magnox contract

HC 653

29th

Whitehall preparations for EU Exit

HC 682

30th

The production and distribution of cash

HC 654

31st

Starter Homes

HC 88

32nd

Specialist Skills in the civil service

HC 686

33rd

Covid-19: Bounce Back Loan Scheme

HC 687

34th

Covid-19: Support for jobs

HC 920

35th

Improving Broadband

HC 688

36th

HMRC performance 2019–20

HC 690

37th

Whole of Government Accounts 2018–19

HC 655

38th

Managing colleges’ financial sustainability

HC 692

39th

Lessons from major projects and programmes

HC 694

40th

Achieving government’s long-term environmental goals

HC 927

41st

COVID 19: the free school meals voucher scheme

HC 689

42nd

COVID-19: Government procurement and supply of Personal Protective Equipment

HC 928

43rd

COVID-19: Planning for a vaccine Part 1

HC 930

44th

Excess Votes 2019–20

HC 1205

45th

Managing flood risk

HC 931

46th

Achieving Net Zero

HC 935

47th

COVID-19: Test, track and trace (part 1)

HC 932

48th

Digital Services at the Border

HC 936

49th

COVID-19: housing people sleeping rough

HC 934

50th

Defence Equipment Plan 2020–2030

HC 693

51st

Managing the expiry of PFI contracts

HC 1114

52nd

Key challenges facing the Ministry of Justice

HC 1190

53rd

Covid 19: supporting the vulnerable during lockdown

HC 938

54th

Improving single living accommodation for service personnel

HC 940

55th

Environmental tax measures

HC 937

56th

Industrial Strategy Challenge Fund

HC 941


Footnotes

1 C&AG’s Report, Digital transformation in government: addressing the barriers to efficiency, Session 2022–23, HC 1171, 10 March 2023

2 C&AG’s Report, para 1

3 C&AG’s Report, para 6

4 C&AG’s Report, para 10

5 Q 55

6 Q 35

7 Q 34

8 Q 7

9 Q 73

10 Qq 55, 69

11 Q 55

12 Q 70

13 C&AG’s Report, para 26

14 Qq 45–49

15 Q 49

16 Qq 42–43

17 Q 30

18 Q 7

19 Q 44; C&AG’s Report, para 26

20 Qq 30, 36

21 C&AG’s Report, para 3.23

22 Qq 57–59

23 C&AG’s Report, para 27

24 Qq 11, 30

25 Qq 13–14

26 Q 31

27 Q 16

28 Q 14

29 Q 31

30 Q 32

31 Qq 1, 23, 26–28

32 C&AG’s Report, para 3.6

33 Q 56

34 Q 52

35 Q 54

36 Q 6

37 Qq 2–3

38 C&AG’s Report, para 3.5

39 Q 37

40 C&AG’s Report, para 3.17

41 Qq 53, 63; C&AG’s Report, para 3.20

42 Q 1

43 Q 63

44 Q 15

45 Q 65

46 Q 41

47 Q 62

48 Qq 76–77

49 Q 38

50 Q 65

51 Q 66

52 Qq 62, 72

53 C&AG’s Report para 1.6; Qq 15, 17–18

54 Q 62

55 C&AG’s Report, paras 3.28–3.29

56 Q 66

57 Q 67

58 Q 68

59 C&AG’s Report, para 25; Q 62

60 Q 54

61 Q 69

62 C&AG’s Report, The challenges in implementing digital change, Session 2021–22, HC 575, paras 2.11–2.14

63 Written submission, DXC Technology DGE0004

64 Q 67; C&AG’s Report, para 31

65 Q 65 ; C&AG’s Report, para 26

66 Q 37