• Home
  • About
  • Subscribe
  • LATIF
  • Conferences
  • Dashboard
  • Edit My Profile
  • Log In
  • Logout
  • Register
  • Edit this post

Room 151

  • 151 BRIEF

    What's New?

  • Inflation ‘disastrous’ for local services, warns LGA

    August 10, 2022

  • Consultation opens into care charging reforms

    August 9, 2022

  • ADASS survey: ‘worst fears confirmed for adult social care’

    August 5, 2022

  • GMCA to unlock funds for home energy-efficiency upgrades

    August 4, 2022

  • Levelling up committee calls for urgent boost to social care funding

    August 4, 2022

  • Oxfordshire councils abandon housing plan

    August 4, 2022

  • Treasury
  • Technical
  • Funding
  • Resources
  • LGPS
  • Development
  • 151 News
  • Blogs
    • David Green
    • Agent 151
    • Dan Bates
    • Richard Harbord
    • Stephen Sheen
    • James Bevan
    • Steve Bishop
    • Cllr John Clancy
    • David Crum
    • Graham Liddell
    • Ian O’Donnell
    • Jackie Shute
  • Interviews
  • Briefs

To Michael Gove: a modest proposal

1
  • by Conrad Hall
  • in Funding
  • — 11 May, 2022

Conrad Hall has written an open letter to the levelling up secretary suggesting an unusual (and tongue-in-cheek) proposal to help councils predict next year’s government grant.

Dear Secretary of State,

I realise that you must have a lot to deal with at the moment. Hopefully the impact of the pandemic will continue to recede, but we all recognise the effect that has had on government’s capacity to act.  Coupled with that, the Russian invasion of Ukraine and the consequences of that for us have, of course, occupied much of your department’s time. To add to that, partly but by no means wholly as a result of events in Ukraine, inflation has returned to levels not seen since the 1990s, with significant consequences for the economy and across the policy spectrum.

Nonetheless, last week’s local elections will of course have reminded you of the very many (and very complicated) issues facing all local authorities. Not the least of those is reform of local government finance, on which I think it is fair to say that successive governments of different political persuasions have struggled to deliver reform in the meaningful way that I, for one, feel is long overdue. As you talk to council leaders and their officers, I’m sure that many of them highlight to you how overdue genuinely radical policy reform in this area is.

In that vein, I have a modest proposal to present that, I hope you will agree, will serve to make some significant improvements for the interim period while your planned reforms are finalised. I also hope that the proposal will contribute in no small way to another of your policy platforms, by creating important new opportunities for training, apprenticeships and generally improving the nation’s skills base.

It is currently essentially impossible to make reliable forecasts for next year’s budget in a local authority. This is not through lack of skill on the part of diligent council officers, nor through ill-advised decisions to cut too deeply into vital financial management services.

Sign of the times

The particular problem I am concerned with is the difficulty of producing reasonable forecasts for next year’s budget. This is always an issue for any organisation, and I think that the record shows that local authorities have, on the whole, demonstrated strong financial management underpinned by, inter alia, good forward financial planning. One exception is, of course, one too many. But I hope, given the scale of the local authority sector, that you do not view the failures and s114 notices we have seen recently as a sign of the overall standard of local authority financial management.

I should also add that the current issues with local authority accounts, while clearly serious, cannot reasonably be attributed solely to councils: auditors, regulators, standard-setters and others also urgently need to consider what role they have played in bringing the current poor state of affairs to pass and how they might address that.

But to return to my central point, it is currently essentially impossible to make reliable forecasts for next year’s budget in a local authority. This is not through lack of skill on the part of diligent council officers, nor through ill-advised decisions to cut too deeply into vital financial management services.

In my council, like every local authority I know of, we employ talented staff. Our accountants, to praise just one profession, can interpret a wide range of data to produce credible forecasts in complex areas. These include modelling the long-term costs of social care, as well as reviewing up-to-date analyses of commuting trends to understand how this will affect our transport infrastructure and what income we can reasonably recover from fair-parking charges to offset some of the investment costs. These and many other policy areas feed into our budget forecasts as we try to establish sensible financial targets for the next financial year.

