A MIOIR Case Study on Public Procurement and Innovation: DWP Work Programme Procurement - delivering...
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Transcript of A MIOIR Case Study on Public Procurement and Innovation: DWP Work Programme Procurement - delivering...
A MIOIR Case Study on Public Procurement and Innovation:
DWP Work Programme Procurement -
delivering innovation in efficiencies or personalised
services for claimants?
Dr Su Maddock
Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Presentation to CESI Conference
Birmingham July 10-11th 2012
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Introduction
The Work Programme procurement model was devised as a policy tool to reduce the number long term claimants, cut the costs welfare benefits and deliver personalised services for long-term claimants.
The Work Programme the largest service contract for personalised services- hence a flagship for the government, with a budget of £5 bill.
Viewed as innovative through a two-tier business model that rationalise government procurement and incentivise social outcomes through ’payment by results’.
Jeremy Heywood, the Cabinet Secretary said
If we could find a way of using the private sector to take more risk in the public sector for good social outcomes it would a great step forward, It is for those areas that require intense intervention. The Work Programme is the biggest by far.
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Policy Objectives
The Work Programme is underpinned
by various and conflicting policy objectives:-
Cost-savings and efficiencies Personal service Innovation Marketization (privatization) of service provision. Transferring financial risk from the tax-payer to contractors ‘payment-by-results’ system.
The Work Programme is complex and can be evaluated against different objectives
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Long term claimants
The DWP WP Model
CO Government policies – marketization, efficiencies & service innovation determine theDWP Commissioning Framework & Funding
Smallersuppliers
Contract with Sub-contractors
Deliver services to claimants
DWP Procurement team
Primes Primes Primes
specialistsuppliers
Contract with
Methodology
The study explored how far the two-tier business model and payment by results was influencing the capacity of contractors to deliver the social outcomes of personalised services?
The study was part of a larger study on public procurement by government to secure innovation.
The research is based on Qualitative research A multi-stakeholder approach Interviews with smaller and large contractors, DWP, Local government and
social enterprise networks and claimants
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Public service innovation learning
What we know about PSI
tendency in governments to imagine that ‘scaling-up’ can be managed through a linear pipe-line and procurement .
When, innovation flow is viral and moves between people not through highly functional systems.
service innovation flow which is dependent on receptive players gets blocked within established and institutional bodies (Kay/Maddock/NESTA/Mulgan)
Which is why PSI intermediaries recognize that champions, innovation capabilities and leadership shift in attitudes and relationships between citizens and staff. (WIH strategy)
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Public Service Innovation Drivers
Observations of successful innovations suggest that those driving PSI – working at the relationships
Focus on solutions by sharing problems
Focus on people
Work outside the mainstream to deliver holistic services
Free to work with other agencies and the labour market
Work in flatter, agencies driven by values- i.e SE which are capability rich – but cash poor
Locality or specialist connections significant
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Back to WP -How it works
The WP Business Model assumed that if
claimants move into work the government saves
money – originally DWP claimed WP would part-
fund the payments made to providers from
savings – savings they would claw back from the
Treasury
This has never happened before and the Treasury are nervous about
it (DWP procurement team lead).
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Numbers and Expectations
3-3.5m people make a claim for job seekers allowance (JSA) every
year; approximately - 10% of these are allocated to the Work
Programme: which is now mandatory for all adults.
DWP had originally estimated that the WP could return 40% of long-
term claimants back to work, however, in February 2012 the NAO
estimated that more likely the programme would support 25% of long-
term claimants back into work.
DWP expected a rise of 83% of claimants in 2012 and a further rise
of 71% in 2013, however, the increase in joblessness in 2011 put
pressure on the Work Programme and it became increasingly difficult
to predict claimant numbers with unemployment rising and job
vacancies contracting.
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Fees and Payments
WP contracts for seven years to develop the market and to ensure
personalised (innovative) services;
tapered payments on the basis of how long a claimant remained in
work.
DWP pays the prime contractors through a series of payments and a
pricing schedule that reflects the difficulty/ probability of helping long-
term claimants back into work.
Primes paid an attachment fee (£300-400 ) per person depending on
the claimant group. If that person finds a job between 3 weeks or 26
weeks, another payment is made of around £1200.
the claimant on IB and they remain in work for two years, then the
supplier could receive payment for up to 2 years, which gives a total
maximum payment for an ex-IB customer of £13,500.
