Construction Matters: House of Commons Business and Enterprise Committee
Construction Matters: House of Commons Business and Enterprise Committee
Construction matters
Ninth Report of Session 2007–08
Volume I
Report, together with formal minutes
HC 127-I
[Incorporating 1090-i from Session 2006–07]
Published on 16 July 2008
by authority of the House of Commons
London: The Stationery Office Limited
£0.00
The Business & Enterprise Committee
Current membership
Peter Luff MP (Conservative, Mid Worcestershire) (Chairman)
Mr Adrian Bailey MP (Labour, West Bromwich West)
Roger Berry MP (Labour, Kingswood)
Mr Brian Binley MP (Conservative, Northampton South)
Mr Michael Clapham MP (Labour, Barnsley West and Penistone)
Mr Lindsay Hoyle MP (Labour, Chorley)
Miss Julie Kirkbride MP (Conservative, Bromsgrove)
Anne Moffat MP (Labour, East Lothian)
Mr Mark Oaten MP (Liberal Democrat, Winchester)
Mr Mike Weir MP (Scottish National Party, Angus)
Mr Anthony Wright MP (Labour, Great Yarmouth)
Powers
The Committee is one of the departmental select committees, the powers of
which are set out in House of Commons Standing Orders, principally in SO No
152. These are available on the Internet via
http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/parliamentary_committees
Publications
The Reports and evidence of the Committee are published by The Stationery
Office by Order of the House. All publications of the Committee (including press
notices) are on the Internet at
http://www.parliament.uk/parliamentary_committees/berr.cfm
Committee staff
The current staff of the Committee are: Eve Samson (Clerk), Emma Berry
(Second Clerk), Robert Cope (Committee Specialist), Louise Whitley
(Inquiry Manager), Anita Fuki (Committee Assistant), Lorna Horton
(Committee Secretary) and Jim Hudson (Senior Office Clerk).
Contacts
All correspondence should be addressed to the Clerks of the Business and
Enterprise Committee, House of Commons, 7 Millbank, London SW1P 3JA. The
telephone number for general enquiries is 020 7219 5777; the Committee’s email
address is becom@parliament.uk
Construction matters 1
Contents
Report Page
Summary 5
1 Introduction 7
Our inquiry 7
Why is construction important? 8
The structure of the UK industry 9
Construction’s clients 9
The workforce 10
Implications of the industrial structure 10
Recent construction industry reform 12
Government responsibilities for construction 16
A Chief Construction Officer 18
3 Increasing capacity 33
Recent and predicted growth 33
Sources of capacity growth 34
Labour supply 34
The planning system 37
Construction price inflation 37
Helping the industry plan for additional capacity 38
7 Raising standards 87
Research and development 87
The reasons for poor R&D performance 88
Government support for R&D 89
The Building Regulations 92
Helping clients make informed decisions 93
TrustMark 94
Constructionline 94
Cover pricing 96
Witnesses 122
List of Reports from the Committee during the current Parliament 125
Construction matters 5
Summary
The construction industry provides employment for more than 2.8 million people. The
sector contributed 8.7% of the UK economy’s gross value-added (GVA) in 2006—twice
that produced by the energy, automotive and aerospace sectors combined. The built
environment—the roads, houses, offices, factories, etc, which represent the output of the
industry—is estimated to account for some 70% of UK manufactured wealth. Hence, the
industry’s ability to deliver projects successfully in terms of time, cost and design quality
has a major impact on the economy’s wider performance.
Construction is vital for the provision of good quality public services. It plays a role in the
delivery of just over half of the Government’s 30 public service agreements. It is also key to
the long-term objective of making the UK a low-carbon society: buildings account for
around half of greenhouse gas emissions.
The health of the construction industry is accordingly a matter of public concern. In some
areas it is a world beater: but there are also significant problems. The industry is complex
and fragmented; it operates on low profit margins. There are difficulties in ensuring that
lessons from experience are shared; that the workforce is sufficiently trained, particularly
regarding the provision of apprenticeships; and that appropriate contractual relationships
are in place between different parts of the supply chain. There is also a high risk attached to
innovative approaches which could save costs, time or carbon emissions.
The construction industry has enjoyed a period of sustained growth for over a decade, in
sharp contrast to the cycles typical of much of the post-war era. Construction output in
parts of the industry, particularly house-building, is experiencing a sharp downturn in the
wake of the fall-out from the sub-prime mortgage market crisis. While public sector
expenditure is always subject to a degree of political uncertainty, in the coming years the
industry currently expects to benefit from rising infrastructure investment and greater
spending in areas such as social housing and education.
Government can help by setting the regulatory framework and providing support for
training, but ultimately standards are driven by the sector’s clients. The industry itself has
shown a willingness to change; but it can only do so if its customers support that change.
The public sector is the industry’s biggest customer, accounting for around a third of
construction output—it has the leverage to force improvement.
The industry has set new targets for itself, and, in conjunction with government,
established a Strategy for Sustainable Construction. We hope these developments and this
Report will provide the impetus for widespread long-term improvement in the sector’s
performance, recognising the significant challenges it faces in light of the current economic
downturn. The Government, because of its roles as both client and regulator, can and must
be at the forefront of the drive to embed best practice, and to ensure the transfer of learning
from frequent to infrequent clients. It must provide organisations such as BERR, the Office
of Government Commerce and the Health and Safety Executive with the resources and
power to achieve this. The sector also needs strategic leadership. There must be someone
both government and the industry accept as having overall responsibility for construction.
6 Construction matters
Truly joined-up working between government and industry, and between different
government departments, would be immeasurably improved by the creation of a post of
Chief Construction Officer. And the Government should remember that, as the industry’s
largest single client, helping the sector to improve means that it and the taxpayer will
directly benefit.
Construction matters 7
1 Introduction
Our inquiry
1. In March 2007 the then Trade and Industry Committee launched its first major inquiry
into the UK’s construction industry.1 Setting broad terms of reference, it challenged the
sector to demonstrate its strengths, but also to highlight areas where there was need for
improvement, and the role government could play in achieving this. We received an
overwhelmingly positive response from the sector. One year ago, the outlook for the
industry was optimistic, against a backdrop of over a decade’s near continuous growth.
Today, industry sentiment is much more uncertain, with the expectation of economic
slowdown both this year and the next in the wake of the US sub-prime mortgage market
crisis. It is unclear at the moment what the implications of these events are for the UK’s
construction industry, especially when weighed against the many large building
programmes expected in the coming years, such as the 2012 London Olympic Games, a
new generation of nuclear power stations, Crossrail, and Building Schools for the Future.
These developments require a “strong and dynamic UK construction industry”.2 We hope
this Report may act as a catalyst for long-term improvement across the sector, helping it to
weather the current storm and prepare for future challenges.
2. In the course of our inquiry we took oral evidence from the Construction
Confederation, the Construction Industry Council, the Construction Products Association,
the Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT), ConstructionSkills,
Unite—the union, Constructing Excellence, the Commission for Architecture and the Built
Environment (CABE), the Building Research Establishment (BRE), the Building Sector
Research and Information Association, the Construction Industry Research and
Information Association, the Federation of Master Builders, the National Specialist
Contractors’ Council, the Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group, the Construction
Clients’ Group, the Olympic Delivery Authority, BAA, the Office of Government
Commerce (OGC), and the Minister of State for Competitiveness at the Department for
Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR), then Stephen Timms MP. The
Committee also visited the Olympic site in Stratford and the Royal London Hospital
redevelopment at Whitechapel. In addition, we received more than 50 written
memoranda.3 We would like to thank all those that have contributed to our evidence-
gathering. We are grateful to all of them for their patience as this Report has taken longer
than we would have liked. Initial uncertainty over the future of the Department of Trade
and Industry (and therefore our own future as a committee), and then the huge volume of
evidence we received, and to which we wished to do justice, both delayed its publication.
We hope it is judged to be worth waiting for.
3. The remainder of this chapter sets out why construction is important, the current
structure of the industry, the reforms it has undergone in recent years, and its relationship
1 Following machinery of government changes in June 2006, the Committee took oral evidence as the Business,
Enterprise and Regulatory Reform Committee. Its title has since shortened to Business and Enterprise Committee.
3 Business and Enterprise Committee Ninth Report of Session 2007–08, Construction matters, HC 127-II
8 Construction matters
with government. It also establishes the key themes of the Report. Chapter 2 looks at the
role of the client, particularly in the public sector, in reforming the industry. Chapter 3
considers recent and expected growth in the sector and the role government can play in
giving firms the confidence to invest in their capacity to deliver. Chapter 4 analyses the
recent economic performance of the industry and looks at ways in which it could function
better. Chapter 5 considers issues relating to the construction workforce, including
progress in improving health and safety and the provision of training. Chapter 6 looks at
government’s role in improving environmental sustainability both in the construction
process and the end product. Chapter 7 concerns the responsibilities of government as
client, regulator and provider of funding in raising standards in the sector. Finally,
Chapter 8 analyses how accumulated best practice is being put to use for the 2012 Olympic
Games.
5. However, as the Minister of State for Competitiveness, who is responsible for the
industry told us, “its importance for government goes a long way beyond its economic
contribution”.7 Construction is vital for the provision of good quality public services,
playing a role in the delivery of just over half of the 30 public service agreements set out in
the 2007 Comprehensive Spending Review.8 Better quality schools and hospitals or
investment in housing and urban regeneration have the potential to create improved
outcomes for their users and enhanced standards of living. Moreover, buildings account
for around half of greenhouse gas emissions—hence, the construction industry is key to the
Government’s long-term objective of making the UK a low-carbon society.
6. The construction industry is of vital importance, not only because of the sector’s size,
representing one twelfth of all value-added in the UK, but also because its output—the
built environment—underpins most other economic activity, as well as contributing to
the delivery of the Government’s social and environmental objectives.
