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Richardr's avatar

I agree with much of what is said, but have a couple of points to make that have to be overcome, the first two of which are in the article, but I think are very difficult to change:

1 - reducing and removing red tape / controls is a lot more difficult than increasing it and goes against much of the comment / media that will accompany it;

2 - we have a situation today whenever something goes wrong that something must be done and in particular that we must introduce "John Smith's Law". Getting around those is almost impossible;

3 - The biggest issue to me is the ever increasing centralization of the British [especially English] state. The centre can't control much of what it is trying to control and that leads to the use of targets / red tape, etc. Why can't the centre realize that it can't control everything efficiently?

4 - It sounds politically great to announce more doctors, more Bobbies on the beat, etc. This is often at the expense of admin staff and leads to doctors and police dealing with the sort of admin that they shouldn't be.

My recent favourite political news item was the massive increase in consultancy fees paid by government. Why? They said they would decease Civil Service staff numbers. They achieved that target, but only in a way that cost them substantially more. It shows how such targets and political actions are leading to the wrong outcome and backs up this article completely.

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Syd's avatar

"The risk that something bad will happen because of too little compliance needs to weighed against the risk of a public servant following the rules to the letter yet failing to add value to those citizens they’re meant to serve."

This also plays into something Sam talks about in his book - the nature of the English press, meaning that even for local projects, like the Camden thing, all the downside risks lie with the central government, who will take a painful public beating from the Daily Mail if anything whatsoever goes wrong.

(In fact, I'd lay money on the Camden Family Group Counselling policy being abandoned eventually under these circumstances - something goes wrong; Daily Mail uses it as a stick to beat the government; government introduce rules to ensure it "never happens again".)

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