In July 2008, the government launched the Operational Efficiency
Programme (OEP), looking at where savings could be made in the
UKs central government operations. Dr Martin Read was tasked with
looking at back-office operations and IT, and in discussions with
the government chief information officer John Suffolk came up
with a set of recommendations for getting more out of the overall
£16bn IT budget 4.6% of total overall central government spend.
The report actually benchmarked £6.1bn of actual expenditure
against three main criteria cost, user confidence and capability.
Overall, the report found that the majority of government IT
operations fell within private sector norms for cost and that
departments were relatively happy with what they were provided
with. However, it was noted that the government was not making
the most of its massive scale of purchasing, and that there was a
marked duplication of functions and efforts in the provisioning
and running of services as well.
In conjunction with the governments CIO Council, it was agreed
that savings of around 20% can be made in the operational spend
on government IT or around £3.2bn against the overall budget.
The issue is in how to do this. Over 130 datacentres were
identified by the report, and work has been started in reducing
these, with a view of moving towards 9-12 main government-owned
datacentres. Just as in the 2004 Gershon report, the OEP report
makes the recommendations of moving government services to an
environment where they can be shared across departments but in
the OEP case using a private cloud infrastructure where greater
reuse of functions can be gained, and better economies of scale
achieved. This government cloud has been termed the G-Cloud with
the aim of being a simplified, standardised and available to all
central set of services and functions.
All great stuff. The aim is to move to G-Cloud by 2013/14, with
some services being moved into a test bed cloud during 2010. The
government ICT strategy paper, launched in late January 2010,
laid out the basis for how everything should move forwards.
But now a fly has appeared in the ointment: the May 6 general
election. Any new government faces a major problem of reining in
public sector spending. Already, the sound bites are coming to
the fore, saying that government IT spend has to be controlled,
as so many large projects have been such massive failures (if the
headlines are to be believed).
ID cards and the NHS are the two largest projects that are
currently directly threatened by all parties, but plans to cap
the size of projects involving external systems integrators and
the need to be seen to do something will also have an impact on
the G-Cloud.
Although the Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) already has
an operational cloud platform, due to physical constraints, this
can only be grown to a certain level, and plans to implement
G-Cloud on the scale required to meet the OEPs stated needs are
now unlikely to happen within the timescales stated, due to the
need for the new government to be seen to have costs completely
under control.
With Suffolk having stated that the perceived problems in areas
such as information security make it impossible for the
government to use standard commercial cloud services, all G-Cloud
eggs are currently in one, government-owned basket. If G-Cloud
cannot be driven forwards at the speed needed, the savings
already built in to all parties calculations will not be made and
so deeper savings will have to be identified from other areas.
Six years on from Sir Peter Gershons original recommendations for
shared services, the public sector is not as far along as would
be expected. Dr Martin Read has identified that the same problems
are still there and has made recommendations that could move
towards mitigating the financial and efficiency issues that
result from this.
It looks like the major opportunity to move towards a better IT
platform using highly shared services on G-Cloud could be missed
just so that headlines can be created that look good to the
general public. If this is the case, whatever government does
make active or passive decisions that stop G-Cloud from moving
forwards will be doing a long-term disservice to the general
public. The promise of G-Cloud has to be better communicated to
the electorate, and all parties should agree that it is in the
best interests of all that investment in the project is
continued, so that the immense long-term benefits can be gained.
Clive Longbottom
Service Director, Business Process Analysis
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