Tag: 1998

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Swiss Exchange gets recognition [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Swiss Exchange gets recognition [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 17 December 1998.

    The Swiss Exchange will be able to provide direct access to UK firms to its screen-based trading system following its recognition as an Overseas Investment Exchange by the Treasury, the Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt announced today.

    The Exchange has satisfied the conditions under Sections 37 and 40 of the Financial Services Act 1986 to be recognised as an Overseas Investment Exchange. UK firms, through remote membership, will be able to access the exchange directly through the use of terminals here in London.

    Announcing the decision Ms Hewitt said:

    “Dealing in Swiss securities will become more convenient, and more business should be routed through London. UK investors should benefit from greater choice and lower transactions costs, while both the markets and investors will benefit from increased competition through improved efficiency and innovation, and a strengthening of the UK’s financial services industry. Greater liquidity and depth will also reinforce London’s position as one of the world’s top international financial centres.

    “More overseas exchanges do business in the UK than in any other country. London offers a wide range of choice for internationally mobile financial services firms, making it extremely attractive for them to base their operations here.”

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Patricia Hewitt backs scheme to assist pensions review [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Patricia Hewitt backs scheme to assist pensions review [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 16 December 1998.

    The Association of British Insurers’ PASS initiative is a welcome development, which will be of considerable benefit to the review of personal pension mis-selling, the Economic Secretary Patricia Hewitt said today.

    The Pension Advisers Support Scheme (PASS) offers small firms assistance with actuarial facilities and financing for the review. Ms Hewitt said:

    “I congratulate the ABI on this welcome initiative and note that all of the 30 major providers have joined PASS. The scheme has aroused considerable interest among IFAs and I am confident that it will give a significant boost to the pensions review.”

    Of the 21 firms whose results are published today:

    • all but two have resolved over 75 per cent of their cases. fourteen firms have now resolved over 90 per cent of their cases.

    Ms Hewitt stressed that firms must maintain their progress and ensure that all priority cases are completed by 31 December. She said:

    “I am pleased that most of the industry has recognised that it is in everyone’s interest for the pensions review to be completed on time. The regulators will not tolerate further delays, and I fully support their efforts to see phase 1 completed.”

    The Minister hoped that, as 1999 approaches, all firms would be making New Year’s resolutions to put their customers first in phase 2 of the review. She said:

    “I hope firms have learned lessons from phase 1, and that we will not see delaying tactics used against the review again. Firms must put their customers first, and adhere to the regulators timetable, so that we can put this whole sorry scandal behind us.”

  • Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Kennedy School, Harvard University

    Gordon Brown – 1998 Speech at the Kennedy School, Harvard University

    The speech made by Gordon Brown, the then Chancellor of the Exchequer, at Harvard University, the United States, on 15 December 1998.

    Introduction

    There can be no more appropriate country to discuss the challenges facing the new global economy than the United States of America: the pre-eminent architect of the post-war global system.

    There can be no forum more appropriate than the Kennedy School, named after the President, who on July 4th more than a third of a century ago, matched the Declaration of Independence of 1776 with a new declaration of economic interdependence for our time.

    And there can be no more appropriate institution than Harvard where 50 years ago, the Marshall plan, the most ambitious multi-national effort for economic reconstruction the world has seen, was first launched.

    More than half a century ago, leaders who were still engaged in war took the time to prepare for peace. In a breathtaking leap into a new era, the world created not just new international institutions – the IMF, the World Bank, the GATT as well as the UN- and a whole set of new rules for a new international economy, but gave expression to a new public purpose based on high ideals.

    A generation of leaders who had known the greatest of depressions and the greatest of wars knew also that just as peace could not be preserved in isolation, prosperity could not be maximized in isolation.

    What they did for their day and generation was so dramatic that Dean Acheson spoke of that period as akin to being present at the creation.

    One of the signal events was the Bretton Woods conference – and I ask myself why it was held not in Washington, or New York, or Boston, but in the white mountains of New Hampshire. In fact the location was the price the Roosevelt administration had to pay to persuade a New Hampshire senator to abandon isolationism. As Tip O’neill used to say, “all politics is local” … Even global politics. If Massachusetts and not New Hampshire had threatened to be isolationist we might be talking today of the Cambridge Agreement. Nothing could more vividly show the practical nature of the visionaries who created the new world than their choice of Bretton Woods.

    But as practical as it was, Bretton Woods also defined a new public purpose characterised by high ideals. The conference was about more than exchange rates, the mechanics of financial arrangements or even new institutions. As the American secretary of the treasury said at the very start of the opening session:

    “prosperity has no fixed limits it is not a finite substance to be diminished by division. On the contrary the more of it that other nations enjoy the more each nation will have for itself.

    “prosperity like peace is indivisible. We cannot afford to have it scattered here or there amongst the fortunate or enjoy it at the expense of others…..”

    in short, prosperity to be sustained had to be shared. Practicality and morality went hand in hand.

    George Marshall reaffirmed this in his own historic speech here at Harvard. We must fight against “hunger, poverty, desperation and chaos”, he insisted, to secure “the revival of a working economy in the world [that would] permit the emergence of political and social conditions in which free institutions can exist”.

    So the post-war arrangements were founded on the belief that public action on a new and wider stage could advance a new and worldwide public purpose of high ideals rooted in social justice:

    • to achieve prosperity for all by each co-operating with every other:
    • new international rules of the game that involved a commitment to high levels of growth and employment.

    In short, the job of every economy was to create jobs for all.

    The founders of Bretton Woods resolved that the failed policies of laissez-faire which resulted in vast inequities and recurring depression from the 1870s to the 1930s would not be repeated. Untrammelled, unregulated market forces had brought great instability and even greater injustice. In the post-war era governments had to work collectively if they were to achieve either justice or stability.

