Source · Select Committees · Public Accounts Committee

Seventeenth Report - Cabinet Office functional savings

Public Accounts Committee HC 423 Published 1 March 2024
Report Status
Government responded
Conclusions & Recommendations
28 items (18 recs)
Government Response
AI assessment · 28 of 28 classified
Accepted 25
Acknowledged 1
Deferred 1
Not Addressed 1
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Recommendations

18 results
2 Accepted

Assess functions' progress and publish balanced scorecard for each by Cabinet Office

Recommendation
Different functions are still at different levels of development, and different levels of maturity in their approaches to calculating and reporting savings. The 14 functions are different shapes and sizes and have different approaches and methodologies to calculating savings. It … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the recommendation to take stock of functions and publish a balanced scorecard. It commits to publishing this information in Spring 2025, which aligns with the annual function efficiency savings, rather than by the end of 2024 as requested.
HM Treasury
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3 Accepted

Develop consistent methodologies for functions to report total costs, benefits, and comparable savings

Recommendation
Cabinet Office and HM Treasury do not have a full picture of the performance of functions. Cabinet Office’s current exercise to quantify functional savings has reported for the last two years, but it does not include all functions. In addition, … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the recommendation, stating that the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) will drive consistency in how departments measure and report efficiencies. It explains that the GEF standardises definitions and reporting, requiring all efficiencies to be reconcilable to departmental budgets.
HM Treasury
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4 Accepted

Set out functions' savings targets and robustly test reported savings by Cabinet Office and Treasury

Recommendation
Cabinet Office and HM Treasury have not ensured that functions have fully reported the efficiencies they achieve. Overall, government expects departments to make efficiency savings equivalent to 5% of their day-to-day budgets by 2024– 25, and each department has its … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to set a savings target for functions and will publish this in the Spring 2025 efficiency and savings publication after auditing. The Cabinet Office will use these new targets to encourage functions to identify robust savings that meet GIAF standards.
HM Treasury
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8 Accepted

Government functions demonstrate varying levels of maturity and performance in achieving efficiencies

Recommendation
Since the first functions were established in 2013, there are now 14 government functions, covering activities such as procurement, major project delivery and finance. We asked the Cabinet Office how successful it thought functions had been in improving efficiency. It … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to review the diverse methodologies used by functions for measuring and reporting efficiency savings and set out a plan for improvements by end October 2024, ensuring a transition to the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF).
HM Treasury
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9 Accepted

Functional methodologies for tracking savings vary, leading to inconsistent assurance ratings

Recommendation
Each function sets its own methodology for tracking and claiming savings from its work, to reflect the different types of work they undertake. Functions are responsible for verifying the supporting data and confirming appropriate levels of governance to ensure confidence … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to reviewing functional efficiency methodologies and implementing a plan to support improvements. It will transition these methodologies to the new Government Efficiency Framework by December 2025 to ensure government-wide consistency.
HM Treasury
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12 Accepted

Significant potential for efficiency savings remains untapped in many government functions

Recommendation
We noted that, of the reported £3.4 billion savings, the overwhelming majority was attributed to a small number of functions. We therefore asked what work the Cabinet Office has undertaken to identify whether more savings could be achieved from elsewhere. … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to collaborating with HMT to establish and publish savings targets across all functions for the 2023-24 exercise. It will report these targets to the Committee in October 2024 and publish them in Spring 2025, ensuring functions identify and report robust, auditable savings.
HM Treasury
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15 Accepted

Functional savings reports provide an incomplete picture, risking underreporting of efficiencies.

Recommendation
The NAO concluded that functional savings report may therefore give an incomplete picture of savings generated across the functions. The Cabinet Office provides challenge on an ad-hoc basis to functions where it believes that they have secured savings but not … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to working with HMT to set specific savings targets across functions for the 2023-24 exercise, to be published in Spring 2025, and will report these targets to the Committee in October 2024. This aims to encourage robust, auditable savings.
HM Treasury
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16 Accepted

Effective savings reporting depends on comparable data systems and improved inter-functional data exchange.

Recommendation
We noted that a crucial area to improving reporting is ensuring that functions can get the data they need to identify savings, and that to do this effectively data systems needed to be updated or redesigned so that data sets … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to adopting the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) by December 2025 to drive consistency in efficiency measurement and reporting. This will ensure data comparability by requiring efficiencies to be reconcilable to departmental budgets and use common baselines.
HM Treasury
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17 Accepted

Cabinet Office reports on functional savings lack specific targets for achieved efficiencies.

