The Scotsman

Outsourced army recruitmen­t fails to deliver

● Firm fails to reach targets each year since winning £495m contract

- By SAM RUSSELL newsdeskts@scotsman.com

The British Army has failed to meet recruitmen­t targets as it “under-estimated the complexity of what it was trying to achieve” when it embarked on a project with outsourcin­g giant Capita, a report has said.

Capita was controvers­ially awarded the £495 million contract for Army recruitmen­t in 2012, but the Army has not recruited the number of soldiers it requires in any year since the contract began. The Commons Defence Committee was told in October that the Army currently has 77,000 fully trained troops compared with a target of 82,500.

A report by the National Audit Office (NAO), published today, found there were “significan­t problems” with the British Army Recruiting Partnering Project.

These included an online recruitmen­t system that was

0 The Army currently has 77,000 fully trained troops compared with a target of 82,500

planned for launch in July 2013 but launched 52 months late in November 2017 at a cost of £113m – triple the original budget.

Capita has consistent­ly missed the Army’s recruit-

ment targets, with the total shortfall ranging from 21 per cent to 45 per cent of the Army’s requiremen­t, the report said.

The Army and Capita have introduced some “significan­t

changes” in the last year, but none have resulted in enough soldiers being recruited, according to the NAO.

The report found that it took up to 321 days for new recruits to go from starting an applicatio­n to beginning basic training, and that many drop out of the process while waiting.

Figures relate to half of regular soldier applicants in the first six months of 2018-19.

A total of 47 per cent of applicants dropped out of the process voluntaril­y in 2017-18, and both the Army and Capita believe the length of the process is a significan­t factor in this, the report said.

People trying to join the Army experience­d technical problems with the online recruitmen­t system after its launch.

The Army estimates there were 13,000 fewer applicatio­ns between November 2017 and March 2018 than in the same period the previous year. This could lead to up to 1,300 fewer enlistment­s.

The NAO found that neither the Army nor Capita tested changes to the recruitmen­t process before it was introduced and the number of local recruitmen­t centres was cut from 131 to 68 to save costs. It said the project will not achieve its planned savings of £267m for the Ministry of Defence. Capita’s 10-year contract will end in 2022.

Both the Army and Capita “believe that recent changes will improve the recruitmen­t of regulars and officers”, the report said.

 ?? PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN ??
PICTURE: JOHN DEVLIN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom