Carillion collapse exposed flaws in UK government
policy: lawmakers
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[July 09, 2018]
LONDON (Reuters) - The
collapse of Carillion <CLLN.L> exposed the risks of using private
companies to cut the cost of delivering public services and its failure
could be repeated if the government does not learn lessons, lawmakers
said on Monday.
Carillion, which employed 43,000 people to provide services in defense,
education, health and transport, collapsed in January, becoming the
largest construction bankruptcy in British history. It left creditors
and the firm's pensioners facing steep losses and put thousands of jobs
at risk.
A report published by a parliamentary committee on Monday said the
government's overriding priority for outsourcing had been spending as
little money as possible while forcing contractors to take unacceptable
levels of financial risks.
It said the preoccupation with costs had hit the quality of public
services because the outsourcing companies were sent a clear signal that
cost, rather than quality, was the government's consistent priority.
Bernard Jenkin, chairman of the Public Administration and Constitutional
Affairs Committee, said it was staggering that the government has
attempted to push risks that it did not understand onto contractors.
"The Carillion crisis itself was well-managed, but it could happen again
unless lessons are learned about risk and contract management and the
strengths and weaknesses of the sector.
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Cranes stand on a Carillion construction site in central London,
Britain, January 16, 2018. REUTERS/Simon Dawson/File Photo
"The government must use this moment as an opportunity to learn how to
effectively manage its contracts and relationship with the market."
Other parliamentary committees have already criticized the role Carillion's
directors played in the collapse.
A spokesman for the Cabinet Office said that the government would respond
formally to the report in due course.
"The government is committed to ensuring a healthy and diverse marketplace of
companies bidding for government contracts, and we have recently announced a
wide package of new measures to further improve how we work with our vendors,"
the Cabinet Office said in an emailed statement.
(Reporting by Paul Sandle. Editing by Jane Merriman)
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