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Committee Material Published 27 Oct 2021 ↗ View on Parliament

NHST&T’s continued over-reliance on consultants is likely to cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of pounds. Our previous report found that NHST&T was overly reliant on expensive contractors and temporary staff and recommended that it needed to reduce this. Despite NHST&T committing to reduce the number of consultants it employed, the number of consultants employed was higher in April 2021 (2,239) than in December 2020 (2,164). The Department pays consultants an average of £1,100 per day but s...

NHST&T’s continued over-reliance on consultants is likely to cost taxpayers hundreds of millions of pounds. Our previous report found that NHST&T was overly reliant on expensive contractors and temporary staff and recommended that it needed to reduce this. Despite NHST&T committing to reduce the number of consultants it employed, the number of consultants employed was higher in April 2021 (2,239) than in December 2020 (2,164). The Department pays consultants an average of £1,100 per day but some are paid more. NHST&T does not have a firm grip on its overall spending on consultants. It estimates that it will spend a total of £195 million on co Type: conclusion | Number: 5 | Response status: not_addressed Government response: 5.1 The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation. Target implementation date: June 2022 5.2 The UKHSA wrote to the Committee on 16 December 2021 setting out how it has reduced its dependency on consultants. 5.3 The UKHSA continues to recruit civil ser