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261 Pages·1995·24.21 MB·English
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PARLIAMENTARY ACCOUNTABILITY Also byPhilip Giddings MARKETINGBOARDS ANDMINISTERS Parliamentary Accountability A Study ofParliament and Executive Agencies Edited by Philip Giddings LecturerinPolitics UniversityofReading for the Study of Parliament Group Selection,editorialmatter,chapters4and 11 ©PhilipGiddings1995 Chapters1-3and5-10© MacmillanPressLtd1995 Softcoverreprintofthehardcover 1stedition1995 Allrightsreserved.Noreproduction,copyortransmissionof thispublicationmaybemadewithoutwrittenpermission. Noparagraphofthispublicationmaybereproduced,copiedor transmittedsavewithwrittenpermissionorinaccordancewith theprovisionsoftheCopyright,DesignsandPatentsAct1988, orunderthetermsofanylicencepermittinglimitedcopying issuedbytheCopyrightLicensingAgency,90TottenhamCourt Road,LondonWIP9HE. Anypersonwhodoesanyunauthorisedactinrelationtothis publicationmaybe liabletocriminalprosecutionandcivil claimsfordamages. Firstpublished1995by MACMILLA.N PRESSLTD Houndmills,Basingstoke,HampshireRG21 2XS andLondon Companiesandrepresentatives throughouttheworld IISSBBNN997788--11--334499--1133668844--11 IISSBBNN997788--11--334499--1133668822--77((eeBBooookk)) DOI 10.1007/978-1-349-13682-7 Acatalogue.recordforthisbookisavailable fromtheBritishLibrary. 10 9 8 7 6 5 04 03 02 01 00 Contents Page Preface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . vii Contributors . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ix Part I: The Context of the Initiative 1 The Origins of the NextSteps Programme: Gavin Drewry andPhilip Giddings 3 2 Ministerial Responsibility and NextSteps Agencies: RobertPyper . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19 3 Next Steps and Parliamentary Scrutiny: Barry Winetrobe 33 Part II: The Process of Scrutiny 4 The Treasury Committee and Next Steps Agencies: Philip Giddings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55 5 Departmental Select Committees and the NextSteps Programme: DavidNatzler andPaul Silk 71 6 Financial Accountability: Agencies and Audit: Priscilla Baines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 95 7 Members of Parliament and Agencies: Parliamentary Questions: PaulEvans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 119 8 Agencies and the Ombudsman: Philip Giddings . . . . . . . 139 Part III: Case Studies 9 The Environment Agencies: George Jones and JuneBurnham withRobert Elgie , 155 10 The Department of Social Security and itsAgencies: Patricia Greer , 191 11 Accountability and the Employment Service Agency: Norman Lewis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .. 203 Part IV: Reviewand Conclusions 12 Next Steps to Where? Philip Giddings 221 v vi Contents Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 243 Index 253 Preface This book is based upon the work done by a study group set up by the StudyofParliament Group(SPG) in 1990to monitortheconsequences for Parliament of the Government's Next Steps Initiative, Asconvenor of the group and editor of the book I have been grateful for the continuing support and encouragement of the SPG and particularly its Executive Committee inseeingtheworkthroughtocompletion. That support hasnot been merelymoralsupport.TheSPGExecutivehasgenerously fundedthe travellingexpenses of members of the study group as wellas some of the costs of the preparation of the book for publication. For that we are particularly grateful. To avoid misunderstanding I should, nevertheless, makeclear at the outset that the SPG does not bear any responsibility for the factsstatedor opinions expressed in this book. Thatsame disclaimer also appliestothosewhogenerously gaveoftheir time to talk to the study group and answer our questions about their experience of the Next Steps programme: Don Brereton of the Prime Minister's Efficiency Unit; Mike Goodson, Assistant Auditor General; Giles Radice, MP, of the Treasury and Civil Service Committee; and Peter Ryder, Director of Operations at the Meteorological Office. Peter Kemp, as he then was, gave an illuminating address to the SPG annual meeting in 1991. Priscilla Baines acted as our scribe for these meetings with her customary efficiency and has been a continuing source of encouragement to me as convenorof the group. Tomonitor the consequences of developmentof a programme like the Next Steps means that time must be allowed to reveal