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Britain: Spending watchdog publishes damning report on PFI
school projects
By Neil Hodge
27 January 2003
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Schools commissioned under the governments Private Finance
Initiative (PFI) have not been built more quickly, cheaply or
better than those built under traditional procurement, the UKs
public sector spending watchdog the Audit Commission announced
January 15.
In its report, PFI in Schools, the commission said that
designs have not been any more innovative and, on average, buildings
were better when acquired with traditional funding. Across four
out of five measures of quality PFI schools were statistically
speaking, significantly worse than traditionally funded
schools, the commission reported.
There was little evidence to support governments claims
that PFI would lead to contractors investing more upfront to reduce
maintenance costs over the 25 to 30-year life of the contracts,
thus reducing the lifetime cost. Rather, according to work for
the commission by the Building Research Establishment, the
best examples of the type of innovation that can improve fitness
for purpose and minimise running costs over a schools lifetime
came in traditional schools within local education authorities
with a long-established track record of excellence in school design.
The commissions report does not debate the overall concept
of PFI, in which long-term building and maintenance work in the
public sector are opened up to tender from private contractors.
Its objective is to draw lessons from what has been delivered
to date so as to provide a baseline for measuring improvement.
Nonetheless, the report is a damning indictment of PFI, which
is effectively backdoor privatisation. The Blair government had
claimed PFI would provide better value for money, design innovation,
better risk management and the long-term commitment of funding
for maintenance. But what is clear from the early PFI schools
examined by the commission (those opened before September 2001)
is that not all these benefits are evident and some will not be
achieved without significant changes.
The Department for Education and Skills, which has traditionally
been an advocate of PFI, has attempted to dismiss the report as
old news. David Miliband, the schools minister, said:
The Audit Commissions report is based on very early
examples of PFI. We have studied these schemes ourselves and put
in place significant reforms for the procurement process to learn
their lessons. PFI purchasing was being continuously
refined and improved, he said.
But the commission warned that because PFI had increasingly
become the only game in town, i.e., the only source
of funding for local authorities to acquire new schools, it would
be harder to make comparisons in future between PFI and traditional
schools. One of the commissions recommendations is that
the government should consider allowing high-performing councils
to commission schools by means other than the PFI to provide
a wider test of value for money.
The commissions study compared 17 of the first 25 PFI
schools that were open by last spring with a dozen traditionally
built schools opened over the same period. Five hundred more PFI
schools are due to open by 2005-06 in a £2.4 billion schools
refurbishment programme.
The Blairite thinktank, the Institute of Public Policy Research
(IPPR) is also critical of the cited benefits of PFI funding for
public services. The PFI can offer potential benefits, but
in schools the evidence shows that the policy is clearly in some
difficulty. There should be an independent review of the PFI to
discover whether the PFI is working as expected across a range
of public services, said Paul Maltby, IPPRs public
private partnerships research fellow.
The Government needs to end its PFI-or-nothing
approach. It should pay serious attention to alternative forms
of Public Private Partnership and modern publicly-financed schemes,
he added.
According to recent published research by IPPR, only 6 percent
of PFI projects completed by central and local governments have
had any independent examination of value for money by official
audit bodies. Out of the 378 PFI projects completed by central
and local governments, just 23 have had any independent examination
of value for money by official audit bodies.
IPPR argues that the figures so far available demonstrate that
the expected benefits of the PFI are mixed. Prisons and road schemes
have tended to demonstrate value for money, but for schools and
hospitals the results are much less impressive, says the research
body.
The evidence looked at by IPPR assesses the expected value
for money of PFI schemes after the deals are signed, but before
the projects are up and running. There is currently no evidence,
it says, to suggest whether or not the PFI schemes deliver expected
benefits once they are underway.
In theory the PFI can deliver better quality services
at less cost to the taxpayer, but in sectors such as health and
education these expected benefits are in doubt. Also, there is
currently no evidence about whether the PFI delivers once schemes
are up and running, Maltby said.
Towards the end of last year Audit Scotland published a report
on the PFI in schools in Scotland. It highlighted narrow
expected value for money gains using the PFI. It also explained
the pressures on managers to ensure that the PFI comes out better
than traditionally financed alternatives when calculating value
for money.
See Also:
British Labours
modernisation programme: transferring public assets
to private capital
[20 July 1999]
Labours
backdoor privatisation of essential public services
[22 December 1998]
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