We don’t rest on our laurels and I dare say there is always scope for improvement, but we have a pretty good record of accurately forecasting what is in our capacity to understand and indeed to influence.

However, as you know, most local authority financing comes from central government. Another day we may discuss the always contentious issue of the balance of funding and whether a more localised model, as seen in much of Europe for example, might be worth exploring. For now we must work with the current centralised system and that means that government grant income for next year is by some distance the biggest influence on our financial targets. However, like every council in the country we have almost nothing available at a local level to enable us to forecast this accurately.

Head vs heart

I know that local government finance reform is difficult, but the practical consequences of this uncertainty are truly problematic. My accountancy head tells me to set as high a target as possible to plan for a plausible worst-case and so to prepare a budget with substantial savings proposals. But my human heart tells me of the dangers in consulting on significant reductions to services when the government grant settlement may yet turn out far better than our worst-case projections. Is it appropriate to propose big reductions to vital services that residents rely on when we may not need to implement many of them at all?

My accountancy head tells me to plan for a plausible worst-case and so to prepare a budget with substantial savings proposals. But my human heart tells me of the dangers in consulting on significant reductions to services when the government grant settlement may yet turn out far better than our worst-case projections.

Any budget process must tackle this issue, but usually the difference is not very significant.  However, this year the difference between these two extremes is far greater, by several orders of magnitude, than ever before in my career.

In fairness, some of that uncertainty is driven by inflation, which you cannot directly control.  However, a very significant part of the uncertainty is caused by the plain fact that your department has made almost no data available for us to make meaningful projections on our future government grant. Nor, as I understand it, will you do so for some months yet, but our financial deadlines and responsibilities to steward public finances wisely will require us to start budgeting long before the local government settlement is announced.

Your department has made almost no data available for us to make meaningful projections on our future government grant. Nor, as I understand it, will you do so for some months yet.

Happily, I have a modest proposal that I think may deal with the issues for the next few months while you sort out the longer-term future for local government finance. I think you will agree that it is innovative and will revive important skills in a much-neglected area. As such it is well worth your department creating a new ring-fenced grant to fund some initial pilot work. (We’ll have to discuss another day whether all these new ring-fenced grants Whitehall seems so keen on are really the right way to fund local services).

Restoring an ancient art

Our problem is that modern data systems require data to work on. Local councils, regrettably, have next to nothing from your department to enable them to make meaningful projections about government grant. So instead let’s revive a more traditional approach to forecasting and create exciting new career opportunities. With a modest grant from your department, local authorities could create apprenticeships in an ancient art, supported by modern career planning and development.

With this in place, we might produce much more reliable forecasts of next year’s government grant and so consult much more meaningfully with our communities on the difficult choices that are part of any political budgeting process.

All the obvious solutions, like three-year financial settlements, seem to be too much for your department to manage, so all I’m asking for is a little funding to employ some astrologers. Given the data your department has provided us to work with, they’d have as good a chance, if not better than any accountant, of predicting next year’s government grant with some accuracy.

Surely my modest proposal is not too much to ask you to entertain?

Yours

Conrad Hall

Conrad Hall is the corporate director of resources at the London Borough of Newham and chairs the CIPFA/LASAAC Code Board. His star sign is Leo. 

—————

FREE weekly newsletters
Subscribe to Room151 Newsletters

Room151 LinkedIn Community
Join here

Monthly Online Treasury Briefing
Sign up here with a .gov.uk email address

Room151 Webinars
Visit the Room151 channel

Share

You may also like...

  • Richard Harbord: a lack of New Year resolution 5th Jan, 2022
  • Local government: from funding famine to balanced diet 4th Apr, 2022
  • Room151’s 10th Anniversary: A decade has seen systemic change to funding while core values are more important than ever 8th Nov, 2021
  • “Localism, localism, localism”, or simply time for better funding 19th Apr, 2021

1 Comment

  1. Suresh Patel says:
    2022/05/13 at 07:42

    Fabulous!

