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Power in People's Hands: Learning from the World's Best Public Services

CAB057/09
16 July 2009

The Government's drive to reform public services by giving more power back to the citizen was accelerated today, with the publication of a new study of innovative public services from around the world.

Drawing on more than 30 of the best examples from around the world, Power in People’s Hands: Learning from the World's Best Public Services shows how giving people more control over the services they use and freeing frontline public servants to innovate can deliver better services and greater value for money.

Launching the research in Downing Street, Chief Secretary to the Treasury and Minister for Public Service Reform Liam Byrne said:

“In Building Britain's Future we set out a radical programme for empowering people with new entitlements to high-quality education, healthcare and policing. Power in People's Hands: Learning from the World’s Best Public Services shows how we can turn ideas into action.

“Over the past 10 years, the Government has delivered huge improvements in Britain’s public services through record investment and strong management.

“But in the decade ahead the greatest focus for change will be giving parents, patients and citizens more control of services and freeing up frontline public servants to innovate and respond.

“The best examples of change around the world so clearly prove that it is possible to be radical about power and realistic about value for money. For example, from the way the American government is giving people better information about the performance and cost of services to how Swedish patients have clear entitlements to short hospital waiting times.”

The report, produced by the Strategy Unit in the Cabinet Office, looks at services that fall into five key strands:

Notes to editors

  1. The full report will be available for download from the Cabinet Office website from 09:30 on Thursday. To obtain embargoed copies before then please contact the Cabinet Office press office.
  2. Power in People’s Hands is intended to inform consideration of public service delivery by the UK Government. A number of public servants, academics and other experts have contributed to the study, but the report as a whole does not necessarily reflect the views of any individual participants.
  3. The report does not set out to identify the countries that are the “best in the world” at providing public services, but to highlight specific schemes and projects that are world-leading.
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