The maximum payment for returning JSA claimants into work is closer
to £4500. 10Manchester Institute of Innovation Research
Selecting the Primes
DWP selected nineteen prime contractors
Two or three to each region or city region, most Primes gained more
than one regional contract, the maximum number is seven.
Selection of the Prime Contractors by DWP is based on criteria set
by DWP that prioritized their ability to carry the financial risk of
slow results- the companies had to demonstrate
1. Financial capability
2. financial assets
3.Experience in personalised service delivery
4.A willingness to collaborate local authorities etc.
The Primes were awarded seven year contracts to ensure that they
have the time to develop new services.
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Claimants
Older claimants report that the model works better for younger people with fewer skills than it does for those over 40 who have experience and might be better advised to create their own business rather than wait for low-paid, part-time jobs to be created.
Those with mental health –anxious Numbers refusing WP assessment increasing- 40% winning appeals Assessment techniques of ATOS criticised Some specialist, sub-contractors working with vulnerable people are
demonstrating results and helping claimants gain confidence. Patchy provision across the country depends on locality relationships
– very difficult for DWP to have intelligence of those
Those with mental and chronic incapacities most affected.
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Comments from Specialist suppliers Most sub-contractors are small businesses, local charities etc are reliant on government
contracts. They report that
the WP is not structured to tackle long-term unemployment in rural areas where jobs are few.
time-frames are too short which limits their capacity to develop relationships with claimants and other local agencies (local authorities, colleges etc).
Some medium sized sub-contractors reported that they withdrew from initial award process to become a prime because they could not reduce their costs by the 8% as the larger companies were doing to win ‘prime’ contracts from DWP.
Financial incentives are not passed on to subcontractors –this is resulting cash-flow problems.
• Many 3rd sector and specialist providers suggest that innovative services are best delivered by local providers and sustained through locality innovation strategies.
• There is a tension between business model and personalisation (care) model.
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Findings –Sub-contractors
Prime- contractors
All Primes are sub-contracting, some with each other and ‘’buddying up”, They welcome ‘Outcome-based commissioning’ involved in developing jobs market locally and with national companies. However, the unpredictability of claimant numbers a problem which has been
exacerbated by the number of claimants appealing against their assessment. ‘Gaming’ exaggerating results, cutting corners, speeding up processes- to cut
costs evident. delivery cycle of WP remains too short, DWP team anxious about commercial sensitivities but contractors already
meet to discuss market fluctuations. Say that the government too focused on the supply side and not enough on
strategic commissioning or inter-departmental working
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Primes
“We see integrated local services and relationships with local authorities as the future. DWP could support more innovative services by pooling their resources with other departments and leaving commissioning to local partnerships who are better placed to purchase integrated services. There are savings to be made from joint commissioning by government depts.- at the moment four or five depts., including DWP are funding back to work schemes and opportunities for vulnerable adults”.
SERCO executive, former LA Director of Education.
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Findings
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A NAO report published in Jan 2012 commented that while the WP timeframes for results was unrealistic given the rise in unemployment and the reduced number of jobs, the system appeared to be working.
Process improvements include:- A reduced number of prime contractors resulting in efficiencies in the
short term, however, DWP is managing the longer supply chain and relationships with the labour market.
Repayments by the treasury to DWP of some savings to the department as an incentive to policy-makers.
The Merlin Standard as a quality assurance scheme welcomed by contractors.
Most stakeholders endorse ‘payment by results’ but many say it is not put into practice.
Findings
While specialists struggle to provide personalised service many Prime contractors are resorting to heavy sticks to get claimants into line and asking DWP to cut the benefits of an even greater numbers of claimants for not attending their assessments.
Capgemini referred the most cases (11,910) of which DWP cut 6,210, A4e referred the second largest number (10,120).
Worrying when the whole point of the procurement process is that companies are awarded contracts with companies that can provide personal services to help people back into training/work.
Implications for the procurement criteria and commissioning framework as well ethics of primes
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Findings
widespread endorsement for the ‘payment by results, but problematic for smaller, specialist suppliers;
there is a tension between networks that support service objectives and centralised systems organised for efficiency gains.
the procurement model favours larger companies (primes) with financial assets over smaller specialists with the capacity to deliver service innovation.
