Skip to main content

CEP Public Events

Hosted with the Institute for Government

How can public spending do better at improving wellbeing?

Richard Layard (CEP, LSE), Gus O'Donnell (former Cabinet Secretary), Amanda Rowlatt (former chief economist at the Department for Transport, Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, and Department for Work and Pensions)


Tuesday 03 September 2024 13:00 - 14:00

This event is both online and in person

Off Campus

About this event

How could the government's approach to public spending and policy making consider wellbeing?


Spending reviews, which decide how at least half a trillion pounds of annual public spending should be allocated across different public services, are one of the most consequential processes in government. The new government has announced a new review, to conclude in Spring 2025, that will determine departmental budgets for much of the current parliament. But how should ministers choose how to prioritise spending? Should more money be spent on roads, skills, or police? What is the best way to judge the costs and benefits of each decision?

A new report from the London School of Economics, published on Tuesday 3 September, calls for a radical change in policymaking. It argues that policies should be judged using a cost-benefit analysis which includes a comprehensive valuation of their effects on wellbeing. The report argues that, judged this way, therapies for mental health and guaranteed apprenticeships give much better value for money than most new roads. 

Speakers:

Richard Layard, Co-Director of the Community Wellbeing Programme at the Centre for Economic Performance, London School of Economics

Lord Gus O’Donnell, former Cabinet Secretary

Amanda Rowlatt, former chief economist at the Department for Transport, Department for Business, Innovation and Skills, and Department for Work and Pensions

The panel will be chaired by Gemma Tetlow, Chief Economist at the Institute for Government.

Visit instituteforgovernment.org.uk for more information.


Downloads


Participants are expected to adhere to the CEP Events Code of Conduct.


Directions

This event will take place Off Campus.