    The initiatives and institutions of that era were shaped to the conditions of the time – a world economy of protected national markets, limited capital flows, and fixed exchange rates. And for nearly thirty years the system worked, for hundreds of millions who enjoyed unparalleled prosperity Bretton Woods took us a long way. Yet even in the 70s with hundreds of millions still in poverty we had still a long way to go.

    In the first historic phase of international economic management, nation states spoke unto nation states, with an unprecedented degree of co-operation between separated and still largely insulated economies. The international rules of the game then largely consisted of open current accounts, fixed exchange rates and closed capital accounts and of collective support when countries ran into balance of payments problems.

    But over the next generation, that new world, too, became old, as the existing order of nation states and collective international action was increasingly bypassed by the growth and eventually the sheer force of international financial flows, successively ending dollar convertibility into gold, the fixed exchange rate system, and post-war keynesian certainties, bringing in its wake an outbreak of inflation and then stagflation that spread across the western world.

    The 1980s saw a new consensus emerge, essentially an attempt to return to laissez-faire. It focussed not on what governments should do, but on what governments should not do, emphasising private pursuits almost to the exclusion of public purpose. Enlightened self-interest gave way to sheer self-interest. Instead of rising to the challenge of applying the high ideals of the post war world to a new world, instead of aiming for high levels of employment and prosperity for all, sights were lowered, the vision was narrowed. The new right consensus focussed almost entirely on inflation and minimal government.

    Of course it was and is right to say that inflation is costly, and once out of control, it is even more costly to reverse. Macroeconomic stability, based on low inflation and sound public finances, is an absolute precondition of economic success. Indeed there is a new premium on economic stability in the global economy. A nation state relying on investment flows from round the world – and also vulnerable to them – now knows that retribution for getting things wrong is swift and terrible.

    The 1980s consensus did understand the importance of liberalizing economies from excessive regulation and bad government. But they confused means with ends and said in effect that inflation alone, not jobs and growth also, were exclusive concerns. And they said that all government was bad: that government can’t make a difference, at least a positive one, in jobs and growth, and that global markets have to be left entirely to market dogmas, which have no place for the public pursuit of high ideals. But this 1980s consensus failed even in its own stated purpose – bringing the largest fiscal deficit in American history and reducing britain to inflationary boom-and-bust.

    And by 1997, an increasingly turbulent and inadequately supervised international financial system threatened to create boom and bust on a global scale. Now both of the Bretton Woods objectives – not only prosperity for all but stability for all – were at risk. The post-war hope for an indivisible prosperity was replaced by the sudden fear of indivisible instability. The 1980s consensus could not endure.

    As the downturn in Asia reverberated around the globe, President Clinton said that ‘the world faces perhaps its most serious crisis in half a century’.

    In recent months as interest rates have come down, and the G7 group of leading industrialised nations have set a timetable for reform, financial markets have become less unstable.

    But this is no time for complacency. We must recognise how far we have come – in purpose as well as time – from 1945 and how, without public purpose in this new global economy, one set of events in one continent could inflict so much damage on so many people.

    This year we have experienced events that were unthinkable just two or three years ago:

    • free enterprise Hong Kong taking publicly owned stakes in all its private companies;
    • japan nationalising its banks;
    • russia going into default;
    • in America the mounting of one of the biggest ever emergency refinancings not for a bank, but for a hedge fund;
    • most damaging of all, the biggest growth economies of the last decade in east asia suffering larger contractions in output even than experienced in the great depression of the 1930s.

    The political dimension as George Marshall foresaw, is equally far-reaching: in only one year, revolution in Indonesia; civil strife in Malaysia; the loss of authority in Russia; and as unemployment rises, unrest in South America, typified by the outcome of last week’s Venezuelan election. It is a sign of the times that only one of the Asian finance ministers I met with in Bangkok last September is still in office today.

    The ultimate price of all this is profound human suffering. In Korea unemployment has trebled in one year. In Indonesia ten years of growth have been wiped out; and in the Asian crisis countries as a whole the number of people in poverty is set to double by 2000. We can’t simply declare whenever the stock market bounces back that the crisis is over and we can return to the status quo. We must act – both because it is in our self-interest – to safeguard our own prospects and prosperity – and because it is right.

    So now the responsibility falls on this generation to be present at a new creation – of new rules that break with the past and both effectively and fairly meet the demands of the new global economy. We must reject the false choice between clinging to laissez faire and retreating to 1930s protectionism or the tightly-controlled, restricted capital markets of the 1940s. We must meet the new challenge but we must remember that while times and circumstances change, ideals endure.

    Our aim must be an international financial system for the twenty first century that recognises the new realities – open not sheltered economies, international not national capital markets, global not local competition. It must be one that captures the full benefits of global markets and capital flows, minimises the risk of disruption, maximises opportunity for all and lifts up the most vulnerable, in short, the restoration in the international economy of public purpose and high ideals.

    Our predecessors did this for the post-war world of distinct national economies drawing closer together. Now we must do it for the post-national economy – where economically no nation is an island.

    The consensus of the 1980s with its narrow focus on inflation, privatisation and deregulation must evolve into a new 1990s consensus with a new and broader emphasis on competition, supervision and the right conditions for growth and employment.

    Before I describe the specific reforms we need, let me be clear that this new public purpose will require public endeavour.

    In the international economy the era of absentee government is over.

    We need that middle way between government doing everything and government doing nothing.

    It was here in your country that Franklin Roosevelt in the 30s found a third way for a national economy – securing the benefits of the market while taming its excesses.

    And I believe that the third way initiated and developed by Tony Blair has profound relevance for the challenge we now confront on the global stage. The issue is not one of either markets or government, but how markets and government can best work together. And the way forward for the new global economy is not to retreat from globalisation – into either protectionism or old national controls – or to retreat into a failed laissez faire. It is to ensure global markets can work in the public interest. And transparency in policy-making is one way to develop the informed and educated markets we need.