what those consequences are. The research, andthe book whichis based upon it, has therefore inevitably been a long time in the making. I would like, therefore,to pay tribute to the patience and resilience of mycolleagues in keeping faith with the project. Most of the initial group who expressed interestinthe studyhaveremainedwithus andcontributed tothis volume, manyofthem whilst carrying out heavy commitments elsewhere. The list ofcontributors is appended to this preface. I am gratefulto them all. Ishould also liketopayparticular tributeto thosewho haveassisted in the task ofconvertingour findingsintothis book. Sheila Baxter, secretary intheDepartment ofPoliticsattheUniversityofReading,didmuchofthe early word processing and Lisa Hasell has brought those early drafts into camera-ready formwithremarkablefacility.Simon Patrickgaveinvaluable help with preparation of the tables and other aspects of the design of the vii viii Preface book and Paul Evans has generously assisted in proof reading and arranging for preparation of the index, for which we are indebted to Sue Martin. In the Preface to a book about accountability it is more than ever necessary to make clear who is responsible for what. Broadly speaking, as editor Itake responsibility forall matters ofeditorial policy,within the guidelines helpfully provided byMacmillan, including the structure and balance of the book, as well as (ofcourse) for those chapters which bear my name. For the content of the other chapters, the particular authors, individuallyorjointlyasthecasemaybe, takeresponsibility. Ifthatleaves the reader with some lingering doubt about precisely who is responsible forparticular passagesor words inthe text, then the reader has been well initiated into the issues raised bya study of accountability. Reading, Philip Giddings October 1994 Contributors Priscilla Baines is Deputy Librarian of the House of Commons. She joined the Economic Affairs Section of the Research Division of the Library in 1968, became head of section in 1977, head of the Science and EnvironmentSection in 1988andthenHeadoftheParliamentaryDivision. Her publicationsinclude contributionsto the Study of Parliament Group's ParliamentandEconomicAffairs(1980) andto G. Drewry (ed.), The New Select Committees: a Study ofthe1979Reforms (1989). Gavin Drewry is Professor of Public Administration and Head of the Department of Social Policy and Social Science, Royal Holloway and Bedford New College, University of London. He has been a member of the Study of Parliament Group since 1974 and written or edited several books and many book chapters and academic articles on subjects mainly related to parliamentary practice and procedure, the legislative process, publiclawandpublicadministration. Hisbooksinclude: asco-author(with Louis Blom-Cooper), Final Appeal: A Study oftheHouse ofLords inits Judicial Capacity, (Clarendon Press, 1972), currently being revised; co author (with Ivor Burton), Legislation andPublic Policy (Longman, 2nd edition, 1981); editor and principal contributor, The New Select Committees: a Study of the 1979 Reforms (Oxford University Press, for the Study of Parliament Group, 2nd edition, 1989); co-author (with Tony Butcher), The Civil Service Today (Blackwell, 2nd edition, 1991). Paul Evans is currently a Clerk in the Public Bill Officeof the House of Commons. He has beenaClerk inthe House ofCommons since 1981and has worked for the Energy and Health Committees as well as in the Table Office(which deals with Parliamentary Questions) and the Journal Office. Philip Giddings lectures on Politics at the University of Reading. He is author of Marketing Boards and Ministers (Saxon House, 1974) and a number of articles on Parliament and public agencies. He has contributed to several Study of Parliament Group publications, including The New Select Committees: aStudy ofthe1979Reforms (Oxford University Press, 2nd edition, 1989)and Parliamentary Questions(Oxford University Press, 1993), and published articles on the Parliamentary and Health Service Commissioners. ix

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Written by members of the Study of Parliament Group, this book assesses Parliament's response to the reorganisation of much of the civil service into 'executive agencies'. Chief executives have been given freedom to take operational decisions. Yet Ministers insist that they themselves remain constit
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