4 Office for National Statistics, Annual Business Inquiry 2006, November 2007, and Ev 123, Annex 1 (Department for
Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR))
5 Ev 163, para 5 (Building Research Establishment), Ev 294 (New Civil Engineer) and Ev 271, para 2 (HR Wallingford)
6 Professor David Pearce, The Social and Economic Value of Construction: the Construction Industry’s Contribution to
Sustainable Development, November 2004
7 Q 571 (BERR)
8 Ibid.
Construction matters 9
Construction’s clients
9. Table 1 below gives a breakdown of output by contractors in Great Britain, including
estimates of unrecorded output by small firms and self-employed workers, excluding the
construction products and professional services parts of the industry. It shows that the
public sector was client to just over 31% of construction output in 2006, making it the
single largest customer to the industry.17 Repair and maintenance contributes the largest
share of output, at 43%, followed by ‘other new work’ (31%), new housing (20%) and
infrastructure (6%).
17 Around 65% of infrastructure output stems from the private sector, with the remainder from the public sector.
10 Construction matters
Category £ million %
Source: BERR, Construction Statistics Annual 2007, Table 2.1, August 2007
The workforce
10. BERR estimates that close to 600,000 of the sector’s 2.8 million workers operate in the
informal economy, particularly in private housing repair and maintenance, and therefore
do not pay tax. We explore some of the implications of the size of the construction
informal economy in Chapter 5. Of the 2.2 million legal employees, around 90% are male
and more than 90% work full-time—both figures are significantly greater than the national
average. There is also a high level of self-employment, estimated at over 900,000—also
much higher than the national average—although this is subject to considerable seasonal
variation and does not take account of the informal economy. Although a higher number
than average hold trade apprenticeships, a greater proportion of people have either low or
no qualifications in the construction industry, and fewer have level 4 qualifications.
Migrant workers are also becoming increasingly important for the sector. Their share of
the construction workforce has risen from 2.7% to 7.7% in the last 10 years.18 But such
national figures mask considerable regional variation. Self-employment is more prevalent
in the South, corresponding to lower levels of trade apprenticeships and a greater
dependency on migrant labour. In London 42% of construction workers are migrants, and
89% of firms are self-employed contractors.19
reliance on sub-contracting. For most non-housing projects, main contractors will bid for
work on the basis of a fixed price, working to produce one-off designs for their clients and
sub-contracting the delivery of much of the work. Specialist sub-contractors, in turn,
further sub-contract work so that, for any particular project, a number of firms are likely to
be involved. The Specialist Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group told us around 85% of
the value of the industry’s output is delivered by a supply chain, containing specialist
contractors, suppliers and manufacturers. Yet despite the fact that the supply chain is a key
determinant of the success of a project, it often has comparatively little influence over
procurement decisions, design and costings—this being largely the gift of the main
contractor.20 Once projects are completed, teams tend to break-up, each moving on to the
next venture.21 Some will regroup and work together over a number of projects, though,
this is not yet the industry norm.
12. Not all parts of the construction industry function in this way. The construction
products sector more closely resembles wider manufacturing in its processes. Elsewhere,
the housing sector is characterised by the existence of developers who buy land and build
homes speculatively, rather than to order, although it still operates on a project-by-project
basis.22 The domestic repair and maintenance market also works slightly differently,
mirroring more closely the retail sector than other parts of the construction industry.23 In
addition, it has a higher proportion of firms with only a small number of employees.
13. Because profit margins are typically only 2-3%, the construction industry is particularly
sensitive to cost. Activities which are not immediately necessary risk being sacrificed to
ensure short-term profitability. All too often this can include investment in training, and
research and development. Three quarters of construction employers do not offer any
form of training. What is more, the project-based nature of large parts of the industry
means the workforce has to be mobile and flexible. Although this allows the industry to
respond quickly to changes in demand, it also means that companies are reluctant to invest
in their employees, since they believe the benefits are more likely to be reaped by other
firms.24 At the same time, the industry struggles to innovate because the learning points
from particular projects are usually team-based and lost when the team breaks up.
14. This industrial structure also helps explain the contrasting ways in which the sector is
perceived internationally and by the general public. The Construction Industry Council
told us that while the sector is “absolutely world-class, at the top, the public’s perception is
often conditioned by what they see in terms of the builder who comes to do a repair job in
their home”.25 The fragmentation of the industry is also reflected in the sheer number of
representative bodies, which BERR estimated at about 300.26 The plethora of construction
trade associations was demonstrated to us by the number of organisations we needed to
examine to ensure our evidence adequately reflected the views of all stakeholders.
15. The construction supply chain encompasses an extremely wide range of activities,
from quarrying to civil engineering to associated professional services. It is a highly
fragmented industry, dominated by small firms with very little vertical integration.
This, together with the inherently project-based nature of the sector’s work, has
profound implications for the way the industry operates. It uses sub-contracting
extensively, which in turn has consequences for the composition of its workforce.
Unreliable rates of profitability have repercussions on the sector’s approach to
investing in areas such as training and innovation, which are likely to be exacerbated
under current market conditions. Our Report looks at what can be done to overcome
the difficulties arising from the fragmented nature of the industry.
17. Four years later, the Construction Task Force, led by Sir John Egan, reiterated the same
themes in its 1998 report Rethinking Construction. It acknowledged that while the
industry’s “capability to deliver the most difficult and innovative projects matches that of
any other construction industry in the world […] there is deep concern that the industry as
a whole is under-achieving”. The report identified five key drivers of change: committed
leadership; a focus on the customer; integrated processes and teams; a quality driven
agenda; and a commitment to people. In support of these, the Task Force set three-year
targets for improvement in areas such as project delivery time, cost and quality, and for on-
site accident reduction. It also set up a demonstration projects programme, designed for
organisations from across the industry to bring forward schemes that demonstrate
innovation and new ways of working. This programme has been at the heart of the
implementation of what became known as the ‘Egan agenda’. In the intervening 10 years
there have been almost 500 such projects, worth around £12 billion and involving more
than 1,100 organisations.30
27 National Audit Office, Modernising Construction, HC 87, January 2001; Foreword written by Sir Michael Latham
18. While the construction industry and its clients responded positively to Rethinking
Construction, actual progress in the years after its publication was described by the industry
as ‘slow and patchy’ and we were told that “partnering and team-working arrangements
have often appeared to be ‘skin deep’ or have excluded the supply chain”.31 Government’s
response to this was, in 2001, to establish the Strategic Forum for Construction. Its role is
to oversee the implementation of the industry reform movement through its member
bodies, including Constructing Excellence, ConstructionSkills, the Union of Construction,
Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT) and the main Construction Umbrella Bodies.32
Chaired by Sir John Egan, the forum’s first output was the 2002 report, Rethinking
Construction: Accelerating Change. Building on the previous report, this set new targets for
achieving industry reform in a range of areas by the end of 2007:
• By 2006, a total of 300,000 qualified people to have been recruited and trained in the
industry;
• By 2010, a fully trained, qualified and competent workforce on all projects; and
• By 2004, 500 projects to have used the Design Quality Indicators (DQI), and 50% of all
publicly-funded and PFI projects (having a value in excess of £1 million) to be using
them. DQI is an online tool for evaluating the design quality of buildings.
19. Although the Strategic Forum has reported good progress against most of the targets
set by Accelerating Change, particularly for skills, the most notable exceptions have been in
adoption of the Clients’ Charter and in promoting greater use of integrated teams and
supply chains.34 On the latter the Construction Products Association (CPA) told us it had
proved difficult to measure exactly what was going on in the industry because what would
be defined as an integrated project team in one part of the supply chain would not be
integrated for another part. Nonetheless, the CPA told us “there is no hiding from the fact
32 The Construction Umbrella Bodies comprise the Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council,
Construction Products Association, National Specialist Contractors’ Council and Specialist Engineering Contractors’
Group.
33 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364-I, March 2005
that we have not moved anything like as quickly as the Accelerating Change report
intended or we would have liked”.35 The Minister responsible for construction also
accepted this view in evidence to us.36 We will refer back to the industry’s performance
against its recent targets throughout this Report.
20. At the time the Committee was taking evidence for its inquiry, the Accelerating Change
targets were near or at the end of their lifetime. The Construction Industry Council told us
it felt “the momentum has to some extent been lost” and that “it is important to find new
ways in which a new thrust of energy can be injected to ensure that we are driving ahead on
[…] some of the big policy challenges”.37 It is encouraging, then, that the Strategic Forum
has recently launched a new set of targets to push forward the Egan agenda for the period
up to 2012. These are set out in Table 2 below.
Table 2: The new Egan targets for the period 2008 to 2012
Procurement No specific interim target, but progress to Different parts of the industry (clients,
and integration 2012 target will be monitored on an annual consultants, main contractors, specialist
(Chapter 4) basis contractors,38 and product manufacturers
and suppliers) to be engaged in supply
chains on 30% of construction projects and
for 40% of their work to be conducted
through integrated project teams
Client 35% of client activity, by value, embraces the 60% of client activity, by value, embraces the
leadership principles of the Clients’ Commitments principles of the Clients’ Commitments
(Chapter 2)
Design quality 10% increase year-on-year from 2007 levels Continued 10% per annum growth from
(Chapter 4) in the proportion of projects using DQI in 2010 levels in both of the first two targets
civic (custodial, police, fire, courts and other
public projects), housing, and education
projects
Commitment to Net increase of 230,000 qualified people Net increase of 260,000 qualified people
people recruited and trained in the industry recruited and trained in the industry
(Chapter 5) compared with 2006 compared with 2006
35 Ibid.
38 These targets only apply to those specialist contractors involved in mechanical and electrical work. For other the
specialists the target is to establish by 2012 a mechanism for measuring integration in their sector.