    In a world where the new frontier is no frontiers, we must rediscover the public purpose and high ideals of 1945 with four major reforms that add up to a transformation of the international financial system – a new economic constitution for the new global economy.

    New rules of the game for the global economy

    First, internationally agreed codes of conduct for transparency and proper procedures that ensure educated markets. These would cover monetary, financial and fiscal policy and corporate governance and would be applied by all countries, rich and poor, as a condition for participation in the international financial system.

    Recall that the first constitutional settlement of the world economy in 1945 was not simply about institutions but about rules of the game. And we must now return the international financial system to this idea of rules of the game. While the founders of Bretton Woods devised rules for a world of limited capital flows, we must devise new rules for a world of global capital flows. But our guiding principle remains the same – the promotion of global economic stability and international cooperation to promote growth and employment.

    The codes will require accurate reporting to the international community, by each national economy, of all relevant information – for example the size of a budget deficit, the state of bank reserves and the level of currency liabilities.

    And the codes will require not only this flow of information but the adherence to specific timetables and proper standards for transparency and disclosure.

    The new disciplines involve both the private and the public sector. We need new standards of corporate governance – including an international standard of best practice for financial institutions and their regulators.

    We used to think that all that industrialising countries required was raw materials, good communications, a supply of labour and the funds and ability to tap commercial inventions. But we now know that all nations also require a sound robust financial system: no nation can afford – and the international community cannot condone – national financial systems that are reckless, disordered and dishonest. Lack of transparency anywhere can create lack of credibility everywhere.

    By requiring exposure of deteriorating conditions, the codes would prevent the temptation for countries to deliberately mask problems, which is what happened in Thailand and Korea with consequences felt across Asia and then the world.

    And we should not be so complacent as to assume that codes of conduct are needed only in other countries and not our own. Given that the most recent threat to global stability came from lack of transparency in hedge funds in both the United States and Britain, we need tougher standards and requirements for disclosure all round.

    The codes I propose will mean radical changes in the way governments and financial markets operate.

    These new rules of the game are not incidental to the financial architecture for the new global economy: they are the financial architecture for the new global economy. They require countries to pursue self discipline with the prospect, if they do not, of imposed discipline. So the right to participate fully in the system should thus be conditional on meeting explicit responsibilities. In this way the codes will reduce the risk of future failures. And if failures do occur, a stronger financial system will be better able to deal with them.

    The codes are as relevant for underdeveloped Africa as they are for industrialising Asia and Latin America and industrialised America and Europe. They help us to lay down a route map for sequencing capital account liberalisation. By making sure that economic facts can’t be manipulated and underlying problems can’t be hidden, citizens will know their country’s real problems and prospects, the codes will deter corruption, restore public confidence and build public support for the sometimes painful reforms that are essential to long-term economic growth and prosperity. And this is critical for investor confidence in the wake of the Asian crisis. Without transparency and the proper procedures that the codes of conduct will require, investors may not reinvest on the long term scale that is necessary for jobs, growth and social progress.

    National governments should not pick and mix which standards they choose to meet and which standards they choose to ignore. So proper implementation of the codes should be a condition of any IMF and World Bank support. In the global economy national governments have rights but they also have responsibilities they must meet.

    Global financial regulation

    And because today’s financial markets are global, we need not only proper national supervision but also a second fundamental reform – global financial regulation. That is why Britain has proposed bringing together the IMF, the World Bank and key regulatory authorities: a new permanent standing committee for global financial regulation charged with delivering the global objective of a stable financial system.

    The G7 have now agreed on the urgent need for this kind of coordination, and we are grateful to the president of the Bundesbank, Hans Tietmeyer, who has undertaken the critical task of preparing detailed recommendations.

    I see the standing committee not as an additional institution but as process of monitoring developments in global finance, ensuring that necessary worldwide standards are put in place, and providing timely surveillance of financial conditions and international capital flows.

    The standing committee’s work would make co-operation between international institutions and national regulators a fact of international economic life. In short, the standing committee would be the world’s early warning system for regional and global economic risk.

    Global crisis prevention and resolution

    Our aim must be crisis prevention where possible crisis resolution where necessary.

    So in place of the old approach whereby crisis-triggered intervention, we need, thirdly, a modern mechanism, rooted in transparency and reliable surveillance, and built on public and private sectors both accepting their responsibilities, which can identify potential problems at a stage where preventative action can be effective.

    The mechanism they agreed in 1945 for crisis prevention dealt with imbalances in current account flows in a world of restricted capital flows and fixed exchange rates: to tackle public sector deficits and balance of payments crises, it offered temporary financial support or permanent exchange rate adjustment.

    The new mechanism for crisis prevention must deal with imbalances as a result of global capital flows.

    We need a process of active and transparent surveillance that is a matter of course for all countries, operating in normal times, all the time: not one triggered only by the warning signs or onset of crisis in a particular region or country.

    And all main participants, public and private, must accept their responsibilities.

    So emerging market economies in particular must not only be transparent in their activities: they must now also forge regular contacts and lasting relationships with their private investors. An open and honest dialogue, in which investors can ask hard questions and then advise, will make it more difficult to cover up bad news, and make it easier to assess what policies will increase or reduce market confidence, thus making it more likely that we can prevent today’s problems from deepening into tomorrow’s crisis.

    The short-hand phrase for these creditor-to-country arrangements is country clubs, but these are not exclusive clubs, old boy networks, an informal means of defending privilege. These are modern investor networks that can bring real benefits in return for real responsibilities: networks that every country should form and every creditor should join.

    To make these work there should, be a new presumption across the board, in favour of the release of information wherever possible.

    The G7 have proposed greater openness from the World Bank, the IMF and other international financial institutions. Their monitoring tells them much of what is happening in every national economy. Clearly in exceptional cases some policy discussions will have to be kept confidential but I strongly support the publication of the IMF’s country surveillance reports under Article IV. The case for an exception must be made and justified, while openness should be the norm.

