Threads / DWP Employment Provision Commissioning Strategy / The Department has ended up paying more per Restart partici…
Committee Material Published 22 Mar 2023 ↗ View on Parliament

The Department has ended up paying more per Restart participant than for previous similar schemes, because it had to pay providers to rapidly build up capacity from a standing start and then did not need all that capacity. From 2010–11, when it was responding to the last economic crash, to 2020–21, the Department reduced expenditure on employment support from £2.9 billion a year to £300 million a year. So, when it announced details about Restart in November 2021, designed as a £2.9 billion sc...

The Department has ended up paying more per Restart participant than for previous similar schemes, because it had to pay providers to rapidly build up capacity from a standing start and then did not need all that capacity. From 2010–11, when it was responding to the last economic crash, to 2020–21, the Department reduced expenditure on employment support from £2.9 billion a year to £300 million a year. So, when it announced details about Restart in November 2021, designed as a £2.9 billion scheme for 1.4 million people, it inevitably had to work with the market to build capacity and could not achieve as much competition on price as it otherwi Type: recommendation | Number: 2 | Response status: accepted Government response: The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Recommendation implemented The department agrees it is important to have a mix of provision available in order to ensure it can effectively pivot to tackle emerging issues. The department’s assessment is th