Construction matters 15
Health and Reduce the incidence rate of fatal and major 10% reduction year-on-year in the incidence
safety injury accidents by 10% year-on-year from rate of fatal and major injuries from 2010
(Chapter 5) 2000 levels levels
Reduce the incidence rate of cases of work- 50% increase in projects offering a route to
related ill health by 20% from 2000 levels Occupational Health support from 2008 level
21. The targets are underpinned by the newly established Construction Commitments,
listed in the Appendix to this Report. The Commitments set out widely agreed current best
practice for construction industry and client behaviour. They are based on the 2012
Construction Commitments, which were developed to embed industry best practice in
delivery of the various construction works for the 2012 Olympic Games in London.
Throughout this Report we seek to identify how government can play its role in the
achievement of these targets.
22. The new objectives for construction also reflect the acknowledged growing importance
of sustainability in all aspects of the construction process. Although traditionally seen only
within the context of environmental issues, sustainability is increasingly accepted as having
both economic and social dimensions as well—often referred to as the ‘triple bottom line’.
The concept of economic sustainability involves achieving better value from construction,
rather than simply concentrating on minimising short-term costs. Social sustainability
embraces issues such as ensuring the industry’s workforce is trained to its full potential,
that it is treated with respect, and that it is representative of the wider diversity of the
working population. In turn, environmental sustainability encompasses not only the
construction process, but also the end-product—the built environment.39 For the industry
to be truly sustainable it must respond to each of these challenges. This is reflected in
BERR’s recently published Strategy for Sustainable Construction, and it is a key theme of
our Report.
23. Since its emergence from recession in the early 1990s, the construction industry has
been undergoing a gradual process of reform, which we hope will not be jeopardised by
the current economic downturn. The influential Latham and Egan reviews called for a
radical new approach to construction—one in which client leadership is key; where
there is greater collaborative working between firms within the construction supply
chain; and where its workforce is fully skilled. There has been progress on all these
fronts, but there is still the potential to achieve significantly more. As such, we
commend the industry’s decision to set new targets for taking forward the Egan agenda.
We also welcome the fact that these targets reflect the need to promote economic, social
and environmental sustainability in construction—the ‘triple bottom line’—themes
which underpin this Report.
25. The fact that government wears different hats in its dealings with the industry is in turn
reflected in the extent to which various parts of the public sector all have a strong policy
interest in construction. For example, BERR has responsibility for areas such as
construction legislation and payments practices, as well as overseeing implementation of
the Strategy for Sustainable Construction and the Egan agenda. It also takes overall lead for
central Government’s relations with the industry.40 However, the Office of Government
Commerce (OGC), which sits within HM Treasury, has the lead on procurement and
hence pushing for best practice in the public sector’s role as client. Elsewhere, the
Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG) is in charge of the Building
Regulations and planning policy, and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural
Affairs (DEFRA) is responsible for environmental regulation affecting the construction
industry. Skills and training provision is now split between the Department for Children,
Schools and Families (DCSF) and the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills
(DIUS), while health and safety regulation is in the remit of the Department for Work and
Pensions and its Health and Safety Executive. The Department for Culture, Media and
Sport (DCMS) also has a construction interest in areas such as design and architecture and
delivery of the 2012 Olympic Games. Various other bodies, such as the Commission for
Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE), the Sustainable Development
Commission, and the Construction Industry Training Board, also interface with the
industry. Moreover, nearly all departments (for example, the Department of Transport),
and every local authority, are clients to the construction sector. As such, they all have a role
to play in implementing construction policy.
26. This complicated picture partly reflects the highly complex nature of the industry itself.
However, we are not surprised that the Building Research Establishment (BRE)
characterised the sheer number of public sector bodies with an interest in construction as
“a completely fragmented mess”.41 This degree of fragmentation has several implications.
First, both clients and suppliers have to monitor and interpret policies, standards, and
regulations from a wide range of sources, some of which may overlap or contradict each
other. The Federation of Master Builders said this meant “never being quite certain where
you need to go” on different matters.42 In turn, the Construction Industry Council told us
that, despite the fact that BERR is the lead department on construction, it is hard for it “to
ensure really effective integration across central Government”.43
27. There is also difficulty in creating consistency in what constitutes best practice for
public sector clients. As the industry’s largest customer, government is in a powerful
position—the Construction Industry Research and Information Association said, it needs
to “have the wherewithal to behave as an intelligent client”.44 Although this is an area in
which the OGC has done a lot of work—an issue which we turn to in the next Chapter—
there is still concern about how best practice is actually enforced.45 The dispersal of skills
and expertise in construction across government inevitably and understandably makes the
industry fear that its views and interests are not well represented. It also reduces “the
government’s ability to influence, communicate and partner effectively with the
industry”.46
28. Despite the widespread concern about the fragmentation of responsibility for
construction, the Minister of State for Competitiveness was confident he was able to co-
ordinate the machinery of government to deliver the best outcomes for the industry.47 He
highlighted the Strategy for Sustainable Construction, which has been endorsed by six
separate departments, each of which is represented on a joint project board chaired by
BERR.48 Even so, the Minister has a broad portfolio. Construction is only one of 14
business sectors for which the post-holder currently has responsibility, alongside other
policy areas including oversight of the Shareholder Executive, corporate social
responsibility, business support simplification, and regional development. As one witness
noted, while there is a Minister for Agriculture—a sector that comprises just 1% of the
47 Q 578 (BERR)
economy—construction must compete with many other sectors for ministerial attention,
despite having far greater significance.49 Though the Minister told us he spent a
disproportionate amount of his time on construction issues, it is still understandable why
the industry feels it does not receive the top-level attention that its importance merits.50
This concern is exacerbated by the frequency of ministerial reshuffles affecting the post.
29. As client, regulator and provider of funding, government can influence the
construction sector in many ways. The most important is the purchasing power it holds
as procurer of almost a third of construction output. This is the main cross-cutting
theme of our Report. However, its ability to make effective use of its power is severely
hampered by the extent to which responsibility for different aspects of construction
policy and procurement is dispersed across government.
31. Nevertheless, we do understand and support the more general view put to us that
government needs some form of ‘champion’ for the sector.52 We believe this is best
provided at official rather than ministerial level. We have given this ‘champion’ the title of
Chief Construction Officer (CCO). The role would be to co-ordinate and engage with all
parts of the public sector that have a policy or procurement interest in construction, both at
central and local government level. Amongst others things, the Chief Construction Officer
could:
50 Q 573 (BERR)
51 Qq 292 (Federation of Master Builders) and 342 (National Specialist Contractors’ Council); Ev 232, para 29
(Construction Industry Council—East Midlands), Ev 295 (NG Bailey), Ev 311 (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors)
and Ev 255 (Federation of Master Builders)
52 Qq 274 (Construction Industry Research and Information Association), 286 (Building Research Establishment), 341
(National Specialist Contractors’ Council) and 344 (Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group); Ev 238, para 5.2
(ConstructionSkills)
Construction matters 19
• Enforce the adoption of best practice in procurement across the public sector as defined
by the Construction Commitments;
• Function as the single main point of engagement between government and the
construction industry;
• Seek to co-ordinate, as far as possible, the timing of major public sector construction
programmes or projects to facilitate planning by the industry.
32. All but the last of these tasks are currently undertaken by a staff of roughly 16 at BERR’s
Construction Sector Unit (CSU) in addition to the OGC. We envisage that the Chief
Construction Officer would have operational responsibility for construction in both
organisations. The post-holder would also be actively involved in policy and regulation
development in other Whitehall departments with a construction interest. He or she would
be adequately resourced to enable the carrying out of the functions listed above.
33. The Chief Construction Officer would be a senior official equivalent in standing to the
Government’s Chief Scientific Adviser or the Chief Executive of UK Trade & Investment.
Indeed, these posts offer the precedent for our proposal. Like them, the post-holder would
probably not have begun as a career civil servant. It would be essential for him or her to
have an in-depth knowledge of how the industry functions, wider private sector
experience, as well as an understanding of the workings of the public sector. This would be
necessary for them to command the respect and trust of the industry and to have sufficient
influence within government. They would also provide the long-term continuity that a
ministerial post will never be able to provide. We believe this would significantly address
the concerns of the construction industry about fragmentation without requiring a
significant reorganisation of the machinery of government.
37. Frequent clients are responsible for the greater part of the value of construction work—
about 60% by value. However, at any one time about 95% of the industry’s customers are
one-off or occasional clients.55 By their nature they have little or no experience of working
with the construction industry. As such, they are less likely to understand how the sector
operates and the importance of their role in ensuring success. This greatly increases the risk
of a project going off course—both the Scottish Parliament and Wembley Stadium, which
suffered massive delays and cost overruns, were commissioned by infrequent clients. The
nature of occasional customers varies enormously with, for example, the Olympic Delivery
Authority at one end of the spectrum, down to the procurement of a new school by a local
authority at the other end. (Home-buyers may also be categorised as infrequent clients, but
they are rarely tied to the purchase of a project before it has been built.)
53 Q 165 (ConstructionSkills)
55 Qq 441 and 443 (Construction Clients’ Group) and Ev 338, para 1.18 (Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group)
to a higher standard.58 The contractor has the security of long-term work, which also
means they are able to invest in their own capacity to deliver with greater confidence, for
instance, through the provision of training for their workforce. Hence, both the client and
the supplier can benefit in terms of cost, delivery time and the quality of the end-product.
However, framework arrangements are not a panacea. They need to be actively managed
by the client to impose the commercial pressure, which would usually come from
participating firms having to tender for every project. It is important that companies face
the threat of being taken out of a framework if they perform poorly.