    Put simply we should establish an international right to know that is not occasional or voluntary but ongoing and mandatory.

    This will work best if the IMFand other international institutions are more open about themselves. They should do more to explain their practices and procedures to the public. And they too should join in a new partnership with the private sector – ongoing discussions about broader and more systemic issues facing the world economy.

    With a right to a greater flow of information comes greater private sector responsibility. We need a system of debtor-creditor agreements – crisis resolution procedures signed up to in normal times with private sector responsibility clauses, such as agreement on collective representation and majority voting when creditor decisions are being made. When trouble hits an economy, the private sector must be prepared to do more than simply pull money out and accelerate the panic. On an ad-hoc basis investors did the opposite in Korea and Brazil and their decisions were essential in halting the flight of capital.

    With these three changes – transparency, enhanced surveillance and investor networks we can establish a markedly lower threshold for effective response than the old ad-hoc crisis-triggered system.

    Detailed discussion should now take place on the right mechanisms for private sector involvement in crisis resolution. Of course more information and more participation must not become a licence for reckless investment or insider dealing instead, by universalising reliable information and creating orderly consultation procedures open to all, we can minimise the risks arising from insider information on the one hand and moral hazard on the other.

    In the new framework it should be the duty of the public sector to inform, the duty of the international financial institutions to monitor and the duty of the private sector to engage.

    And because of the new disciplines we propose the public sector can now justify a system of mutual financial support, assistance to countries pursuing sound policies and to contain the spread of financial contagion.

    In the last few weeks the international community has proposed a temporary preventative facility, with short-term lines of credit for sound economies that are the victims of contagion. Once transparency, surveillance and agreed private sector responsibility clauses are embedded in the new system of crisis prevention, this facility should be made permanent, and be properly funded.

    Of course countries that do not follow these procedures or act on advice cannot expect that they and their private sectors will secure crisis support, the moral hazard would be to guarantee such support independent of whether they do the right things.

    With the reforms we propose, we have a real opportunity to move the emphasis of international financial governance from one of crisis resolution to one of crisis prevention and crisis containment.

    A global social code

    There is a fourth reform: we propose a code of global best practice in social policy which will apply for every country, will set minimum standards and will ensure that when the IMF and World Bank help a country in trouble the agreed programme of reform will preserve investment in the social, education and employment programmes which are essential for growth. This should be an indispensable goal for government in the new global economy: not guaranteeing that nothing will change, but equipping people to turn change into new opportunity.

    International economics is not just about numbers in a ledger, but about the lives of people. For too long it has been assumed that the cost of crises will inevitably be paid by putting more burdens on the poor – by cutting health, education and basic social services.

    This is wrong in the short term and it will not work in the long term because it erodes both the economic and the political foundations of a society. For reasons of self-interest as well as conscience, we cannot accept a worldwide regime of the well-off in the castle, and the vast majority at the gate. Creating national support for needed reform depends on sharing gains, and helping those who are hurt by economic crises. As Jim Wolfensohn, President of the World Bank, has so vividly put it “social and economic issues are inseparable, they are like breathing in and out”.

    In their October statement the G7 recognised the urgent need for a code for good social practice and asked the World Bank to work countries and with the United Nations and others to develop the principles and provisions of such a code.

    This is an historic opportunity to realise the enduring public purpose, the high ideals of 1945. And we should not see this code in narrow terms as merely creating social safety nets. We should see it as creating opportunities for all by investing more not less in education, employment and vital public services.

    The way forward is not leaving people defenceless – and tolerating a culture of poverty; not repeating past mistakes which have created a culture of dependency; it is equipping people to cope with change, through a new culture of opportunity.

    The first building block is, of course, minimum social provision such as safe water supplies; universally available vaccinations and basic health care; and in every society- universal access to schooling for girls as well as boys.

    The second building block is the chance to work and the assurance that work will pay, a commitment that we must, stage by stage, year by year, fulfill in developing countries as well as developed ones. The code would set out best practice that can help people find and remain in paid employment: programmes to move them from poverty or welfare to work; life-time learning so that people can move themselves up a ladder of opportunity; and pension systems that mean a lifetime of work will be followed by a decent retirement.

    We should forge new partnerships between the public and private sectors – and the ngos. But of course the existence of a programme today should never be the excuse for its perpetuation tomorrow. And the reforms the IMFand other international authorities require must be consistent with the social principles and make a virtue of preserving necessary social investment.

    For the poorest highly indebted countries of the world we must create a virtuous circle of debt relief, poverty reduction and economic development. We should never leave countries with an impossible choice between paying or defaulting on unsustainable levels of debt. Immovable mountains of debt run up in the 1980s have become impassable barriers to progress for poor countries in the 1990s. It should now be our ambition that every highly indebted poor country will be in the process of debt relief by the millennium.

    And for countries like hurricane-hit Nicaragua and Honduras, weighed down by the burden of debt and devastation, it is right to create a new World Bank trust fund – now with over 130 million dollars pledged – to alleviate their debt payments. It is also right to devise the new post-disaster facility that will give faster relief from debt, to all countries in this position. I believe 1999 must bring a new urgency to relieving third world debt.

    Conclusion

    So what we must together create is a new economic constitution for a global economy, born out of new realities, grounded in new rights and responsibilities, enshrined in codes of conduct that are agreed nationally and applied internationally, rediscovering public purpose in the international economy and bringing to life again the high ideals of 1945.

    We need to build quickly, not debate indefinitely.

    Agreement on the codes of conduct should be reached at the IMF meetings in April.

    A new system of global financial regulation should be in place by the summer.

    The new mechanism for crisis prevention and crisis resolution should be agreed in principle this summer and the detail should be the subject of intensive discussions between the private sector and national and international institutions to reach agreement by the end of 1999.

