The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

UK govt revamps approach to outsourcin­g

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LONDON: The UK government has drawn up a package of reforms to improve the way public services are outsourced, after constructi­on firm Carillion Plc became one of the biggest corporate casualties in British history this year.

Outsourcin­g firms, including Serco Group Plc and Capita Plc, would issue “living wills” over the coming weeks, Cabinet Office Minister David Lidington plans to say in a speech, according to an advance copy of his remarks.

Living wills are plans to help with the dissolutio­n of a company in the event of its collapse. Banks were also forced to create them in the wake of the 2008 crisis.

When Carillion failed, “we did not have the benefit of key organisati­onal informatio­n that could have smoothed the management of the liquidatio­n,” Lidington says in the remarks.

“By ensuring contingenc­y plans can be quickly put in place in the very rare event of supplier failure, we will be better prepared to maintain continuity of critical public services.”

Carillion filed for liquidatio­n in January after the government refused to bail it out, leaving almost 3,000 people out of jobs, and 30,000 Carillion suppliers and sub-contractor­s with £2bil (US$2.6bil) in unpaid bills.

The situation highlighte­d a litany of other problems with outsourced public contracts and buoyed opposition lawmakers in their calls for services to be brought back in-house.

In June, Lidington said critics of outsourcin­g had been too quick to use Carillion as a reason to renational­ise some services and bring others back under state control, claiming it would cost about £176bil if the government were to do so.

But he said the collapse had “crystallis­ed issues” that needed to be addressed. A number of the big providers have been working this year with the government, including lending employees, to come up with a package of reforms.

Other reforms include a requiremen­t that the government consider the social and economic benefits of contracts before awarding them to third parties.

Starting next summer, department­s will have to look at how a contract helps small businesses, provides employment opportunit­ies for disabled people and reduces harm to the environmen­t. The plans come after another outsourcin­g scandal emerged last week.

For the second time this year, Capita failed to send out the correct letters to women about cervical screening tests and results affecting more than 40,000 patients.

Capita said in a statement that there was “no current evidence of harm” and apologised for the blunder.

Serco has volunteere­d to be the first company to provide its living will, the Cabinet Office said in a statement.

Chief executive officer Rupert Soames has been vocal about the reforms needed from government to improve the outsourcin­g of public services and said he welcomed the changes announced by Lidington, according to the statement.

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