Friday 2 December 2011

Training Matters



The National Audit Office (NAO) has issued a report today (Core Skills at HMRC) that highlights some problems wrt HMRC's internal financial controls over its training expenditure.

"HMRC faces significant challenges in delivering its change plan and Spending Review commitments to reduce its running costs by 25 per cent by 2014-15 and bring in additional tax revenues of £7 billion a year. 

HMRC recognises these challenges and has identified not having enough people in the right places with the right skills as a significant risk. 

By March 2015, 50 per cent of HMRC staff will either have moved to different work in the organisation or will have left. In addition, since its formation in 2005, HMRC has faced significant operational challenges. These result from many complex underlying issues but the organisation recognises that maintaining and improving skills will raise performance."


Despite the fact that HMRC held over 2,000 training courses in 2010/11, the NAO states that HMRC does not know how much it is spending on training, nor if the money is being spent in the right places.

The spend on training by HMRC in 2010/11 was (according to an estimate by NAO) £96M. However, HMRC is not focusing that expenditure on priority areas.

The NAO is also worried that HMRC cannot validate as to whether the expenditure on training is actually having any positive/beneficial results.

HMRC staff have complained about training within the organisation, only 54% of HMRC staff say that they were able to access the right learning and development opportunities and only 38% report that training has improved their performance.

The NAO says HMRC does not have a good overview of its current skills gaps, and needs better data and information in order to adopt a more strategic approach.


The NAO also noted that HMRC has no governance arrangements or structures to hold the organisation to account for money spent on training, and had failed to act on earlier concerns.

Amyas Morse, head of the NAO, said:

"At the level of the business as a whole, HMRC has no strategy to manage the £96M it spends each year on skills. 

Although the department is doing much to make sure it has the skills it requires, it needs a more systematic approach, where spending on skills is linked explicitly to the organisation’s overall business objectives and a vision of how it should look in the future."

The summary states:

"HM Revenue and Customs will have to make sure its staff have the right skills if the Department is to succeed in cutting its running costs by 25 per cent by 2014-2015 and bringing in each year an extra £7 billion of tax revenue.

The National Audit Office has today reported to Parliament that HMRC does not know how much it is spending in total on skills development, or if its money is being spent in the right places. The National Audit Office estimates that HMRC spent £96 million in 2010-11 developing the skills of its staff but judges that the Department is not systematically directing that spending on top level business priorities.

The Department has recognized that it has significant challenges and is doing much to ensure it has the skills it needs.  It is developing major professional programmes, using new technologies and fast-tracking training for key roles. Staff skills will have been a factor in the improvement of HMRC’s business results including the extra £1billion tax generated since 2010 by enforcement and compliance activity.  But currently there is not a direct evidential link between results and training and development activities. 

The majority of staff in HMRC (79 per cent in the 2011 staff survey) say that they have the skills they need to do their job effectively.  However, only 54 per cent said that they were able to access the right learning and development opportunities when they needed to and only 38 per cent said that training had improved their performance. 

Evidence from a customer survey and external stakeholders also suggests that the Department does not have all the skills it needs, but HMRC does not have a good overview of its current skills gaps. It needs better data and information on gaps which would help it take a more strategic approach and gain an early warning of future skills gaps, such as the risk of skills depleting as experienced staff retire. This is of particular concern in HMRC as one in five staff in key business areas are over 55.
HMRC is spending money on skills development in some key business areas but does not yet have a skills strategy to direct spending systematically towards areas that produce the most important business results and which links to a model of how the organization will operate in the future. 

There is an absence of engagement at senior level in staff skills and there is no specific body that examines the total spending on skills and decides whether it is being made in the right parts of the organization.

HMRC also lacks governance arrangements or structures to hold the organization to account for money spent on training. Many of the points in this report were raised previously by HMRC’s own reviews but the Department has not made the changes needed. For example, HMRC’s total number of training courses has not reduced from 2,000 courses in 2009 when an internal review raised concerns about poor focus in training provision."


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10 comments:

  1. "only 54 per cent said that they were able to access the right learning and development opportunities when they needed to and only 38 per cent said that training had improved their performance".


    Thats because hmrcs online training courses are not worth a shit. And the management couldnt give two fucks either way.

    ReplyDelete
  2. 'Teachers open the door but you must enter by yourself.'

    ReplyDelete
  3. "Teachers open the door but you must enter by yourself."

    Cock.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Training???

    HMRC???

    Front-line??

    Beneficial??


    I feel like I've stepped back in to a former century.

    The former Inland Revenue provided training and I suspect Customs and Excise did as well.

    HMRC training = sit in front of a pdf file and get on with it.

    The training courses that most will have been on are how to BS in management, or how to be the only inspector doing your current job.

    ReplyDelete
  5. 2 December 2011 15:35

    "Cock."

    Afraid not,

    'Teachers open the door but you must enter by yourself.' is Japanese Zen Buddism

    Ignorance is bliss

    ReplyDelete
  6. Oh and before you ask

    "ignorance is bliss"

    Thomas Gray 1742

    ReplyDelete
  7. @2 December 2011 19:53

    "Cock" - James May, any given top gear episode, 2001-

    HMRC front line staff who deal with the likes of yourselves on a day-to-day basis beg for training but it is 'not a priority, read some vague online thingy that doesn't go anywhere....' according to our managers. So it's not a case of 'teachers opening the door'.

    OK I guess you could deal with taxes by reading the manuals and tax law but then you are just interpreting those without any checks on how you've interpreted them.

    But, as you say, ignorance is bliss, easier to criticise what you won't understand I suppose.

    ReplyDelete
  8. @19.46

    "It's Japanese Zen Buddism"


    Ultra cock.........

    ReplyDelete
  9. @ 19.46

    "Pretentious, Moi ?



    Basil Fawlty.

    ReplyDelete
  10. Having endured ten weeks of training to try to learn what previously took TWO YEARS in harness proved to me that the lunatics took over the asylum years ago. While the trainers were desperately trying to do the impossible, their numbers were being drastically reduced by the idiot penny-pinchers. Nervous breakdown anyone?

    ReplyDelete