As the search for massive UK public expenditure cuts swings into intensive mode, Joachim Wehner finds a strong link in comparative work between the number of department heads sitting around a country’s cabinet table and the proportion of GDP absorbed in public spending.
In his quest to regain control over the deficit, the Chancellor has asked his cabinet colleagues to propose cuts to their budgets of up to 40%. But perhaps the government should start at the centre and consider reducing the size of Britain’s bloated cabinet. British cabinets are among the largest in the industrialised economies. Labour’s last cabinet had 25 ministers around the table, which has increased to 29 in Cameron’s first cabinet (mainly to accommodate coalition partners). Contrast that with the much more modest size of the cabinet in countries such as Germany (16), Poland (19), Sweden (21) and France (21). These figures exclude all of the other junior ministers and officials on the government payroll, which usually take the total to around 120 in all in Britain. In contrast to the phalanxes of ministers and junior ministers in every Whitehall department, other governments – for example in Denmark – get by just fine without any junior ministers.
The problem with supersized cabinets is that they are costly. First, ministers need ministerial offices, which have grown in size over recent years, in addition to a big growth of special advisors and the government communications teams backing up each minister. Second, the fewer ministries there are, the less often they are also likely to be subject to expensive reorganisations. There are substantial costs involved in creating, adjusting and maintaining portfolios, as highlighted in a recent joint study published by LSE and the Institute for Government. The current coalition government sensibly responded by not reorganising Whitehall as soon as it took office. Unfortunately, this has not curtailed a tendency of each ministry to periodically want to reorganise all the bodies that it supervises, its “departmental group”, evidenced by Andrew Lansley’s determination to overhaul yet again the macro-structure of the NHS. Such reorganisations involve extra expenses recently estimated by the National Audit Office at £200 million a year in the period 2005-9, during which there were 90 different reorganisations.
Finally, the far wider problem is that ministers and departments (as key political contact routes) are expensive in a structural way. While finance ministers reap political rewards when they manage to contain spending, most of their cabinet colleagues have different political incentives: Spending ministers easily become representatives of special interests. They are deemed “powerful” when they increase their budgets, but “weak” when their departments suffer below-average increases or disproportionate cuts. Each spending minister benefits politically from their own departmental spending, while the costs of their programmes are shared more widely across the government and taxpayers – a classic example of the “common pool resource problem”.
In a recent academic paper, I review several studies that have quantified the marginal cost of expanding the size of the cabinet. All of these contain remarkably similar findings, despite the fact that they use different empirical approaches, samples of countries and time periods. These studies estimate that adding a spending minister to the cabinet is associated with an increase in the deficit of about one tenth of one per cent (0.1%) of GDP, largely due to effects on spending. In other words, if Britain were to cut its number of spending ministers by ten, about a third, this should reduce deficits and expenditures by about 1% of GDP – a significant contribution to fiscal consolidation. At a time when many governments face the most severe fiscal crisis in decades, these findings are gaining international attention. In July 2010 an OECD study team tasked with examining strategies for greater value for money in government considered a draft report that some countries are already seeking to get the number of their top departments down to a maximum of 15.
Most governments include some portfolios that have no obvious justification. One of my all-time favourites is France’s Minister of Free Time, a portfolio that existed between 1981 and 1983 to develop leisure programmes. The problem is that prime ministers use portfolio allocation to reward friends, or to accommodate foes, and to manage coalition governments. Hence, cutting the number of spending ministers is politically difficult. Still, Britain’s cabinet is excessively large in comparison to most of its counterparts in other OECD countries. Does Britain really need a Secretary of State for Northern Ireland, a Secretary of State for Scotland and a Secretary of State for Wales, even if combined with other roles? If the government wants less public spending, getting rid of such luxury portfolios could be a good start. But downsizing the cabinet probably requires a strategic goal also. A recent essay on joining up public services looked forward to a UK cabinet in 2020 of no more than 15 department heads, with perhaps 50 ministers in total.
At a time when citizens are asked to accept massive cuts in spending on public services, Britain’s supersized cabinets are no longer justifiable.
To learn more, see:
Joachim Wehner, ‘Cabinet structure and fiscal policy outcomes’, European Journal of Political Research, (2010), vol. 49, no.5, pp. 631-53.
The need to accommodate coalition partners is hardly a fair explanation for the number round the Cabinet table under Cameron – Brown also had 29 attending for the period of his premiership until 2009. And I had thought it only dropped to 27 for the period 2009-2010.
On a different note, is the issue the number of department heads round the table (the standfirst) or the size of the Cabinet (the article)? There’s more sense in the former, with each department wanting its own share, as a thesis.
You omit:
(a) the spending and reorganization that occurs solely to justify the existence of the department.
(b) the lack of meetings and cooperation because of their size and scheduling.
(c) the diffusion of responsibility from too many people to know and watch.
Britain and Denmark are not comparable. Britain has 61 million people and a history of leadership. Denmark has 5.5 million people, about the population of metropolitan Houston. GDP: Denmark $200 billion; Houston $325 billion.
America’s 13 ministers — plus assorted people with cabinet rank — are too many, causing the presidents to create their own cabinet within the White House — like the Office of Management and Budget and National Security Advisor.
Thanks for your comments. Of course, it is always tricky to make comparisons across rather different political and economic contexts. Perhaps Denmark is not comparable to Britain, but it is interesting that several of its European peers – such as Germany (a G7 country like the UK) – have much smaller cabinets. More technically, the effect picked up by the statistics is based on the variation in the number of ministers WITHIN countries over time only, and represents an estimate of the average cost of adding a spending minister to the cabinet (roughly equivalent to 0.1% of GDP). Given that all major existing studies that I review in the paper, despite some differences in approach, come to very similar estimates, this constitutes very robust evidence that cabinet size matters for deficits and public spending.
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