A NEW CHIEF EXECUTIVE FOR THE OFFICE OF GOVERNMENT COMMERCE
17 Mar 2004 01:35 PM
The Prime Minister, with the agreement of the Chancellor, has
appointed John Oughton as the new Chief Executive of the Office of
Government Commerce (OGC), which leads the drive to modernise
government procurement and deliver value for money savings in the
government's commercial activities. Mr Oughton, who has been the
deputy Chief Executive since April 2003, will take over as Chief
Executive from Sir Peter Gershon on 1 April 2004. He will also be
joining the Treasury Management Board as a non-executive member.
Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown said:
"I am delighted that John Oughton has been appointed. He brings a
wealth of expertise and experience to the job. He is a worthy
successor to Sir Peter Gershon, and will play a key role in improving
government procurement and promoting efficiency across the public
sector. I am very grateful to Sir Peter both for setting up the
Office of Government Commerce and for making it a key driver for
public sector reform. I welcome his continuing non-executive role in
supporting efficiency implementation."
DETAILS
Implementing efficiency
Reporting jointly to the Prime Minister and the Chancellor, John
Oughton will be responsible for implementing the efficiency review,
instituted in Budget 2003 and taken forward in its first phase by Sir
Peter Gershon. He will work closely with the Treasury and other
Government departments, and will chair an interdepartmental steering
group, which will oversee implementation. The steering group will
comprise key departmental representatives as well as external
members.
The Spending Review will require efficiency improvements across the
public sector of 2.5 per cent a year over the SR2004 period (2005-06
to 2007-08). The Office of Government Commerce, working with
departments and the wider public sector, will play a key role in
delivering these improvements.
On procurement, having achieved value for money gains of 1.6 billion
since its inception to March 2003 and with a target to realise
further gains of 3 billion in central government civil procurement
by 2005-06, a new target is being set:
* to deliver a further 3 billion across the SR2004 period - 2005-06
to 2007-08 - in central government civil procurement.
Sir Peter Gershon has agreed to stay on as a non-executive member of
the Treasury Management Board after his departure from the OGC. He
will also sit on the interdepartmental steering group overseeing the
implementation of the efficiency review to ensure continuity and to
enable him to play a key role in the implementation of his
recommendations on efficiency.
NOTES FOR EDITORS
John Oughton (51) is currently Deputy Chief Executive of the OGC,
leading the OGC's work to support government departments in
delivering major acquisition programmes and projects successfully.
In a public service career in the Ministry of Defence, the Cabinet
Office and now the OGC in the Treasury, John has held appointments in
both the policy and delivery fields. He was Director of Procurement
Policy in the Ministry of Defence. Under the previous government he
was, from 1993-1997, Head of the Government's Efficiency Unit, and he
continued in this role after May 1997, when the Efficiency Unit
worked with No 10 and the Treasury on the new government's first
comprehensive spending review. From 1998 until 2003 he was, in the
Ministry of Defence, the senior civilian responsible for leading the
modernisation programme in the new Defence Logistics Organisation,
first as head of the implementation team creating the DLO and then as
Deputy Chief of Defence Logistics.
The Office of Government Commerce (OGC) is an independent Office of
the Treasury reporting to the Chief Secretary. It is responsible for
a wide-ranging programme that focuses on improving the efficiency and
effectiveness of central civil Government procurement. In addition,
OGC has an important role in developing and promoting private sector
involvement across the public sector. From 2003-04, OGC has assumed
a key role in assisting departments set up project and programme
management centres of excellence in departments. These new units will
become central points for embedding project and programme management
best practice across Government.