39. The use of framework agreements began in the private sector, where they have
demonstrated some impressive results. In some cases clients have reduced their bidding
costs by up to a third.59 Tesco more than halved the delivery time of its projects from 40
weeks to 18.60 In turn, many parts of the public sector, such as Defence Estates and the
Highways Agency, have begun to adopt a similar approach. Constructing Excellence told
us that many local authorities also now have frameworks in place. Birmingham City
Council, for instance, has saved £8 million per annum in tendering costs.61
40. The public sector is catching up with the private sector in the use of framework
agreements, though there remains scope for improvement. Freestanding regional
frameworks are an innovative form of frameworks, developed by the public sector. They
are run by third parties, such as the regional development agencies, rather than being
managed by clients who instead pay for access. These have the potential to be used by those
parts of the public sector which are not frequent clients, and take-up should be improved.
Moreover, to get the full benefits of framework arrangements, contracts need to be
monitored and used properly. Constructing Excellence told us there could be “huge
improvement in the way in which framework contracts are managed downstream”.62
While clients are benefiting from reduced tendering costs, they are not performance
managing the frameworks rigorously enough to accrue their wider benefits.63 This problem
persists despite the availability of best practice guidance and support from a range of
sources, including Constructing Excellence through its Local Government Task Force.
41. Success in construction projects is driven by the knowledge and skills of the client.
Whether a construction client is frequent or infrequent is more important than
whether they function in the private or public sector. Frequent clients are more likely to
have invested in their capacity to fulfil their role, thus delivering benefits both for
themselves and their contractors. Infrequent or inexperienced clients are less likely to
have an understanding of the construction sector and the importance of their client
role. This poses greater risks for the delivery of their projects.
59 Ev 210, para 20 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
in terms of time, cost and quality. However, many public sector clients are not yet
managing their frameworks rigorously enough to achieve all their potential benefits.
One of the functions of the Chief Construction Officer, in conjunction with the
Department for Communities and Local Government and others, should be to ensure
wider use and more effective management of frameworks, where they are appropriate,
both at central and local government level.
44. The industry highlighted several factors that define a ‘good’ client. First, the customer
had to be clear and consistent about its needs from the outset. The success of the Emirates
Stadium was attributed in large part to the client having had a clear understanding of what
they wanted.65 In their memorandum, Constructing Excellence noted “most big projects
which have suffered in recent times have failed in the early briefing phase”.66 There are two
aspects to this. First, as pointed out by the Commission for Architecture and the Built
Environment (CABE), is the fact that the client’s objective for its building project
determines strongly its initial design. For instance, a prison with the primary purpose of
rehabilitation would be designed in a very different way to one whose main objective was
containment and security.67 Those objectives need to be clear. Secondly, a lack of clarity in
the briefing early on can also lead to changes in project scope later, which in turn can
impact heavily on overall costs and delivery time. It is worth noting, however, that the onus
here does not rest on the client alone. The industry itself should help the client ask the right
questions in the first place during the briefing process.68
45. Clients also need to understand that the successful delivery of a project is not
necessarily guaranteed by awarding the contract to the lowest bidder. Here, an appreciation
of what offers best value to the client in the long term is likely to result in a project that
meets fully the customer’s needs both in terms of the end-product and its operation over its
lifetime.69 This concept of ‘whole life value’ is one we look at in more depth in Chapter 4.
46. The importance of client leadership does not end once the initial briefing is complete
and a main contractor in place. A good client continues to be actively involved in the
project as it proceeds, working closely with the whole project team. This does not mean the
client should repeatedly tweak the scope of the work. Instead they should pay close
69 Qq 235 (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment) and 345 (National Specialist Contractors’ Council)
Construction matters 23
attention to the risks associated with the project, and allocate ownership of these to the
parties that are best-placed to manage them.70 This avoids the mutual recriminations and
delay that often ensue later on if a problem occurs. Ongoing client engagement is also
important for ensuring high standards of health and safety, and the promotion of
training—issues, which we explore in Chapter 5.
48. Following a review of its effectiveness, the CCG intends to revise the Charter to make it
more relevant. It will reflect the six key themes of the Construction Commitments, namely
procurement and integration; client leadership; design quality; commitment to people;
sustainability; and health and safety. The CCG hopes these new Clients’ Commitments will
be more relevant and accessible to all clients, frequent or occasional.74 In support of this,
the new industry targets include one for 35% of client activity, by value, to embrace the
principles of the Clients’ Commitments by 2010, and for 60% to do so by 2012.
49. The features of a ‘good’ client are the same whether they are frequent or occasional
customers to the industry. They include setting clear and consistent objectives,
appreciating the importance of value rather than cost alone, and active involvement
throughout the project to manage risk. Following its extremely poor take-up, we
welcome the industry’s intention to revise the Construction Clients’ Charter to reflect
the new Construction Commitments. This should provide a comprehensive outline of
what being a ‘good’ client entails. Once in place, we believe the Government should lead
take-up of the new Clients’ Commitments and contribute to the Strategic Forum’s new
target for client leadership by requiring all major public sector procurers of
construction works in central Government to become signatories within the next two
years. We expect local authorities to make a similar commitment, and look to the Local
Government Association to encourage this, recognising the benefits this would bring to
those authorities and their council taxpayers.
51. However, best practice information and guidance for occasional construction clients
cannot be put to effective use unless clients have access to the programme and risk
management skills that construction procurement requires. As the Institution of Civil
Engineers put it: “without these skills government will struggle to set realistic budgets and
timeframes, and to manage projects effectively”.77 While large spending departments need,
and can afford, a permanent pool of procurement staff, smaller departments and many
local authorities do not have access to such resources.78
52. There are ways in which this problem can be addressed. One example is the model used
by Partnerships for Schools, the body responsible for co-ordinating delivery of the
Government’s secondary school renewal programme, Building Schools for the Future. It
provides a centralised source of expertise that local government clients can draw on. It also
acts as a means of capturing lessons learnt and improving processes through, for example,
standardised contracts and products and more efficient design.79 Despite this and other
initiatives, such as NHS ProCure21, there remains a legitimate sense of frustration within
the construction industry that the opportunities for such joined-up approaches are still not
being fully realised and that procurement skills are spread too thinly across the public
sector.80
53. The 2002 Accelerating Change report recommended that inexperienced clients should
have some form of independent client advice to help them navigate the early stages of the
procurement process in particular, and all aspects of that process if necessary. It considered
that such mentoring would need to be free from vested interest as well as being in
accordance with the principles of the Egan agenda. The report, however, was not clear as to
77 Ibid.
79 Ev 210, para 21 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
80 Ev 295 (NG Bailey) and Ev 279, para 11.5 (Institution of Civil Engineers)
Construction matters 25
who would fund this initiative or whether it was meant for both private and public sector
clients. The Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group noted that the proposal has not
been widely implemented.81 Surprisingly, construction client skills do not currently form
part of the strategy for the sector skills council, ConstructionSkills.82 Rather, the Office of
Government Commerce has overarching responsibility for developing public sector
procurement skills. We look at this organisation in more detail in the next section.
54. Occasional clients in the public sector who lack sufficient procurement and
construction management skills should be able to draw on skills from elsewhere. The
centralised expertise provided by Partnership for Schools shows this can be done. The
Chief Construction Officer, in conjunction with the Office of Government Commerce,
should establish where such skills gaps exist across the public sector. Where deficiencies
are found, a process should be put in place to address the issue, involving the sector
skills council, ConstructionSkills, where appropriate.
57. Where the Process applies to a programme of activity rather than a single project, there
is also an additional Gate 0, which involves a strategic assessment of the whole programme.
At each of the Gates, a project is subject to an independent review by experienced
practitioners to assess whether the project is ready to proceed to the next stage. At the end
of each review, projects receive a ‘red’, ‘amber’ or ‘green’ status. Here, ‘red’ signifies the
83 www.ogc.gov.uk
26 Construction matters
58. The Gateway Process is mandatory for all medium or high risk procurement of goods,
services and construction by government departments and their agencies. Perhaps
surprisingly, the OGC does not, however, enforce its use. Instead it is for senior responsible
owners of projects to request reviews at the various gate stages. In 2005, the National Audit
Office reported some concerns about the take-up of Gateway Reviews, particularly below
departmental level where some agencies and non-departmental public bodies were
sometimes completely unaware of its existence. It also cited departments’ perceptions that
in some cases review teams did not possess the requisite skills and experience to add
value.84 At the time, the OGC stated its intention to address these concerns. The Office told
us the Gateway Process is “well respected” and that departments had now used it on 368
occasions in 182 programmes.85 Nevertheless, three years after the NAO’s report,
Constructing Excellence told us they were concerned not only by the small number of
Gateway Reviews conducted for construction projects, but also by the way the process had
not become embedded in public sector practice.
59. The Office of Government Commerce’s Gateway Process offers a means for public
sector clients to assess and monitor their procurement performance for construction
projects and programmes. We are disappointed by the low take-up of the Process. All
public sector construction commissioners should be aware of it. The effectiveness of the
scheme should be evaluated urgently, and action taken if the review teams lack
necessary expertise. Furthermore, and while the responsibility for initiating reviews
must rest with responsible senior officers who will be able to assess when projects are
ready, we hope the practicability of giving the OGC power to enforce its use will be
explored.
84 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364, Session 2004–05, March 2005
61. A year later HM Treasury estimated that more than 50% of contracts went over their
pre-tender budget and 66% exceeded their time estimates. As a result of both these sets of
findings, and seeing both the potential for significant performance improvement and
accompanying cost savings, the Department launched the Achieving Excellence in
Construction initiative. Conceived originally as a three-year programme, Achieving
Excellence set targets for improvement across departments in the areas of management,
performance measurement, the standardisation of processes, and integrated working—
reflecting the agenda set by the first Egan report, Rethinking Construction.
62. On the back of encouraging progress during the first three years, and following the
publication of the second Egan report Accelerating Change in 2002, the OGC launched a
new set of Achieving Excellence targets in 2003:
• On time;
• Within budget;
• By March 2005, for each key sector to reduce the average time period from the start of
procurement (Gate 2) to award of contract (Gate 3) by 25% for construction projects
taking over a year between Gate 2 and Gate 3, and 15% for all other construction
projects.