    • and the code for best practice in social policy social code should be agreed at the next world bank meetings in the spring.

    This is a programme of reform for our generation. It is more than simply a collection of proposals. It rests on a modern vision of government, doing the right thing, but not everything; of markets working, but not always perfectly; of principles of economic and social justice that reflect our best values and ultimately determine world stability and growth.

    This project is indivisible; each element is essential to the success of the whole. And all of it is built on the understanding that increasingly we are part of both one global economy and one moral universe. Now more than ever, in the phrase of the Scottish author, William Mcilvanney, we must understand that ”the economy should be there to serve the people, not the people to serve the economy.”

    Ours is an age of great challenges but also great possibilities. What Franklin Roosevelt said to the citizens of his nation in 1933 is now powerfully relevant to the citizens and governments of all nations.

    If I read the temper of our people correctly we now realise – as we have never realised before – our interdependence on each other, that we must be willing to sacrifice for the good of a common discipline – because without such discipline no progress is made.

    Today I believe that we in our generation have the vision, the values and the will – as the generation which preceded us – to make the world economy anew; the public purpose and high ideals to make a better world economy in every sense of that word.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Tackling the improvement of Public Sector Procurement [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Tackling the improvement of Public Sector Procurement [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 15 December 1998.

    Top civil servants and senior business leaders will be questioned as part of a fundamental review covering all aspects of how central government departments spend 12 billion Pounds a year on goods and services, Peter Gershon, the head of the review, announced today.

    Mr Gershon, managing director of Marconi Electronic Systems, was commissioned last month to bring his experience in major private sector companies together with senior civil service management to identify efficiency, modernisation and competitiveness gains in central government procurement. The review complements the Government’s comprehensive spending review and will help Departments identify and deliver savings and quality gains to meet their Public Service Agreements, which will be launched later this week.

    Setting out how he intends to tackle this important task, Mr Gershon said:

    “I have been asked to report my initial findings to the Prime Minister early next year, with a final report during March. This is a tight schedule, but I am determined to press ahead to make sure that Government Departments are able to start taking the undoubted savings and quality improvements which can be found as early as possible.

    “My report will contain recommendations for the future roles and relationships within central government procurement functions. The review will be conducted in two phases, gathering information from public and private sector organisations with ideas and expertise to contribute, followed by analysis of these views and the underpinning information, and then produce recommendations.

    “In many areas of commerce the Government is the biggest customer in the UK. I intend to address ways in which it can secure best value for public money as the private sector does. This will involve making use of the most efficient models in the UK and abroad and the latest technology, including electronic commerce. I shall look at ways in which government departments collectively can deal with suppliers to get the best possible deal for the tax payer from this large amount of public money.

    “I shall visit a number of Departments and key supply side executives in the search to win this valuable prize. Given the 12 billion Pounds spending by civil central Government Departments, efficiency gains of only 5% would release 600 million Pounds every year. This is a prize which must be grasped if the comprehensive spending review is to produce in full the benefits which modern management approaches offer.

    “I urge any organisation that is a supplier to the civil departments of central government to provide me with a one or two page submission setting out views on how better value for money and efficiency gains can be obtained through changes to current departmental approaches to procurement.”

    NOTES FOR EDITORS

    1. The appointment of Peter Gershon to head the current review was announced by the Paymaster General, Geoffrey Robinson, and Cabinet Office Parliamentary Secretary Peter Kilfoyle on 17 November (HM Treasury press release 193/98).

    2. The earlier comprehensive spending review paper “Efficiency in Civil Government Procurement”, published in July 1998, identified the need to take advantage of electronic trading, collaboration between departments and coordination of supplier relations. The Gershon Review will examine whether the current organisation of procurement practice supports this and what improvements can be made to deliver these objectives.

    3. The Gershon Review covers central civil procurement only. Its terms of reference are:

    “To review civil procurement in Government in the light of the Government’s objectives on efficiency, modernisation and competitiveness in the short and medium term and to report within three months”.

    4. Peter Gershon, currently MD Marconi Electronic Systems, was formerly MD GPT and before that, MD STC Telecom and has held senior positions in the computing industry.

    Submissions to Mr Gershon should be sent to him at

    c/o HM Treasury

    Room 202/203

    Allington Towers

    19 Allington Street

    London

    SW1E 5EB

    5. The Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Stephen Byers, will make a statement and publish a White Paper on Public Service Agreements later this week.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Treasury agrees to allow fines, levies and fees to be used to finance specific projects [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Treasury agrees to allow fines, levies and fees to be used to finance specific projects [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 9 December 1998.

    The first schemes in which receipts from fines, levies and fees can be used to fund specific projects were announced today by Chief Secretary, Stephen Byers. The detailed criteria against which applications to retain receipts from specific activities will be assessed were also set out. This new flexibility will allow government departments and agencies to retain money raised from fines and levies in cases where this would encourage the development of new initiatives, more efficient use of public money and better services.

    Explaining this new policy Mr Byers,said:

    “The Treasury is determined to provide a flexible and effective framework within which controls on public money will work. Where appropriate, and providing they meet strict criteria, I believe it is now right to consider how bodies can in future meet the costs of their activities from the money they raise from fines, levies and fees.

    “The criteria will ensure that the money raised is in each case appropriate for such treatment, in particular, that the money is spent where it is most needed and will not distort the operational priorities of the organisations concerned.”

    Separate criteria are applied to fines/penalties and licences/levies, reflecting the different considerations that apply. For example, money raised from fines and penalties will only be allowed to meet costs where: this is likely to improve performance against policy objectives; enforcement costs can be readily identified and apportioned; and where arrangements are in place to prevent any possible abuse of the system through the use of fine and penalty collection as a method of revenue raising.

    The criteria applying to licences and levies require, for example: that the service provided is closely linked to the payer of the fee; that the activity must further the government’s economic goals; and that efficiency regimes are in place to keep costs down.

