Archive for March, 2005

NHS IT Privacy

Thursday, March 31st, 2005

I have a funny feeling of déjà vu…

A new NHS computer database may threaten the privacy of patients’ medical records, the BBC has learned.

A senior Department of Health civil servant said people would not be able to decide what details were stored.

Critics said this went against earlier government assurances that patients would be able to veto the information.

The DoH said people could still discuss with their doctor what details were recorded and control who could access them - except in an emergency.

[...] Phil Walker, the DoH’s head of digital information policy, made the privacy claims in an e-mail to a Warwickshire GP, Dr Paul Thornton.

[...] The British Medical Association said this appeared to contradict earlier ministerial assurances that patients will be able to withhold sensitive information from the database.

From: BBC News

Work Foundation Report - Why ICT?

Thursday, March 31st, 2005

The Work Foundation have published a new report on e-government: Why ICT? The role of ICT in public services (Also: BBC News Report).

The headline finding is around preferences for e-government services:

we asked the public how they would like to access services, and what they think are the advantages and disadvantages of three of the main service delivery channels.We found that there was an equal split, with a third each preferring: one-stop shop, face-toface services; telephone hotlines; and interactive websites.

In addition, they found that:

  • 78% felt there is enough choice in terms of different service delivery channels;
  • 48% wanted more government services online [a bit of contradiction with the above?];
  • 63% thought the web had made it easier to find out about government services;
  • More than three quarters wanted access to services outside of normal working hour.

(more…)

Policy Wonks Spat

Friday, March 18th, 2005

An interesting little spat about the importance and impact of think tanks is going on within (a section) of the policy wonk community.
Rob Blackhurst, formerly of the Foreign Policy Centre, has published a piece in the New Statesman titled ‘The sad decline of the policy wonks in which he argues ‘The British policy wonk has never been more in demand’, but that ‘enslaved by corporate sponsors, [the think tanks] no longer have a significant influence on the political parties’.

(more…)

IPPR North Event

Friday, March 11th, 2005

The IPPR North seminar last week - ‘Opportunity Society - Improving Social Mobility in the North’ - which featured David Miliband as the key note speaker.

A brief report for the next issue of Policy World:

(more…)

Bill Gates is still very rich…

Friday, March 11th, 2005

The Forbes magazine list of the world’s super-rich has increased to a record 691 people with a combined fortune of $2.2 trillion (£1.14 trillion).

Microsoft’s boss Bill Gates is top of the billionaires’ list for the 11th year in a row [...] Mr Gates nevertheless saw his net worth decline slightly to $46.5bn from $46.6bn.

From: BBC News.

ICTs and Benefit Fraud Crackdown

Wednesday, March 9th, 2005

The government are flagging claims that they’ve saved £0.5 billion via a crackdown on benefit fraud.

A central plank of their new strategy has been increased data sharing within government, though it seems that the Inland Revenue were initially reluctant to participate:

The dramatic turnaround follows a decision pushed through four years ago by the former social security minister, Angela Eagle, to persuade the Inland Revenue to share its data with benefit offices to track down fraudsters. The policy was initially resisted by the Inland Revenue but after what Ms Eagle calls a “Whitehall kerfuffle” the tax officers backed down.

Now officials are able to trace immediately whether a claimant is both paying tax and claiming benefit at the same time. This has led to 80,914 people caught in the last year. The number of cases of people working and claiming at the same time has nearly halved in the last five years.

The ministry is also targeting what it calls “at risk” groups of people, thought to be likely to be claiming benefit while holding down self-employed jobs. Altogether 133,277 cases have been identified.

Mr Pond is adamant that the department is not picking on particular ethnic groups as part of the exercise.

Officials are also having more success in cooperating with local councils to curb housing benefit and council tax fraud. Checks on claimants revealed that some 44,000 people had made incorrect claims which did not match their income.

We await news of an equally vigorous and technologically sophisticated ‘crackdown’ on non-take up of benefit entitlements…

Global Money Markets

Sunday, March 6th, 2005

Came across an interesting piece on the global money markets today. I’d already seen the estimates of somewhere between US$1 and US$1.5 trillion being traded on the foreign exchange markets each day, but have to admit I had no idea that the UK’s share of this trade was (a) bigger than that of any other single nation and (b) accounted for a third of all trading globally.

Foreign Exchange Markets 2001 (Source: http://www.ny.frb.org/education/fx/foreign.html)
(Source: http://www.ny.frb.org/education/fx/foreign.html)