NEWS28 February 2011
UK— Four government departments cut almost £9m of research and statistical data collection spend in the months following the general election last May, a Freedom of Information request has found.
Simon Tanner, owner of Research as Evidence, asked the Departments of Communities and Local Government; Business Innovations and Skills; Education; and Work and Pensions to divulge which projects had been cancelled as of December.
Education wielded the biggest axe with more than £7.4m of projects cancelled – 13 in total – including the Evaluation of Academies, the TellUs survey and the Survey of Disabled Children’s Services indicator, according to a report prepared by Tanner and published on the Radical Statistics blog.
Work and Pensions cut £321,000 of projects, six in all, while Communities and Local Government cancelled 15 but did not provide figures on their value.
A further 26 projects across the four departments were curtailed before completion, Tanner found. Work and Pensions stopped six projects worth a total of £3.3m having only spent £612,000 on them as of December.
Tanner believes that curtailed research presents “a more serious issue” than cancelled research. “Projects curtailed for non-methodological reasons could equate to wasted funds, making results unusable or unpublishable,” he said.
The £8.9m in cuts Tanner has uncovered equate to 13.5% of spend across all four departments, based on published departmental resource accounts.
Significant though the figures are, they are probably only a fraction of total cuts to research and data collection spend across a government of 50 separate departments, whose leaders are looking to cut government expenditure by £83bn by 2014-15.