Even large contractors say they are being unlikely to both meet service outcomes and make a return. Profit wins over service innovation if no public investment in social development.
Complex service innovation such as the WP requires systemic support of local partners who collaborate to holistic services.
For instance in Cornwall the SE Network suppliers formed a consortia and work closely with Cornwall CC, College and Prime contractor.
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Locality Collaboration
The Cornwall Works programme has been a national exemplar for this 'single purse' approach where the support has been tailored to the individual and aligned with local economic development, skills and labour market strategies. Indeed, the Convergence ESF programme is an example of such a strategy that is geared to a commissioning approach from local suppliers. This has proved highly successful and the Cornwall programme is acknowledged as the most successful ESF programme in the country.
Head of economic development, Cornwall CC 2012
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DWP officials
DWP Sheffield-based procurement team managing supply chain and contracts, had negotiated changes in time-scales, however, they have little influence over the commissioning framework.
DWP highly functional and centralised preferring innovation models that drive efficiency through vertical supply chains.
Experienced employment officials in DWP recognise that top-down procurement is limited without an alignment with the complex, relationships at the locality level.
Unease among DWP officials about dept’s lack of strategic commissioning and cross- government commissioning which is hampering locality service improvements.
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Findings
Public and press outrage at company fraud and profit –
however it is clear from stakeholders, that there are wider systemic problems within government and the commissioning framework
Systemic innovation is needed within commissioning as
well as in procurement. Awards criteria, Balancing of objectives,
cross-government budgets, devolved budgets.
Too little awareness of the wider system and impact of commissioning frameworks and procurement funding and practice on social and financial outcomes.
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Conclusions
Politicians, such as IDS are defending budgets, but not responding to changes in commissioning framework
. Many stakeholders agree that two-tier, vertical model of procurement
will eventually come into conflict with personalisation innovation requirements which demand horizontal, service-integration at the local
level.
Process innovation is limited when is it is not aligned to a wider commissioning framework, i.e. systemic innovation to support the process innovation. And need for locality investment in inter-agency working and invisible costs of social development.
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Conclusions
Political expectations and ideology are overriding realities of the practice of development and costs incurred.
Treasury undermining reform by cutting welfare to work budgets.
Marketization or privatisations does not of itself support difficult service innovation which involves sustained personal support.
WP procurement framework favours large, companies who have the assets to carry risk – debate to be had on government’s role in governance and risk..‘payment by results’ positive payment delay is disadvantaging small, charitable providers who cannot afford to wait a year for payment.
23Manchester Institute of Innovation ResearchSecondly, the vertical two-tier model by design reinforces the relationships between corporate primes and central government when as the DWP locality pilots show it is
local relationships that sustain connect
Conclusions
Government attitudes to Locality Governance.
ideological resistance to local government is undermining the very relationships between stakeholders who are developing integrated commissioning within cities.
Government is ignoring the role of locality governance in creating a context for personalised services for a range of vulnerable people.
Devolved funding to local partnerships could better forge and sustain
a closer connection between the needs of claimants and employers – resisted by civil servants as well as ministers.
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Policy recommendations
Incentives and ‘Credits' are needed to keep to smaller SMEs in the supply chain
Governance needed to regulate WP and ensure service innovation is not undermined by the business model which favours larger companies and their financial gain.
Rebalance criteria for contract awards and incentives for service innovation outcomes and financial assets criteria: give medium-sized, service providers with locality connections a chance to bid for larger contracts to deliver personalised services for marginal, under-employed people.
WP could be transformative and support service innovation if commissioning were devolved to localities and medium sized suppliers awarded contracts to develop social market of innovative suppliers and relationships with potential employers
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KEY MESSAGES
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Wider Systemic innovation would
• Align locality and government commissioning devolve WP to localities and redesign governance frameworks.
•Integrate WP policy and spending with enterprise and skill’s policies
•Rebalance gains from short-term and narrow financial savings & efficiencies with those from systemic innovation in government: inter-departmental commissioning with devolved procurement.
•Devolve budgets and support locality commissioning to incentivise inter-agency relationships, innovation across personal services and locality resilience in the jobs market in conjunction with locality partnerships, LEPS and creative suppliers.
•
Thank you for your attention
Research Project: www.mbs.ac.uk
Contact: [email protected]
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