63. Responsibility for delivery of the strategic targets rested with departments themselves,
and applied to any construction project over £1 million in value. To support their
endeavours, the OGC published a set of Procurement Guides. These have been added to
over time and now comprise three core and eight supporting guides covering all aspects of
the construction procurement process, including whole-life costing, health and safety,
design quality, and sustainability. The OGC also put in place some systems to monitor and
report progress, which it continues to do. The most recent results for the first strategic
target are summarised in Table 3 below. This shows that departments fell short of the
Achieving Excellence targets in three out of four categories. In its 2005 report the National
Audit Office concluded that the Government had made significant progress since 1999
when only 25% of projects were delivered within budget and 34% on time.87 It stated that
the implementation of the Achieving Excellence best practice principles played an
important part in this improved performance.
86 Office of Government Commerce, Achieving Excellence in Construction Procurement Guide: Initiative into action
87 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364-I, Session 2004–05, March 2005
28 Construction matters
Table 3: Performance under the first strategic target of Achieving Excellence in Construction
64. However, two concerns arise from the OGC’s reporting of performance against the
strategic targets. The first is that the Office did not collect data to measure progress against
the second strategic target to reduce the period of time between Gate 2 and Gate 3. Second,
is the lack of any continued improvement in performance since 2005 for the areas defined
within the first target. Figures in Table 3 show a wide variation between half-year periods.
While such comparisons must be treated with caution because of differences in sample
size, it seems clear for the performance measures of time, cost and defects, that at best there
has been no further improvement in the two years since the end of the strategic targets.
More likely it seems that departments’ performance has actually deteriorated.
65. In its Information Note, the OGC states that it is investigating the underlying reasons
for the downward trends in performance through one-to-one meetings with participating
departments. It is worth emphasising here that the OGC does not have powers to enforce
or police usage of the Achieving Excellence best practice principles. Instead, its staff focus
primarily on monitoring progress and disseminating best practice. Indeed, even if the
Office did have these powers, the four people the organisation has dedicated to
construction policy would not be sufficient to enforce comprehensive take-up. As the
Construction Clients’ Group put it, “they have the guidance for public sector clients to
follow, however, they do not typically have the resource to turn that into action”.88
66. The Office of Government Commerce has used Achieving Excellence in Construction
as its primary means of driving best practice in construction procurement across the
public sector for almost a decade. The initiative played a key role in raising
performance during its early days. However, the most recent strategic targets for the
initiative expired more than three years ago. Departments’ performance since 2005
suggests there has been no further progress on the delivery of public sector projects on
time, within budget and with zero defects. This is not surprising given the OGC has no
powers to enforce use of its best practice guidance and there are only four people in
post to support the scheme. In short, Achieving Excellence is now more accurately
realising mediocrity.
67. In the wake of the launch of the new industry-wide Construction Commitments, we
recommend the Government reinvigorates the Achieving Excellence initiative by
establishing new targets for public sector construction project performance. The OGC
should also put in place performance measurement systems that collect data against all
of these targets—not just some.
69. At the time of their launch the Standards were generally seen to be “comprehensive,
practical and achievable, as well as cost effective” by all those departments that had taken
part in their consultation.90 Yet, in its evidence to us the industry was critical of the extent
to which parts of the public sector were actually enforcing their use. For example, the
Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group said “if you take local authority work […] there
is no indication that those minimum standards are applying or will be”.91 The Construction
Clients’ Group agreed.92 Part of the reason for this is simply a lack of awareness of the
Standards in the first place. Working with the Local Government Task Force, the OGC
sought to tackle this issue by holding a number of ‘road shows’ around the country during
2007 aimed at familiarising local authorities with the Standards.
70. As with the Achieving Excellence guidance, which underpins the Common Minimum
Standards, the OGC does not have the power to police use of the Standards by public
sector clients, nor does it collect comprehensive data to monitor compliance. Again, this
largely reflects the resources the Office has at its disposal. The SEC Group called for
government funding of all construction projects to be contingent on compliance with the
Standards.93 More generally, Constructing Excellence told us it felt the Standards needed
now to become “more outcome-orientated rather than prescriptive inputs”.94 In light of the
recent launch of the Construction Commitments and the expectation of a new set of
89 Office of Government Commerce, Common Minimum Standards for the Procurement of Built Environments in the
Public Sector, 2005
90 Ibid.
Clients’ Commitments, it may be time to re-visit and update the Standards to make them
more consistent with the principles now expected by the industry.
71. The Office of Government Commerce has set Common Minimum Standards for
construction procurement, based on the Achieving Excellence in Construction guidance,
which are mandatory across the public sector. Yet anecdotal evidence suggests their
implementation, particularly at local authority level, has been patchy, due in large part
to a lack of awareness. We believe the Government should now update the Standards to
reflect the principles set out in the new Construction Commitments. The OGC should
also work to promote greater awareness of the Standards; to measure their use across
the public sector; and to enforce compliance by central government departments and
their agencies. Local authorities, with the support of the Local Government
Association, should also comply with the Standards in the interests of the communities
they serve.
95 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364, Session 2004–05, March 2005
common goods and services. In support of this new approach, the OGC has made changes
to the Government Procurement Service (GPS), which brings together procurement
specialists working across central government. The Chief Executive of the OGC will head a
“reinvigorated” GPS that will more closely resemble the established Government
Economic Service and Government Statistical Service, which have their own graduate
entry routes.99 The GPS will also be more flexible, concentrating resources where they can
have the most impact, and will draw in private sector experience through secondment
opportunities.
74. Two other important aspects of Transforming government procurement are the
introduction of Procurement Capability Reviews (PCRs) and the setting up of a Major
Projects Review Group. PCRs are meant to assess how far departments’ procurement
meets the standards set by the OGC, and make recommendations for improving
performance where necessary. They involve the deployment of a small team of experts,
engaging intensively with departments over a short period, looking at all aspects of their
procurement, including construction. The Office aims to complete 18 reviews of
government departments by the end of 2008. It has already published the first tranche of
these, highlighting some serious concerns, particularly for the Department for
Communities and Local Government.
75. The Major Projects Review Group (MPRG), which is chaired by HM Treasury, is a
panel of commercial experts from across government whose role is to “provide advice on
the deliverability, value for money and affordability of the largest and most complex
procurement projects”.100 The points at which the MPRG scrutinises projects align closely
with Gates 1, 2 and 3 of the OGC’s Gateway Process. The aim of the Group is to provide
additional value over and above that added by the Gateway Reviews. Although its processes
are still developing, HM Treasury reports that departments have welcomed the additional
scrutiny provided by the MPRG. The Group is not focused solely on construction projects,
although these inevitably form a significant part of its workload. To date it has been
involved in a range of projects, including Crossrail, the Nuclear Decommissioning
Authority’s competition for Sellafield, and the Pandemic Influenza Preparedness
Programme.101
99 Ibid.
101 Ibid.
the Audit Commission has a staff of over 2,000 and the National Audit Office some 850.
The public sector spends some £125 billion a year purchasing goods and services. It would
be logical to increase the resources which go into preventing procurement problems from
arising at the outset and so reduce those that go into monitoring and dealing with failure.
77. Our second fear, voiced throughout this section of our Report, is the ability of the OGC
to police the use of its best practice tools and to ensure departments respond to
recommendations made through its Procurement Capability Reviews. It is not clear from
the Transforming government procurement initiative whether the Office will have the
powers it needs to address this issue. This is a significant challenge for the OGC if it is
improve procurement across the public sector.
3 Increasing capacity
79. Since the end of the recession in the 1990s the sector has had near continuous growth
in capacity, due in part to the ability to respond to demand and its openness to migrant
labour. In this chapter we look at the recent expansion of the construction industry, and
estimates for its future growth. We then look at the ways in which the industry’s capacity
has expanded in recent years, its ability to continue doing so, and the implications of any
constraints for construction price inflation. Finally, we consider what role government can
play as client to the sector to help it plan to meet future demands.
81. At the time we launched our inquiry, many commentators were predicting the
construction sector would maintain its recent growth in the years ahead. The expectation
was that any drop in public sector construction output would be offset by continued
growth in the private sector.105 However, in the wake of the US sub-prime mortgage market
crisis, this looks too hopeful. The Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors recently
recorded a slowdown in reported workloads, particularly in the home-building sector.106
Similarly, the latest government statistics show a 1% fall in new private housing work in
2007, compared to 2006. This was, however, offset by increases in output in other areas of
the construction industry with, for example, private commercial work 13% higher than in
2006. This meant that overall, the sector’s output grew by 2% in 2007, and its total
employment was also up by 5%.107
82. It is difficult to predict how the construction sector will fare in 2008 and 2009. The
latest Construction Skills Network report forecasts a decline or little change in activity for
much of the private sector. However, it anticipates this will be partly offset by growth in
public sector and infrastructure output.108 Non-housing public expenditure on
construction fell in recent years, though it is now expected to increase by 3.7% per annum
up to 2012, due largely to the Government’s Building Schools for the Future programme.
103 Qq 140 (ConstructionSkills) and 586 (BERR); Ev 208, para 4 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry
Council and Construction Products Association)
104 Ev 208, para 5 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
105 Unite—the union, Sustainable Solutions for the Long-Term Supply of Skilled Operatives to the UK Construction
Industry, 2007
106 BBC News Online, Housing decline hits construction, 31 March 2008
107 National Statistics, Output and employment in the construction industry 4th quarter 2007, 7 March 2008
108 Construction Skills Network, Blueprint for UK Construction Skills 2008 to 2012, March 2008
34 Construction matters
Public sector housing output is also set to grow by 2.9% per annum as the Housing
Corporation works towards its target to produce 45,000 social housing units annually by
2010–11.109
83. Expenditure on infrastructure is expected to outpace the rest of the industry with
annual growth of 5.7% in the period up to 2012. Whilst the Olympics is perhaps the most
high-profile construction project in the short to medium term (but still accounting only for
5% of construction work in the South East during this period), there are also a number of
other anticipated infrastructure projects.110 These include the East London Line and
Docklands Light Railway extensions; railway station redevelopment at London Victoria,
Reading and Birmingham; the M25 widening; Heathrow Terminal East; Crossrail; and the
Thames Gateway regeneration scheme. Nor is this growth in activity confined to the South.