Recommendation
As part of the government’s ambition to make savings equivalent to 5% of overall spend across government by 2024–25, every government department has both an efficiency target and an efficiency assumption “baked-in” to the funding allocated to it as part … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to collaborating with HMT to establish savings targets for functions for the 2023-24 exercise, which will be reported to the Committee in October 2024 and published in Spring 2025.
HM Treasury
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18 Accepted

Efficiency savings and targets received lower priority amid recent national challenges.

Recommendation
We asked the Cabinet Office how it was ensuring that there was sufficient direction and leadership in departments and functions’ approaches to achieving savings. The Cabinet Office told us that it was getting “terrific value” in areas such as land … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government commits to working with HMT to establish and publish savings targets across all functions for the 2023-24 exercise. These targets will be reported to the Committee in October 2024 and published in Spring 2025, aiming to provide direction and leadership for identifying robust and auditable savings.
HM Treasury
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19 Accepted

Cabinet Office fails to effectively share good practice examples between government functions.

Recommendation
We asked the Treasury whether, as the lead for the Finance Function, it had shared the methods it had put in place to develop savings with other functions. The Treasury told us that the heads of functions met regularly as … Read more
Government Response Summary
The Cabinet Office will include case study examples of best practice and provide guidance to functions on calculating savings and avoiding cost-shunting and double-counting for the 2023-24 efficiency and savings return guidance by end June 2025. They will report back in Spring 2025.
HM Treasury
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20 Accepted

Methodologies for predicting future functional savings vary significantly in maturity across government.

Recommendation
We asked the Cabinet Office how accurately it could predict what savings would be achieved in future. It told us that this had changed over time and depended in part on the extent to which the methodologies to calculate savings … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to review and improve the functions' methodologies for measuring and reporting efficiency savings, ensuring they transition to the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) by end October 2024, and will publish further details on savings, benefits, and performance measures for each function by Spring 2025.
HM Treasury
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23 Accepted

Efficiency reporting must avoid adverse effects on service users and unintended costs elsewhere.

Recommendation
Avoiding adverse effects is a key element of good practice in efficiency reporting. Efficiencies should not adversely affect resilience planning or the experience of service users, and should not add costs to other part of government. This also includes being … Read more
Government Response Summary
The Cabinet Office will include case study examples of best practice and provide guidance to functions on calculating savings and avoiding cost-shunting and double-counting for the 2023-24 efficiency and savings return guidance by end June 2025. They will report back in Spring 2025.
HM Treasury
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24 Accepted

GIAA audit scope does not cover wider adverse effects of efficiency savings.

Recommendation
The NAO found that while the Government Internal Audit Agency (GIAA) looked at the processes the functions used to calculate and assure the savings claimed, it did not consider whether the efficiency savings created adverse effects on other parts of … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees and commits to providing an update to the Committee by end December 2024 on assurances received from functions and departments that cost shunting and double counting have not led to costs elsewhere, further noting the GEF provides additional checks against these issues.
HM Treasury
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25 Accepted

Cabinet Office lacks robust independent verification and controls for efficiency savings cost-shunting.

Recommendation
We therefore asked the Cabinet Office how confident it was that efficiencies were genuinely cash savings, and had not resulted in additional costs elsewhere in government. The Cabinet Office told us it asked the heads of function to answer that … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to provide an update to the Committee by end December 2024 on assurances received from functions and departments that cost shunting and double counting have not led to costs elsewhere, emphasizing that the GEF provides additional checks against these issues.
HM Treasury
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26 Accepted

Treasury's new Efficiency Framework lacks specific explicit reference to 'cost-shunting' for savings.

Recommendation
The Treasury confirmed that it had incorporated the NAO’s principles for reporting efficiency savings into its Efficiency Framework, which included setting out the requirements for sustainability and avoiding cost-shunting.39 The new Efficiency Framework states that for reporting both cash-releasing savings … Read more
Government Response Summary
The Cabinet Office will include case study examples of best practice and provide guidance to functions on calculating savings and avoiding cost-shunting and double-counting for the 2023-24 efficiency and savings return guidance by end June 2025. They will report back in Spring 2025, noting the GEF also provides checks.
HM Treasury
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27 Accepted

Risks of double-counting efficiency savings persist with separate central and departmental reporting.

