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By Claire Racine
The Government has launched Building Britain’s Future,
a plan for a fairer, stronger and more prosperous society,
outlining government action to move the UK from recession
to recovery and rebuild trust in the political system, with
a strong part to played by the Third Sector.
“Our task after three terms in office is not merely
to defend Britain's achievements over the last decade but
to work even harder so as to meet new challenges with the
same sense of conviction,” Prime Minister Gordon Brown
said.
Jon Sibson, partner and head of government and public sector,
PricewaterhouseCoopers, said the language has changed from
targets to entitlements, but expectations of service levels
are still being nudged upwards. In the current financial
crisis, this will be a challenge for public sector leaders.
“They will need to think about how to redesign services,
and to make savings in the back office, to deliver more
for less,” Sibson said.
As a first step, the government made a number of commitments
to the British people, including to deliver 20,000 new affordable
homes and create 45,000 jobs in the construction and related
sectors in the next two years, to further reform the House
of Lords, including completing the process of removing the
hereditary principle, and to establish a new £150
million Innovation Fund to drive growth and create high
value jobs.
Dave Prentis, general secretary of UNISON, the UK’s
largest public sector union, welcomes the commitment to
directing more resources at housing.
“This creates jobs and much needed homes which will
go someway towards helping the thousands of families living
in overcrowded accommodation and the millions on waiting
lists,” Prentis said.
“But there can be no quick fixes to the housing crisis.
Nothing will substitute for sustained investment over the
long term, which is what we want to see the government commit
to.”
Recognizing the importance of the Third Sector, the report
estimates that government investment in the Third Sector
is worth about £11 billion a year and that the sector
offers potential for future economic growth, jobs, training
and enterprise.
“Government commitment to unlocking new forms of
finance for charities is vital if the Sector is to fulfil
its role at the heart of the Government’s aspirations
for Britain’s future,” said John Kingston, director
of Charity Aid Foundation’s social investment fund
Venturesome.
The report states that the government plans to do more
to support social enterprise, through developing new forms
of affordable and sustainable finance.
“Social investment is still in its infancy,”
Kingston added. “We hope that the Government’s
initiatives, starting with the consultation on a Social
Investment Wholesale Institution, will ensure that affordable
and sustainable finance can fulfil the very real capital
needs that exist and help charities to thrive and come out
of the recession stronger.”
To facilitate Building Britain’s Future, Cabinet
and Regional Ministers will be holding town hall events
around the country during July and August to explain more
about the plan and to consult with members of the public
on how to take it forward.
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