Infrastructure work in Scotland is expected to expand by 6% a year between now and 2011,
whilst a new programme of investment in Northern Ireland will see expenditure of £14.4
billion in the next seven years.111
84. The construction industry has enjoyed a period of sustained growth for over a
decade, in sharp contrast to the cycles typical of much of the post-war era. Construction
output in parts of the industry, particularly house-building, is experiencing a sharp
downturn in the wake of the fall-out from the sub-prime mortgage market crisis. While
public sector expenditure is always subject to a degree of political uncertainty, in the
coming years the industry currently expects to benefit from rising infrastructure
investment and greater spending in areas such as social housing and education.
Labour supply
86. It seems likely that labour force growth will continue to provide one of the main means
of capacity growth in the short to medium term.114 Construction employment has risen by
109 Ibid.
111 Unite—the union, Sustainable Solutions for the Long-Term Supply of Skilled Operatives to the UK Construction
Industry, 2007
just under 500,000 in the past decade, although the rate of recruitment has remained
relatively flat, suggesting that the duration of employment in the sector has increased over
this period.115 The Construction Skills Network estimates that to meet the expected
expansion in construction output in the coming years, even taking account of a possible
slowdown, the sector will need to recruit an average of 88,400 new recruits in each of the
years up to 2012. This figure covers a range of skills and disciplines, including almost
10,000 extra workers in the electrical trades and installation sector every year, more than
12,000 construction professionals and technical staff, and 6,350 construction managers.116
Within this, there will be considerable regional variation. Double-digit employment
growth is anticipated in Wales, Northern Ireland and the East of England. In absolute
terms, though, the largest sources of demand will be London and the South East, requiring
over 28,000 new entrants in each of the next five years.
87. The new recruits needed in construction are expected to come from a range of sources,
including school-leavers and other domestic new entrants.117 We talk about increasing
domestic capacity in Chapter 5, but for the industry to provide capacity in the short term,
migration must also play an important part in meeting the future demand for new workers.
The UK’s ability to attract foreign labour explained why many organisations we spoke to,
such as ConstructionSkills and CABE, were confident that the industry would achieve the
increase in recruits it needed in the coming years, although there were likely to be
shortages for some specific skills and disciplines.118
88. The Department for Work and Pensions (DWP) told us migration has “long made a
small, but nevertheless important, contribution” to the UK’s employment needs and that
this is likely to continue in the future.119 For construction in particular its current estimate
of the number of migrants is around 144,000 out of 1.8 million manual workers in the
sector (although this does not take account of illegal workers).120 The extent to which the
industry depends on migrant labour depends on its location. In most of the UK the
proportion of migrant workers in construction is lower than in the wider working
population. However, the proportion of the construction workforce that is migrant labour
has risen from 4.6% in 2001 to 7.7% in 2006, and in London its share of employment has
risen from 21.5% to almost 42% during the same period.121
89. Although the UK has traditionally drawn migrant workers from countries such as
Ireland, the majority of those entering the sector in recent years have come from Eastern
Europe.122 Poland has been the chief source, followed by other countries that joined the EU
in 2004. Several organisations, including ConstructionSkills, emphasised that migrant
labour in construction is generally highly skilled and so mitigated the effects of domestic
118 Ev 208, para 8 (Construction Confederation et al), Ev 235, para 1.1 (ConstructionSkills), Ev 199, para 6 (CABE) and
Ev 262, para 28 (Greater London Authority)
122 Q 583 (BERR); Ev 313, para 4.1 (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors)
36 Construction matters
90. The increased use of migrant labour in the UK’s construction industry was not
welcomed by everyone. Unite—the union told us the UK was “over reliant on an imported
off the peg skilled workforce”.126 While it accepted the benefits that imported labour had
brought, the Construction Confederation considered that the current dependence on
cheap foreign labour reduced the incentives for firms to invest in more modern methods of
construction, and so was concerned that migration was a possible barrier to innovation.127
The Minister did not accept this, and cited the fact that wage growth in construction has
outstripped that of the rest of the economy as evidence that firms have not been able to
artificially depress earnings by using migrant workers.128 We are not convinced by this
argument. The fact that earnings in construction have outpaced the rest of the economy
might simply mean they would have been even higher if firms had not had access to an
external source of labour.
91. While the possible effects of migration on construction innovation are largely
anecdotal, there was a consensus that long-term reliance on migrant labour is not
sustainable. ConstructionSkills told us it believed East European migrant workers came to
the UK with the intention of accumulating savings for two to three years, before returning
to their home country.129 The recent decline in the value of sterling and increasing
construction wages in Poland are likely to draw workers back. The Minister too stated “we
may not be able to benefit from as many migrant workers in the future as we have done in
the past”.130 Reports suggest this process has already begun. There was a 10% fall in East
European migrants approved for work in the UK in 2007, compared to 2006.131 The
Institute for Public Policy Research also estimates that half of the one million migrant
workers who entered the UK since 2004 have now returned.132
92. One of the main sources of capacity growth in the construction industry in recent
years has been the availability of skilled migrant workers, predominantly from Eastern
Europe. This imported labour has helped mitigate the effect of skills shortages and
123 Qq 142 (ConstructionSkills) and 203 (Unite—the union, T&G branch); Ev 208, para 8 (Construction Confederation et
al), Ev 185, para 37 (Confederation of British Industry) and Ev 270, para 17 (Home Builders Federation)
131 The Independent, Tide of migration turns as Polish workers return, 27 February 2008
132 BBC News Online, Half EU migrants ‘have left UK’, 30 April 2008
Construction matters 37
facilitated the continued expansion of the industry. However, it will not provide a long-
term solution to the construction industry’s skills needs since, over time, most foreign
workers will return to their home countries. This means there is an ongoing need for
the UK to invest in its own construction skills base—an issue we return to in Chapter 5.
94. In the housing sector the HBF told us that it currently requires on average 15 and a half
months for a residential planning application to be approved and that the amount of land
coming through the system actually fell by 7% between 1997 and 2003.136 The Federation
saw this as the biggest single constraint on the Government’s ability to increase the rate of
housing new build in the UK.137 In the infrastructure sector too, there have been many high
profile examples of large-scale projects that were delayed significantly by the planning
system, including the newly opened Heathrow Terminal 5 and Sizewell B nuclear power
station.138
95. Although largely outside the scope of our inquiry, the planning system
fundamentally determines the capacity of the construction industry through the supply
of land, which can be developed and the uses to which that land can be put. This
constraint affects all parts of the sector, from quarry products, through house-building,
to infrastructure. The Committee looks forward to engaging further on this issue in the
next Session, when it will be scrutinising the National Policy Statement for energy.
138 We discuss proposed reforms to the planning system for new infrastructure later.
139 Ev 275, para 6.3 (Institution of Civil Engineers) and Ev 209, para 13 (Construction Confederation et al)
140 Building Cost Information Service, Tender price inflation to hit 4.8% in 2008, 6 February 2008
38 Construction matters
97. The City of London Corporation told us pressure from the Olympics was likely to lead
to a higher level of tender price inflation in the capital, although the Games were not
expected to result in prohibitively high price levels in the City.142 The Government’s own
estimates are for the Olympics to add 0.2% per annum to tender prices between 2006 and
2010.143 The more worrying issue is the impact of inflationary uncertainty on construction
contractors in long-term fixed price contracts. The Chartered Institute of Building
suggested this may have the effect of firms being unwilling to enter into contracts without
significant risk premiums being built into their bids.144 This could impact on projects such
as the Olympics, Crossrail and Heathrow East, all of which have long-term delivery
schedules.
98. Despite the offsetting factors of recent migration and the current economic
slowdown, a combination of high demand, skills shortages and rising input prices has
led to construction price inflation running at above the overall rate of inflation.
However, we cannot predict what the effect of the current industry downturn will be.
Construction price inflation poses a cost risk to construction firms on long-term
contracts. It also reduces the cost certainty for public sector clients of long-term
projects such as the Olympics.
100. As the largest client to the construction industry, the public sector could potentially
structure its work to give the sector’s supply chains the security to invest in their capacity.
The Construction Confederation told us the industry has “a great capacity to deliver when
it gets engaged early”.147 Buildoffsite said that engaging as early as possible with suppliers
helps to ensure that the optimum construction techniques are identified and gives them
time to plan for greater investment in manufacturing capacity and the required skilled
resources.148 Indeed, this view was echoed by most of the industry’s main representative
bodies.149 In evidence, the Minister himself also agreed that there is “huge potential […] for
the public sector in its procurement activity to be helpful to the industry, and indeed to
promote improvement”.150
101. While the public sector provides the most stable part of the industry’s work in one
sense, at the programme and project level it has often been characterised by volatility and
poorly co-ordinated demand. This partly reflects the political context in which the public
sector operates. That said, ARUP told us other countries, for example France, generally
have a greater capacity than the UK for the delivery of large infrastructure projects on time
and to budget because of their use of longer-term investment planning.151 In recent years,
there has been a growing acknowledgement in the UK of the importance of early
engagement with the construction sector to help ensure it can deliver the Government’s
investment pledges. For example, the spending review system provides an indication of
spending on public sector construction anticipated in the following three years, as do
longer-term planned programmes of expenditure such as Building Schools for the Future.