    A full list of the criteria used is set out below.

    Activities where using receipts to meet costs has been approved include:

    DVLA receipts from wheel clamping activities; fees charged for removing wheel clamps from illegally parked cars and proceeds from the sale of unclaimed cars removed from the roadside will meet the costs of wheel clamping teams and the pounds where cars are held.

    Office of Rail Regulation licence fees; the costs of the rail regulator will be met from licence fees charged to rail operators.

    Environment Agency charges on waste packaging producers; waste packaging producers must register with the Environment Agency, which then monitors their activities. The costs to the Environment Agency can be met through registration fees.

    For the remaining applications, discussions are continuing with departments on whether and how each case could meet the criteria. These include:

    a request that the agencies involved should be allowed to retain the money raised from speed camera fines to meet the associated costs;

    Environment Agency fines for breaches of environmental regulations.

    The Treasury would be happy to consider further detailed proposals from departments, set against the criteria, to use receipts to meet costs.

    NOTES TO EDITORS

    1.  The Economic and Fiscal Strategy Report 1998 (June 1998, CM 3978) announced that departments were to be able to keep more of their receipts in order to improve efficiency and effectiveness.

    2.  Any questions relating to the specific activities for which receipts might offset costs should be addressed to the departments concerned.

    3.  The full list of criteria used for assessing proposals by departments to allow netting off of receipts from costs, within Departmental Expenditure Limits, is:

    (I) CRITERIA TO BE APPLIED TO FINES AND PENALTIES

    Will performance against policy objectives, e.g. crime fighting and prevention, be likely to be improved?

    Are arrangements in place which will ensure that the activity will not lead to the abuse of fine and penalty collection as a method of revenue raising, and that operational priorities will remain undistorted?

    Will revenues always be sufficient to meet future costs, with any excess revenues over costs being surrendered?

    Can costs of enforcement be readily identified and apportioned without undue bureaucracy, and with interdepartmental and inter-agency agreement, where necessary?

    Can savings be achieved through the change and are adequate efficiency regimes in place to control costs, including regular efficiency reviews?

    (II) CRITERIA TO BE APPLIED TO LICENCES AND LEVIES

    The service delivered should be closely linked to the payer of the licence or levy, either because they are the beneficiaries of the service, or because they are the cause of the expenditure being incurred;

    The licence or levy is appropriate, i.e. applied in the economically most advantageous way in the circumstances;

    Introducing the levy or licence should not materially restrict the Government’s fiscal policy;

    The activity financed by the levy or licence must further our economic goals;

    Netting off receipts would improve the efficiency with which resources are allocated eg because of a difficulty in otherwise matching resources to unpredictable changes in externally driven demand;

    Where appropriate, charges should be set using the principles of the Fees and Charges Guide, and surpluses would have to be surrendered;

    There should be adequate efficiency regimes in place to keep costs down, including stretching targets and regular efficiency reviews;

    Day-to-day decisions on the level of charges and an efficient level of costs should be taken separately from the body raising the levy, to prevent abuse of its monopoly power. Normally this would be by the departmental minister. There will be periodic reviews, involving the Treasury, of the operation of the licences and levies, including whether they should exist at all, what scale of activity is appropriate, and the level of charges set.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Ministers to network on social exclusion [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Ministers to network on social exclusion [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 7 December 1998.

    An expanded Network of Ministers to tackle social exclusion was welcomed today by the newly appointed Chair, the Chief Secretary to the Treasury, Stephen Byers on the first anniversary of the establishment of the Social Exclusion Unit (SEU).

    The Network will be made up of Ministers who work closely with SEU and they will act as champions to help guide and present its work. It will now include Ministers from Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Mr Byers said:

    “If we are to achieve our aim of creating a modern Britain and a decent society there must be no forgotten people. That is why tackling social exclusion is a priority for the government.

    “In it’s first year the Social Exclusion Unit has made good progress and action is now being taken to cut school exclusions and truancy; reduce rough sleeping and tackle the problems faced by poor neighbourhoods.

    “We have established a new way of working across Whitehall. By breaking down the traditional departmental barriers we have been able to respond in a more positive and practical way to the needs of individuals and communities.

    “The Unit is a vital part of our programme to modernise government. Providing joined up solutions to deep seated problems is a key aspect of democratic renewal”.

    NOTES TO EDITORS

    1. The membership of the Ministerial Network on Social Exclusion was announced today in a written answer from the Prime Minister to Robin Corbett MP. It is:

    Stephen Byers HM Treasury (Chair)

    Hilary Armstrong Department of Environment, Transport and the Regions

    Paul Boateng Home Office

    John Denham Department of Social Security

    Lord Falconer Cabinet Office

    Peter Hain Welsh Office

    Tessa Jowell Department of Health

    Geoffrey Robinson HM Treasury

    Barbara Roche Department of Trade and Industry

    Lord Sewel of Gilcomstoun Scottish Office

    John McFall Northern Ireland Office

    Andrew Smith Department for Education and Employment

    2. The Social Exclusion Unit was set up by the Prime Minister in December 1997, and is staffed by a mixture of outside experts and civil servants. They come from a number of Government departments and from organisations with experience of tackling social exclusion – the probation service, housing, police, local authorities, the voluntary sector and business. The Unit has a remit to produce ‘joined up solutions to joined up problems’. It is tasked with analysing the web of problems that make up social exclusion, and then improving the mechanisms to prevent them happening.

    3. The Unit forms part of the Cabinet Office, and reports directly to the Prime Minister. It works closely with the No 10 Policy Unit and policy officials across Whitehall. It does not cover issues which are dealt with by one Government department, or duplicate work being done elsewhere.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Paymaster General announces new panel to improve sector productivity [December 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : Paymaster General announces new panel to improve sector productivity [December 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 7 December 1998.

