The final point I want to make is about the “dog that didn’t bark” in Mr Osborne’s Autumn Statement. What could, and should Britain look like After Austerity?
The Autumn Statement Blame Game: Austerity Agitprop and the Double (Triple) Dip (#SR2013)
The second major thing wrong with today’s Autumn Statement was the usual political spin embedded in Mr Osborne’s “it weren’t me guv” plea. According to the Chancellor, supposedly aided and abetted by the OBR, the poorer than expected economic results, and knock-on poorer than expected public finances, is all down to those rotten Continentals over […]
Geeky Gripes About the Autumn Statement. (#SR2013)
George Osborne delivered his Autumn Statement today to general critical declaim. Let me begin with a rather geeky gripe about the Autumn Statement. It was a mini-Budget, indeed a mini-Spending Review, rather than an Autumn Statement. In this George Osborne has gone one up on his predecessor, Alistair Darling, who has famously said he delivered […]
Whitehall: What a Performance
In a couple of weeks I’m attending a (private) seminar on Lessons from the History of Whitehall Performance Measurement Systems. I have fairly well developed views of my own on this already, but I’d be very interested to get any input from colleagues, especially those with “insider knowledge” of how these things have worked and evolved.
MBS Doctoral Funding Opportunities – September 2013 entry
Please see below for details of available funding for PhDs starting 2013. If anyone is interested in applying to research in the areas of public sector performance, civil service reform, general public management, etc I would be willing to consider supporting an application and being named as a potential supervisor. But please note these schemes […]
Police and Crime Commissioners: A Muddled Policy Shambolically Implemented.
I appeared briefly on BBC TV nationally and in the NW after the PCC election farce and made some remarks I thought it might be worth just expanding on a little. There were two issues about these elections: were they a good idea in the first place? And were they badly implemented?
Why Health and Education get more expensive and Computers don’t.
What do health care, education, symphony orchestras and hairdressing all have in common? They all seem to get remorselessly more costly to produce. A new book – The Cost Disease by William Baumol and others – sets out to explain why.
Good Government – a Mid-Term Review (Event)
The Institute for Government is pleased to bring to your attention the following event hosted by the Better Government Initiative. Good Government – a Mid-Term Review An event to mark the launch of a new report Wednesday 14th November 2012, 18:00 – 19:30
Policy@Manchester week: great line up of speakers and events. All Welcome.
Out first ‘Policy@Manchester’ Week – 29 Oct to 2 Nov – is now finalised with a great set of speakers and events. For more details got to www.manchester.ac.uk/policy and follow the link to the Week. To reserve a place at an event email policy@manchester.ac.uk
The Changing (?) Sociology of the Senior Civil Service – what do you know?
I am currently (re)exploring some issues around the nature of the British “administrative elite” – which, for reasons I’ll explain in a later publication, I am restricting to mainly the Senior Civil Service (SCS) for the moment.
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