Elsewhere, Ofwat is setting out long-term investment plans for the water industry and the
Department for Transport is developing a 30-year national rail strategy. However, such
intentions are inevitably subject to the perennial uncertainty over longer-term public
spending plans. Statements of policy, such as the commitment for all new homes to be
‘zero carbon’ by 2016, also provide information to the construction sector on the direction
of travel of the Building Regulations and where it should focus its capacity investment.
102. In the area of planning, the Government is currently introducing a new single system
for major infrastructure. The reforms will include the establishment of National Policy
Statements to inform planning decisions on major projects. They have the potential to
make the consent system for infrastructure projects more predictable, which could allow
the construction industry to plan more effectively for their delivery, although, as the
Institution of Civil Engineers told us, this would have to be “accompanied by increased
cross-government planning of construction work flow”.152 Another change in planning
policy, this time at a local level, has been the introduction of Planning Policy Statement 3
on Housing, which entered into force in April 2007. This requires local authorities to
identify a rolling five-year forward supply of developable land sufficient to meet their
agreed housing requirements. This information should help developers to plan for the
148 Ibid.
149 Ev 209, para 15 (Construction Confederation et al), Ev 149 (ARUP), Ev 224, para 22 (Constructing Excellence), Ev 290,
para 5.C.d (National Specialist Contractors’ Council), and Ev 203 (Construction Clients’ Group)
152 Ev 136, Annex H (BERR) and Ev 276, para 7.2 (Institution of Civil Engineers)
40 Construction matters
longer-term, but house building rates will still depend on the strength of the housing
market.153
103. Despite these improvements in the Government’s approach, the construction industry
believes it could still do better. The Construction Products Association (CPA) told us that
while details of government spending plans were useful for the sector, firms would find it
more helpful if these were set out, for example, in terms of number of schools to be built
rather than overall expenditure levels. The CPA said it is “output targets, not input spend,
which interests us”.154 In addition, whereas some parts of the public sector have improved
information flow to the construction industry, there are many other areas where there is
still uncertainty and confusion because the Government either does not collect
information on progress towards a particular target, or does not communicate well when
programmes have been delayed or changed.155
104. The CPA produces an annual report which monitors and assesses the delivery of the
Government’s plans for investment in the built environment.156 It covers six areas of
activity—social housing, schools, the NHS estate, roads, the rail network, and water—on
which it scores the Government’s performance against its targets and makes
recommendations. In its most recent report the CPA gave three stars out of a potential five
for the public sector’s new build work, but only two stars for its efforts with the existing
building stock. The CBI also highlighted its concern about public sector procurement
delays.157 It found on average delays in the procurement process on health Private Finance
Initiative schemes amounted to £2.45 million on each deal. It also cited findings from the
Major Contractors’ Group of average delays of just under eight months for health projects
and seven and a half months for schools. The CBI argued that such procurement delays are
“costly to bidders and the taxpayer and seriously undermine the drive for value for money
and efficiency in public services”.158 More generally, the Construction Confederation told
us the public sector needed to be more realistic about the delays that tended to blight major
construction programmes.159 What is important is the flow of information to the industry
when such delays or cut-backs are anticipated.
105. Not only is it important for the Government to establish long-term programmes and
communicate progress and changes to planned delivery, it also needs to have adequate
phasing of projects to ensure a steady flow of work to the industry. This too will help its
supply chains keep together experienced teams that can move from project to project.160
This is also important where the timescales for major infrastructure projects overlap. For
instance, the Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors noted the general belief by those in
the industry that the Olympics, Crossrail and the M25 expansion would collectively need
careful co-ordination to avoid spikes in construction price inflation and delays to delivery
158 Ibid.
160 Ev 224, para 22 (Constructing Excellence) and Ev 203 (Construction Clients’ Group)
Construction matters 41
schedules.161 Yet the Institution of Civil Engineers told us at present “there is little evidence
of serious co-ordination”.162 In a recent report it argued that the Government needed to
provide greater client leadership to the construction industry on the demand for
infrastructure work. It called for the setting up of an independent national commission for
strategic infrastructure planning whose role would be to co-ordinate spending
programmes across the public sector and “bring an end to unpredictable, stop-start
procurement”.163
106. In recent years the public sector has responded to calls for greater co-ordination of
construction activity. A review by Sir Christopher Kelly in 2003 made recommendations
on the importance of engaging suppliers at an early stage and ways in which sharing supply
and demand information can enable better planning in the construction industry.164 This
work is now being led by the Public Sector Construction Clients’ Forum (PSCCF). In 2006
the PSCCF produced a report on construction demand and capacity. One of its key
findings was that, assuming there would be no restrictions on the use of migrant labour,
the UK would not face any significant general labour capacity constraints between now
and 2012, although there would be shortages in some specific areas such as project
management and design.165 The study also produced an econometric model to help
government analyse the impact of different scenarios and therefore inform investment
decisions. The Minister told us he thought the Forum “does give us the opportunity to
improve the flow of information to the industry […] about what is coming up”.166 These
developments, combined with the current work of ConstructionSkills to forecast future
skills needs, have the potential to enhance the construction industry’s long-term capacity
planning. However, they are still dependent on the provision of reliable and timely
information on construction demand from the rest of the public sector.
163 Institution of Civil Engineers, The State of the Nation—Capacity and Skills, January 2008
164 Sir Christopher Kelly, Increasing Competition and Improving Long-term Capacity Planning in the Government
Market Place, 2003
108. One of the responsibilities of the Chief Construction Officer should be leading the
Public Sector Construction Clients’ Forum’s work on capacity planning. The post-
holder should work with departments both to improve the flow of information on
construction programmes, and to advise on their co-ordination. As the industry’s
largest single client, the public sector ultimately benefits from such early engagement.
Construction matters 43
Key performance indicator 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007
% of projects on cost or better 50% 46% 48% 52% 50% 48% 45% 46%
% of projects on time or better 28% 36% 42% 44% 44% 46% 44% 58%
Source: Constructing Excellence in partnership with BERR, Industry Performance Report, 2007
111. It is not easy to provide an objective overall measure of design quality. However, client
satisfaction can give a subjective indication of the industry’s performance. Table 4 above
shows that, across the industry, client satisfaction has steadily increased in recent years,
both in terms of the end-product and whether it represents value-for-money. There has
also been a significant increase in the percentage of projects delivered on time, albeit from a
very low base. However, performance in terms of cost has barely changed at all—more
than half of reported projects went over budget. As the Construction Confederation told
us: “The evidence is not brilliant”.167 Overall, the construction industry is getting better
at delivering a quality product for the client, and the proportion of projects completed
on time has increased, but there still remains significant room for improvement in
finishing projects both to time and to budget.
113. Because the construction industry’s structure so clearly harms its performance the
main thrust of recent efforts to improve it have focused on the need for greater team-
working—what the industry refers to as integrated delivery. The Specialist Engineering
Contractors’ (SEC) Group described integration as “the bringing together of all the
processes involved in construction delivery—especially design and construction—into a
seamless whole”.169 The client, the main contractor, architects, sub-contractors, structural
engineers, etc should work together as a team and share collective responsibility for the
delivery of a project. Integrated teams, which are often co-located, should be established at
the outset to work together on the design, cost plan and allocation of risk before
construction begins. Everyone involved in the project team has a collective interest in
ensuring its success. The Construction Confederation cited industry estimates that
between 15% and 20% of project costs could be saved as a result of adopting a more
integrated approach.170
114. Integrated supply chains are able to move from project to project, and apply lessons
learnt on one project to the next. This gives firms greater confidence to invest in their
capacity, for example, by providing training for their employees or developing new ways of
working. As a result, the industry can further improve its performance. However, if they
are to survive integrated supply chains need the security of a long-term programme of
work. This is one of the main reasons why the development of framework agreements and
long-term government expenditure programmes are important to the industry.171 Without
them, it is difficult to hold supply chains together from project to project.
115. Integrated teams and supply chains were at the heart of both the Latham and Egan
reviews of the industry, and are a key part of the good practice guidance promulgated by
170 Ev 209, para 19 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
Constructing Excellence, the industry’s Strategic Forum, and the Office of Government
Commerce. The 2002 Egan report, Accelerating Change, set an ambitious target for 20% of
construction activity by value to be conducted by integrated teams and supply chains by
2004, and 50% by 2007. That has not been achieved. On using 2006 survey data, the
Construction Products Association (CPA) estimate that roughly 20% of projects use
integrated project teams, where the client’s team and the contractor’s team work together,
and no more than 15% use integrated supply chains.172 However, collecting data to assess
performance is not straightforward. The extent to which teams or supply chains are seen as
integrated often depends on the perspective of those involved. The SEC Group told us
clients working together with just their main contractor and designers may consider
themselves an integrated team. From the perspective of sub-contractors, who are
frequently excluded from such arrangements, no more than 5% of projects are
integrated.173
116. Whatever the actual figure, the Strategic Forum noted that while “more integrated
working is taking place … there is no hiding from the fact that we have not moved
anything like as quickly as the Accelerating Change report intended or we would have
liked”.174 The National Specialist Contractors’ Council (NSCC) attributed this lack of
progress to a “lack of engagement by clients and main contractors”.175 This is all the more
disappointing given the savings that integrated delivery could realise. The National Audit
Office’s 2005 report estimated that such collaborative working, in conjunction with the
application of other industry good practice, could generate savings of roughly £2.6 billion
per annum for the public sector.176
117. The industry’s main umbrella bodies remain committed to the promotion of
integrated working. They have agreed new, although slightly less ambitious, targets for
various parts of the sector—clients, consultants, main contractors, specialist contractors,
and product manufacturers and suppliers—to be engaged in integrated supply chains on
30% of construction projects, and for 40% of their work to be conducted through
integrated project teams by 2012. The Strategic Forum has also agreed an action plan of
activities to engage with the industry to help it meet the targets. Best practice in integration
and procurement is also one of the six themes of the new Construction Commitments.