    The membership and direction of the new Public Services Productivity Panel was announced today by Paymaster General Geoffrey Robinson.

    Speaking at the second Productivity Roadshow in Cambridge, Mr Robinson said:

    “The productivity challenge must be met across all sectors of the economy – that includes the public sector. We want to improve the effectiveness and efficiency of public spending, and the quality of service it buys. We are determined that the extra 40 billion billion we are investing in health and education delivers real measurable improvements.

    “The new Public Services Productivity Panel will draw on private sector experience to look at ways of improving the productivity of Government departments and other public sector bodies.

    “It will examine the Public Service Agreements to determine what will be most critical to each department’s ability to deliver its targets. It will also offer specific recommendations on service delivery improvement.

    “I look forward to working with the Panel on how we can improve our productivity in Government.”

    The Panel will be chaired by the Paymaster General; and the Vice Chair will be Byron Grote, of BP-Amoco.

    Participating in the Cambridge event, Tottenham chief and entrepreneur Alan Sugar said:

    “The Productivity Panel is another excellent Government initiative, designed to stimulate innovation and enterprise and I welcome the opportunity to help whenever I can in this worthwhile programme.”

    Alan Sugar, a member of the Treasury’s team of business leaders, will tomorrow relaunch his nationwide Enterprise Tour of Schools, with the Chancellor and Paymaster General.

    NOTES FOR EDITORS

    1. The members of the Public Services Productivity Panel are:

    Geoffrey Robinson MP, Paymaster General (Chair)

    Byron Grote, Group Chief of Staff, BP (Vice Chair)

    Lord Simon, Department of Trade and Industry

    Lord Sainsbury, Department of Trade and Industry

    Dame Sheila Masters DBE, Partner KPMG

    Clare Spottiswoode, Senior Vice President, Regulatory Affairs, Azurix

    John Mayo, Finance Director, GEC plc

    John Makinson, Group Finance Director, Pearson plc

    Andrew Foster, Controller of Audit, The Audit Commission

    John Dowdy, McKinsey

    2. The Panel’s remit is to advise the Government on ways of improving the productivity and efficiency of government departments and other public sector agencies. It will report to the Cabinet Committee charged with overseeing departments’ progress against their new Public Service Agreements.

    3. The roadshow was held at TWI (The Welding Institute) at Abington, near Cambridge. There will be other similar regional events throughout the UK over the next few months, as part of the Government’s consultation on the Pre-Budget Report. Ministers from a number of Government Departments will be involved – they will want to discuss directly with local business people and others possible solutions for closing the productivity gap. The roadshow will end in Birmingham on 5 February.

    4. The Pre-Budget Report was published on 3 November. As well as setting out the steps needed to secure high and stable levels of employment, it forms the basis for a wide-ranging consultation on the steps that need to be taken to address the UK’s long-standing productivity gap.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : EMU business advisory group recommends preparations for single currency [January 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : EMU business advisory group recommends preparations for single currency [January 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 30 January 1998.

    UK firms should consider carefully how changes to the European business environment following the introduction of the single currency on 1 January 1999 will affect them before they address the practical implications, Chancellor Gordon Brown’s Business Advisory Group on EMU recommended in a report published today.

    Welcoming the report, Mr Brown said :

    “The report from the Business Advisory Group underlines the importance for all businesses of gearing up to meet the challenges which they must address before the single currency is introduced at the end of the year.  Introduction of the euro provides both opportunities and challenges which must be addressed effectively whether or not the UK joins the single currency.

    “A wide range of representatives from all sectors of commerce and industry contributed to the report. It comprises the practical views of those who will need to take the action about how they believe business will be affected and what must be done if business is to take maximum benefit from the changes ahead.

    “We shall take close account of their views in the coming months as we continue to work closely with British business to ensure that it can successfully anticipate and prepare for the changing economic environment within Europe.”

    The report is a summary of the findings of working parties to the Advisory Group. It is not a statement of the Government’s views, but represents the assessment of the Advisory Group, which includes the CBI, British Retail Consortium, British Chambers of Commerce, the Federation of Small Businesses, the Institute of Chartered Accountants and the TUC as well as other interested bodies such as the Consumers’ Association.

    The Advisory Group addressed issues such as information technology, legal and tax implications, accounting issues, an information campaign and arrangements required if the UK decides to join the single currency. Its recommendations cover issues such as: the provision of targeted information to business likely to use the euro; the practicalities of dealing with the euro for trading and retail purposes; and the strategic implications of the single currency.

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : “Pay awards have to be fair and affordable across the board if we are to achieve our long term project” says Alistair Darling [January 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : “Pay awards have to be fair and affordable across the board if we are to achieve our long term project” says Alistair Darling [January 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 28 January 1998.

    In a wide ranging speech to the Chartered Institute of Bankers in London tonight, Alistair Darling set out the Government’s achievements since it came into office.  He stressed that it was vital to ensure pay rises are fair and affordable if the country is to enjoy the fruits of long term prosperity.

    He said:

    “We have been in Government for eight months.  In that time we have put in place the building blocks which will see us through not just this Parliament, but beyond.  We said we would modernise Britain and we are doing that.

    We are building the foundations for the future.  Low inflation.  Stability.  Reforming the Welfare State.  We have started to rebuild the education and health services.  Building alliances in Europe where we can influence and shape our destination.  Building together long-term prosperity for this country.

    But if we are to succeed, we need to maintain the strict discipline necessary to put the public finances on a sound footing, and keep them there.  We are not going to repeat the mistakes of the past, when the signals were misread.

    We are therefore determined to ensure that pay rises are fair and affordable.  In the public and private sector.  It is in no one’s interest if today’s pay rise becomes tomorrow’s mortgage rise.  The worst form of short-termism would be to pay ourselves today at the cost of fewer jobs tomorrow and lower living standards in the future.

