loddon wrote on Dec 21
st, 2012 at 7:14am:
I think it is valid to criticise the NAO …
The
alleged discrepancy in the numbers is between two different figures.
- £33 million is given as the cost incurred in 2011 whilst callers were waiting to be answered.
- £13 million is given as the saving in call costs if the 0845 numbers were replaced with 03.
The
fair telecoms campaign briefing expresses doubt about the second figure.
I cannot see the alleged absence of dates.One of the reference to the Treasury Committee states
Quote: In July 2011, the Treasury Select Committee concluded that …
This comment is accompanied by an annotation referencing
"House of Commons Treasury Committee, Administration and effectiveness of HM Revenue & Customs, Sixteenth Report of Session 2010–2012, HC 731".Digging into the papers of this enquiry will reveal the evidence presented by a member of the fair telecoms campaign.
One of the references to the Public Accounts Committee states
Quote: In January 2010, the Committee of Public Accounts reported that …
This comment is accompanied by an annotation referencing, amongst other items,
"HC Committee of Public Accounts, HM Revenue & Customs: Handling telephone enquiries, Twenty-fourth Report of Session 2009-10, HC 389"The point about moving from 0845 to 03 was apparently discussed during an oral evidence session; it was not an explicit recommendation of that report. It has however been picked up by the NAO as an implicit recommendation.
It is not my role to defend the NAO, however I have read its report with some care.
We are touching on very fine points of detail here, by digging up history.
I am not sure if readers of the forum would welcome us now getting into a deep debate about how criticism of the actions of Officials and Ministers is the responsibility of the Comptroller and Auditor General, as against the two Select Committees (Public Accounts and Treasury), which have the role of using the evidence provided in her reports to parliament. I can see no grounds for alleging significant failure by the former and note that strongly worded comment has already been made by the Chairman of one of the latter.
Our campaigning focus is on the action that HMRC (along with other public and private bodies) takes in future. This may be informed by what has happened in the past, however that cannot now be changed. The Select Committees will be taking the NAO report forward and will be in receipt of further briefings from the fair telecoms campaign - any citizen is free to make representations.
There is also a tactical reason for sometimes not dwelling long on the scale of past failure. If we want someone to do the right thing, we may make it harder if seeking to stress that taking action now would invalidate previous reasons for not taking the same action, and thereby invite criticism. If we genuinely seek change for the better, then we
sometimes have to forget the past and simply look to a better future.