Recommendation
As part of the key principles for claiming efficiency savings, efficiencies should be carefully calculated, evidence and reported. In doing so, savings should not be double- counted and should not be reported again in future initiatives.41 We asked what witnesses … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government agrees to drive consistency in measuring and reporting efficiencies through the GEF by December 2025, and by June 2025, the Cabinet Office will provide guidance and case study examples to functions on avoiding cost-shunting and double-counting, reporting back in Spring 2025.
HM Treasury
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28 Accepted

New Efficiency Framework lacks specific data requirements to prevent double-counting of savings.

Recommendation
The Cabinet Office also noted that the introduction of the new Framework will mean that there will need to be an agreement between central government and departments about the proportions of savings that are collated to each, which is thought … Read more
Government Response Summary
The government states the recommendation has been implemented with the July 2023 publication of the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF), which sets common standards for defining, collecting, and reporting efficiency savings to avoid double counting, and HMT will iterate reporting requirements.
HM Treasury
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Conclusions (7)

Observations and findings
1 Conclusion Accepted
On the basis of a report by the Comptroller and Auditor General, we took evidence from the Cabinet Office and HM Treasury (the Treasury) about functional savings across government.1 The importance of efficiency savings
Government Response Summary
The government states it agrees with the Committee's "recommendation" (referring to the general theme, despite the item being a conclusion) and commits to the continued adoption of the GEF across government. HMT will consult on implementation and update the Committee by April 2025 on the outcome and next steps.
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6 Conclusion Accepted
Government officials need reliable data on where efficiency savings are identified to free up resources for other priorities and to make decisions about where to best allocate resources to maximise return on investment. Managing Public Money emphasises that effective decision-making is reliant on regular, high-quality information about costs, performance and …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees, stating the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) was published in July 2023 to set common standards for efficiency savings data. GEF reporting is currently being rolled out across government, and HMT will learn lessons from pilot reporting to iterate requirements with departments.
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10 Conclusion Accepted
The Cabinet Office told us that while it thought that the reported savings figures were “pretty robust”, it recognised that the figures could be more comprehensive and more consistent in the measurement of savings. The Cabinet Office recognised the need for consistent methodologies for calculating the savings achieved by functions, …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the conclusion and states that the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) will be adopted by departments and functions by December 2025 to ensure consistency in measuring and reporting efficiency savings.
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13 Conclusion Accepted
The Cabinet Office is ultimately responsible for the accuracy of the figure for the total amount of savings reports. It co-ordinates, assures and reports the efficiency savings achieved by functions, and provides guidance on what they should report. But the NAO found that the Cabinet Office had not consistently reported …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees, aiming for implementation by December 2025, and states the GEF will drive consistency in measuring and reporting efficiencies across departments and functions. Adoption of the GEF will require all efficiencies to be reconcilable to departmental budgets, thereby avoiding double counting.
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14 Conclusion Accepted
We noted that the NAO report stated that it was important that the Cabinet Office had a tighter definition of what a saving is, and that this needed to be consistently applied and have the same methodology and baseline. In its July 2023 report on the savings achieved, the Cabinet …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the conclusion, committing to implementing the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) by December 2025 to establish a consistent definition, methodology, and baseline for measuring and reporting efficiency savings across departments.
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21 Conclusion Accepted
In July 2023, the Treasury issued a framework for tracking, monitoring and overseeing efficiency savings. The framework provides definitions, guidance and best practice examples on how departments should calculate and report efficiency savings to the Treasury. The Treasury expects departments to adopt the Framework for reporting efficiency savings for the …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees with the committee's observation, stating the Government Efficiency Framework (GEF) was published in July 2023 and its reporting is currently being rolled out across government. HMT will learn lessons from pilot reporting and iterate requirements with departments, focusing on efficiencies as defined within the framework.
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22 Conclusion Accepted
We asked what scope there was to accelerate the identification of savings. The Cabinet Office told us that the next year would be one of transition given the introduction of the Efficiency Framework and expanding this from the Treasury and Cabinet Office teams to all government departments. The Cabinet Office …
Government Response Summary
The government agrees, committing the Cabinet Office to work with HMT to set specific cash and non-cash releasing savings targets for 2023-24 by October 2024, reporting these to the Committee. The Cabinet Office will ensure functions report savings commensurate with these targets, publishing them in Spring 2025 after GIAF audit.
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