    The Government’s responsibilities are clear.  But the same responsibility lies fairly and squarely with boardrooms in the private sector.  Every single one of us has the same responsibility.  Pay awards have to be fair and affordable and must be seen to be so – right across the board.  Those in the boardroom must show the same responsibility as those on the shop floor.”

  • HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : EU and G7 meetings to discuss Asia [January 1998]

    HISTORIC PRESS RELEASE : EU and G7 meetings to discuss Asia [January 1998]

    The press release issued by HM Treasury on 23 January 1998.

    Financial developments in Asia will be discussed at forthcoming meetings of the EU and G7, to be chaired by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, it was confirmed today.

    In a letter to Michel Camdessus, Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund, sent following the first ECOFIN meeting of the UK Presidency of the EU, the Chancellor said:

    “European Union Finance Ministers discussed financial developments in Asia at ECOFIN today. As President of ECOFIN I would like to invite you to join us for a similar discussion at a future meeting – perhaps at the Informal ECOFIN on 20-21 March, when we will be joined also by EU Central Bank Governors. The subject will also be prominent on the agenda at the meeting of G7 Finance Ministers and Governors in London on 21 February, where I hope we might begin to draw some lessons for the future from what has happened.”

    The text of the letter to Michel Camdessus, which is attached, also puts forward a number of ideas for consideration:

    “to help prevent such crises recurring; and to reflect on whether we could improve our techniques for handling crises when they occur.”

    M Camdessus
    Managing Director
    International Monetary Fund
    700 19th Street N W
    Washington DC 20431
    WASHINGTON USA

    Dear Michel

    20 January

    1998 FINANCIAL DEVELOPMENTS IN ASIA

    European Union Finance Ministers discussed financial developments in Asia at ECOFIN today. As President of ECOFIN I would like to invite you to join us for a similar discussion at a future meeting – perhaps at the Informal ECOFIN on 20-21 March, when we will be joined also by EU Central Bank Governors.

    The subject will also be prominent on the agenda at the meeting of G7 Finance Ministers and Governors in London on 21 February, where I hope we might begin to draw some lessons for the future from what has happened.

    European countries have a very substantial interest in successful resolution of the current financial difficulties in Asia.   European economic interests in Asia, including British interests, are high. Exports from European Union countries to the region are greater than those from the US. The exposure of European banks is greater than the sum of United States and Japanese exposure.

    European countries have therefore: been giving full support to the IMF’s action in seeking to restore confidence in the region, including exceptionally large calls on IMF finance.

    As major shareholders, we are ultimately responsible for a significant proportion of the resources committed by the IMF and World Bank. played an active role in getting agreement to the new IMF Supplemental Reserve Facility; encouraged our commercial banks to play an important and positive role in the current global efforts to secure continued rollovers of Korean banking debts. provided 8 of the 13 bilateral contributions to Korea’s second line of defence.

    Above all, like my European partners, I believe it is essential to keep the IMF at the centre of the global response to what is a global problem.

    European Union countries fully support the action taken by the IMF so far in the region, and the strong programmes of macroeconomic and structural reform to which countries in the region, including Indonesia, Korea, the Philippines and Thailand, have committed themselves. Confidence will not be re-established overnight. But it will return in time, so long as these policies are implemented with wholehearted commitment and vigour.

    In time we will then see renewed healthy economic growth in the region.

    I can assure you that we will continue to give full and active support to the countries concerned as they tackle their difficulties, through the IMF and in other ways. I am also looking forward to a full exchange of views on developments in Asia at the meeting of G7 Finance Ministers and Governors in London on 21 February. Beyond that, it is already clear that the subject will be high on the agenda for the meeting of ASEM leaders in London in April, and for the G8 Summit in Birmingham in May.

    I also recognise the importance of finding a forum to discuss these issues with a wider group of emerging market economies.   In addition to continuing the close cooperation that we have had in the G7 and elsewhere in tackling the crisis as it has developed, we should begin to reflect on the lessons for the future.

    We need to consider whether there are further measures that could be taken to help prevent such crises recurring; and to reflect on whether we could improve our techniques for handling crises when they occur.

    Among the ideas I would like to see considered are the following:

    we should do more to promote transparency in all countries about the operation of economic policy, and economic developments, and the operations of financial institutions. The better the understanding that the market has, the less will be the risk of sudden market readjustments.

    I hope the IMF will quickly bring forward proposals for a code of conduct on transparency in fiscal policy, as we agreed in Hong Kong last year, and look for ways to broaden that into other areas.

    I hope the Fund will also pursue other ways of improving the quality and timeliness of economic data supplied to the market; the IMF itself should consider being more transparent, also.

    There is a balance to be struck here with maintaining the sometimes necessary confidentiality of the Fund’s policy dialogue with its members.

    But I believe there are ways in which the Fund could and should begin to make its concerns known in public, certainly when policy advice has been given over a period and not acted on.

    We may also need to consider whether there are other ways to encourage international banks and investors to make better use of the information and analysis that is available; the Fund should pay more attention in future, during its regular economic surveillance, to the vulnerability of domestic financial systems to potential shocks and reversals in capital flows.

    I believe this should go hand in hand with the desirable widening of the IMF’s Articles to cover capital account issues, on which we agreed in principle in Hong Kong. we need to reflect on different ways to ensure that when there is a crisis, international private sector investors continue to play a full part in its resolution.

    It will be important to ensure that private investors have a continuing, and if possible enhanced, incentive to make a full assessment of the risks before they invest in emerging market countries; it is absolutely right for the IMF to have focussed in recent Asian programmes on the need to reform and strengthen domestic financial systems.

    We should consider whether more can be done to enhance the quality of assistance we give to emerging market countries in this area, including through improved cooperation with financial regulators in developed countries, who I believe have an important contribution to make, and with the World Bank.

    I look forward to discussing these and other issues with you and colleagues over the weeks and months ahead.

    Yours sincerely

    GORDON BROWN