    Log in to Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

  • 151 BRIEFS – WHAT’s NEW?

    • Inflation ‘disastrous’ for local services, warns LGA
    • Consultation opens into care charging reforms
    • ADASS survey: ‘worst fears confirmed for adult social care’
    • GMCA to unlock funds for home energy-efficiency upgrades
    • Levelling up committee calls for urgent boost to social care funding
  • Room151’s LGPS Roundtables

    Biodiversity
    Valuations & Risk
    LGPS Women

  • Room151’s LGPS Roundtables

    Biodiversity
    LGPS Women
    Valuations & Risk
  • Latest tweets

    Room151 16 hours ago

    LGPS and levelling up: nothing to fear but fear itself: There have been a number of objections to government plans for LGPS funds to invest 5% of their assets in local projects. But George Graham says these objections can be[...] dlvr.it/SWL7vt pic.twitter.com/ebwBEkZTy4

    Room151 17 hours ago

    George Graham @SYpensions @bordertocoast channels his inner FDR in a call for local government pension funds to avoid the fear factor and embrace levelling up #LGPS #localgov room151.co.uk/local-governme…

    Room151 2 days ago

    Changes to rules on capital receipts raise wider questions: Stephen Kitching argues that DLUHC’s latest rule changes are part of a series following on from revisions to MRP guidance and the purchase of commercial property. He questions whether… dlvr.it/SWGqKC pic.twitter.com/Ycr5hWZDPk

    Room151 5 days ago

    ‘No ifs, no buts’: the Bank of England continues its battle with inflation: Partner Content: CCLA Investment Management’s Robert Evans discusses the MPC’s 0.5% increase in the Official Bank Rate and its ongoing commitment to the 2% inflation target… dlvr.it/SW7SNC pic.twitter.com/ryOzYRSNA9

    Room151 6 days ago

    DLUHC changes rules on flexible use of capital receipts: The levelling up secretary has written to all council leaders to amend the rules concerning the flexible use of capital receipts to fund transformation projects. In his letter, Greg Clark[...] dlvr.it/SW3jyX pic.twitter.com/KEhSSaMITl

    Room151 7 days ago

    Local audit and financial reporting: let’s take back control: Mazars’ Suresh Patel suggests three steps that auditors and council finance teams should take to help get financial reporting and local audit back on track. Following my recent appearance… dlvr.it/SW0PfV pic.twitter.com/miL7pjukce

    Room151 7 days ago

    The case for residential investment: income, impact and resilience: Partner Content: Emma Gullifer from Columbia Threadneedle discusses the options for pension funds looking to invest in residential property including the Build-to-Rent market.… dlvr.it/SVzKwN pic.twitter.com/hdgZ4zKt4H

    Room151 1 week ago

    Draft accounts: delays continue despite deadline dash: Dan Bates discusses the latest data on the publication of local authority accounts and examines why so many councils missed the 31 July deadline. Sunday 31 July 2022 was the[...] dlvr.it/SVx2ZT pic.twitter.com/gdELhD3Yis

    Room151 1 week ago

    DLUHC proposes devolution deal in York and North Yorkshire: The government has proposed a devolution deal for York and North Yorkshire, which it says will bring over £540m of investment to the areas over 30 years. The deal will[...] dlvr.it/SVvzPQ pic.twitter.com/JUKfgZB17f

    Room151 1 week ago

    DLUHC proposes devolution deal in York and North Yorkshire: The government has proposed a devolution deal for York and North Yorkshire, which it says will bring over £540m of investment to the areas over 30 years. room151.co.uk/151-news/dluhc… pic.twitter.com/bZEjB1JebO

  • Register to become a Room151 user

  • Previous story Queen’s Speech: an ambitious plan hampered by omissions
  • Next story Bags of capacity – now to housing delivery

© Copyright 2022 Room 151. Typegrid Theme by WPBandit.

0 shares