Last week saw the release of the Interim Report by Sir Charles Bean on the state of the Office for National Statistics (ONS). The headlines that accompanied the release mostly focussed on the Report’s assertion that the ONS’s move from London to Newport has been detrimental to its performance.
This is unfortunate for two reasons:
Firstly, it unfairly maligns the idea that high quality, highly technical public services can be delivered from outside London. Given the need for the UK to develop alternative hubs of economic strength that complement London’s global city strengths, and the ongoing process of devolution of political and fiscal power to the UK’s other great cities, this is a very troubling message.