The
Scottish independence saga has provoked urgency to the English devolution question.
Centralised government breakdown calls for decentralisation. Politicians know
what they want to achieve but are not good at doing it according to published
evidence of costly implementation blunders (King
and Crewe). There is “dissatisfaction with politicians, political parties
and UK politics”.
Local
funding is high on the list of blundering failure over decades of wasted inquiry,
change, implementation and operational failure. For decentralisation to work new
insights and ways of working must be found if the public finances are not to finally
drain away along with political competence.
At
present all local spending and ‘local’ tax is part of the totality of public finance and recorded as such. This requires central
management from the top. Yet is only very recently that consolidated accounting
has been introduced WGAs (Whole of
Government Accounts). These are defective for the same reason that the
European Accounts have failed their audit for 19 years to date and are so late
as to be unhelpful to the OBR (Office of
Budget Responsibility). For example: funds voted are left to be managed by
recipients without feedback to the centre which control requires. Controlled decentralisation does not however
require detailed centralised control of local decisions and activities.
It
is said that local people must contribute to their local area with local’
taxes. They already do with council tax, business rates, VAT and income tax. It
is said that people ought to be able to identify ‘local’ council tax payment
with local needs and spending but mixed revenue flows prevent this allowing the
unaccountable ‘loony left’ to ignite a general explosion in spending over recent years. The corresponding
explosion in council tax around 2003, when raised with councillors, produced
the ‘nothing to do with me guv’ syndrome. Over-riding central reaction had to
be the council tax ‘cap’ which in its various forms continues but now accompanied
by reducing central funding.
It
is said that under those conditions there is local accountability. That is
self-evidently false and efforts in the future to go down that route with local
income taxes, sales taxes and so on will decentralise bureaucracy at great
operating cost without achieving anything like the desired result. The present
hybrid system is a perfect demonstration of a compromise too far. In reality
the local unit is accountable for its performance, with public funds, not its
tax calculation.
The
main method flaw causing the muddle is “equalisation”. This is redistribution
as a secondary process to cross-subsidise regions according to formulaic grant
calculations of needs and differences not locally determined nor catered for in
the primary taxation system. There is the suggestion, by the LGA (Local Government Authority) who badly
want the present arrangements changed, that this should be replaced by another,
supposedly ‘independent’ central body, again detached from local needs. That would
change nothing and would still not allow for genuine inter-area transfers which
are a necessary part of any sovereign state arrangements. It incidentally also
seems from information received that the LGA is also still wedded to ‘no
representation without taxation’.
There
is only one way that wished-for local autonomy can be provided so as to go ‘off
balance sheet’ or privatise - call it what you will. A constituted body run by
elected representatives must raise its own revenue and be allowed to borrow
only on the guarantee of its own people. There are ‘off the shelf’
pricing/subscription methods and existing ‘tax bases’ in the form of electoral
registers and residencies. There is also on government record a simple to
administer ‘automatic’ method given to Sir Michael Lyons for his Inquiry for drawing from central taxation which would
work well, and indeed become necessary, once WGBs (Whole of Government Budgets) are operated as intended.
In
any case there needs to be clear organisation and flow charts both for
decision-levels and accountability. For example a Police Authority can
source funds from and be accountable to
EITHER a central government specified place or a local authority which in turn
can EITHER be accountable upwards (as in the NHS) or to local electors. LEPs (Local Enterprise Partnerships) are not
accountable anywhere. The form of routine accountability to owners is specified
in legislation and best practice but not ‘delivered’ by government. It is also
necessary for devolved bodies to have the right to either refuse to observe
central dictats or negotiate a price for carrying out activities not necessary
to meet their own objectives. Conversely a central government body should be
able to charge a local body for such as standard-setting advice.
The
‘joker in the pack’ in this and failure to solve the problem before now can be laid
at the door of hidebound politicians, political scientists and economists and
more specifically the Treasury which is out of date and has not evolved as in
Industry to a position of influence in ‘how to do’ management infrastructure
and systems.