118. The fragmentation of the construction industry has contributed to its poor
performance on delivery to time and cost. Integrated working not only improves value
for the client, but also allows time for firms in the supply chain to develop business
relationships with each other, creating an environment that encourages investment in
capacity and innovation. Despite the potential benefits for all involved, progress in
adopting integrated working has been slow. We welcome the new targets for the period
2008 to 2012. We are encouraged that the industry bodies have recognised their
responsibility. The Government should also play its part through, for example, effective
172 Ev 219, Annex (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
174 Ev 218 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
176 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364-I, Session 2004–05, March 2005
46 Construction matters
120. In spite of the advantages, the SEC Group told us the public sector had a poor record
of engaging the supply chain early. A survey of its members found that only 7% had been
appointed early on in the majority of government projects they had worked on. 44% of
firms stated that they had not been appointed at an early stage for any project. This is
surprising given that the SEC Group estimate specialist engineering firms contribute as
much as 70% of projects’ value.181 It is also disappointing given the prevalence of
framework arrangements in the public sector, which are supposed to support the
development of integrated teams. Overall, government is not doing enough as client to
engage with the supply chain early on—a key feature of integrated working. As a result,
the public sector is missing out on efficiencies that would deliver a cheaper and better
quality end-product.
177 Q 32 (Construction Industry Council); Ev 224, para 22 (Constructing Excellence), Ev 290, para 4.B.d (National Specialist
Contractors’ Council) and Ev 318, para 1.1 (Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group)
have massive effects on the benefits drawn from a project over its lifetime. In a workplace
this may include raised productivity for its occupants or, say, for a hospital, better health
outcomes for its users. By taking account of the lifecycle of the built environment, a
consideration of whole-life value can also contribute to achieving social and environmental
sustainability. As CABE told us: “It would change quite fundamentally what we build and
probably how we build it”.185
123. Government and the industry are promoting awareness among clients of the
importance of whole-life value when developing projects. On the industry’s side,
Constructing Excellence is undertaking research on the relative ratio of construction cost
to business value, to improve the evidence base in support of whole-life project appraisal.191
Elsewhere, the Construction Industry Council has led the creation of the Design Quality
Indicator (DQI), an online tool, launched in 2003, for evaluating the design of buildings.
There are several versions of the DQI, which procurers of buildings can apply according to
the different phases of the project. First, there is a ‘brief’ version, which aims to clarify the
client’s priorities and ambitions for a project. This is followed by a ‘mid-design’ version,
which allows the client and design team to assess whether their initial aspirations have been
met and for them to make adjustments. There are then ‘ready for occupation’ and ‘in use’
versions, which clients can apply later down the line. The aim of the process, which around
800 projects have now used, is to provide a more objective assessment of what can provide
best value for the client.192 A variation of it has now been developed for schools.
186 Ev 169, para 2-3 (Building Services Research and Information Association)
189 Q 213 (CABE); Ev 224, para 20 (Constructing Excellence), Ev 212, para 37 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA),
Ev 153, para 3.7 (ARUP) and Ev 311 (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors)
124. At the time of its launch, the Strategic Forum had set a target for 50% of publicly-
funded and PFI projects with a value in excess of £1 million to be using the DQI, or a
variant of it. The Construction Products Association told us, however, that although
considerable progress has been made, it has been difficult to measure performance. It did
note that in 2007 around 90% of new schools costing more than £1 million were using the
process.193 As part of the new industry targets for 2012, the Strategic Forum has set a
slightly less ambitious target for a 10% year-on-year increase in the proportion of civic,
housing and education projects using the DQI.
125. Government, too, has made some progress in encouraging a whole-life approach to
procurement. It has been a key part of the OGC’s Achieving Excellence in Construction
initiative. The Private Finance Initiative (PFI) is also meant to encourage decision-making
on the basis of whole-life value, because suppliers have responsibility for both the initial
construction and the subsequent operation of a project, be it a hospital, a prison or a
school. This creates an incentive for them to minimise costs over the building’s lifetime.
The CBI told us PFI has led to a reduction in construction times by 40% and cost savings of
more than 20%. Survey evidence of all 500 operational PFI schemes shows 72% reported
‘good’ or ‘very good’ performance in the service levels achieved by the contractor.194
126. HM Treasury’s Green Book, which provides guidance on the investment appraisal for
all public procurement, states that departments should take whole-life value into account
when making investment decisions.195 To this end, the OGC has recently published a
supplement to the Green Book looking specifically at whole-life value in construction. The
achievement of improved whole-life value by encouraging uptake of the new Construction
Commitments is also an overarching objective of BERR’s Strategy for Sustainable
Construction. However, BERR’s memorandum to the Committee acknowledges that:
“Ultimately, as well as value-for-money assessments, each department needs to take
account of what is affordable within its overall budget”. BERR also told us that applying a
whole-life value approach is challenging and that its success is dependent on the use of
“high calibre people with the appropriate skills”. The OGC is trying to address this issue
through the reinvigoration of the Government Procurement Service, which we discussed in
Chapter 2.196
construction, which the Office should now seek to embed in procurement practice
across government. It should support this by ensuring clients have the information to
accurately quantify whole-life costs and benefits. Finally, the Government should make
it mandatory for all public sector projects with a value in excess of £1 million to use a
structured mechanism for assessing their design, such as the Design Quality Indicator.
Collaborative contracts
129. The legal framework for contracts can affect the way in which parties behave. If
integrated supply chains are to function effectively, they need to be supported by
contractual arrangements which ensure risk is owned and shared by the entire project
team.199 They should also be transparent and non-adversarial in style. The Institution of
Civil Engineers’ NEC3 Engineering and Construction Contract has set the benchmark in
this area. First introduced in 1993 as the New Engineering Contract (NEC), it is a family of
contracts written in plain English and designed to foster partnership between employers,
designers, contractors and project managers.200 Other forms of standard contract such as
the Project Partnering Contract (PPC 2000) and the JCT Constructing Excellence (JCT
CE) Contract adopt a similar approach, with the encouragement of collaboration being at
their heart.
130. Both the National Audit Office and the Office of Government Commerce have
recommended the use of collaborative contracts by public sector construction clients.201
However, evidence we received suggested their use is far from universal. The Specialist
Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group highlighted Network Rail and the Building Schools
for the Future programme as examples where traditional contractual arrangements, which
pass risk along the supply chain, are still in place.202 More generally the SEC Group
criticised the public sector for having in place a “vast array” of “unnecessarily complicated
and lengthy” construction contracts for different procurement methods and buildings. The
Group argued that the proliferation of different contract forms with varying risk/reward
201 National Audit Office, Improving Public Services through better construction, HC 364-I, March 2005
131. A related issue raised by the SEC Group, the Heating and Ventilating Contractors’
Association (HVCA) and the Confederation of Construction Specialists was the use of
bespoke rather than standard form contracts by main contractors.204 They argued that such
bespoke contracts tend to use the industry’s traditional approach of passing risk down the
supply chain. This often occurs despite the fact that the contract between the client and the
main contractor itself reflects a fair apportionment of risk. For example, even though the
client and main contractor may use the NEC3 Engineering and Construction Contract, the
main contractor is not obliged to reciprocate the same arrangements with their supply
chain unless the client tells them to do so. The SEC Group cited evidence from 2005 that
only 38% of firms were content with the contractual terms on offer on the majority of
projects. Arguably such arrangements are not conducive to the development of integrated
supply chains.205
Project insurance
133. Traditionally, insurance arrangements in the construction industry have aimed to
protect the individual rather than the team.206 Project participants are frequently required
to have a number of different insurance policies, including professional indemnities
policies and product liability policies. As a result, any one construction project may be
covered by a plethora of different and potentially overlapping policies. The SEC Group
cited evidence from the Reading Construction Forum that around £1 billion is wasted
every year on insurance cover that provides for the same types of risk.207 Constructing
Excellence also told us that insurance is a problem, “with redundant layers of consultant,
contractor and supplier cover which often do not protect the client anyway”.208
Furthermore, because these insurance policies are activated on proof of liability, this can
lead to defensive behaviour on the part of contractors and sub-contractors. The process of
204 Ev 203, para 6-7 (Confederation of Construction Specialists), Ev 342, para 2.9 (Specialist Engineering Contractors’
Group) and Ev 264, para 13 (HVCA)
apportioning blame is also costly and can swallow up the bulk of what is paid out on a
policy.209
134. One innovative approach has been the development of Integrated Project Insurance
(IPI), where the client has one insurance policy that covers the entire integrated team—
client, contractors and sub-contractors. The whole project is insured against a target
budget that has been agreed by the insurer and the project team. The insurer covers
financial loss incurred above the target budget, subject to any agreed deductible, which is
shared between all members of the team. Correspondingly, any benefits from out-
performing the target budget are also shared among the project team. This aligns the
interests of all members of the team to help ensure the project is a success.
135. BAA used a form of IPI on its recent Heathrow Terminal 5 programme. Its
application there was cited to us as an underpinning factor in the Terminal’s construction
on time and on budget.210 However, Constructing Excellence told us the concept “needs
some learning from demonstration projects before it can be promoted with confidence”.211
The SEC Group told us a number of brokers and insurance companies are interested in
supporting such pilots.212 In turn, the Minister responsible for construction said a health
service project managed by NHS Estates was currently piloting the concept to see if it could
be more widely applied for the public sector.213
136. Integrated Project Insurance provides single cover for the entire project team, and
could foster integrated working by encouraging the collective ownership of a project’s
target budget. It is an emerging concept, but one that could deliver benefits for all
members of the project team. We encourage the OGC to set a target for the approach to
be piloted across a range of departmental construction projects so it can be properly
evaluated.
Fair payment
137. Integrated working can only succeed if there is a culture of fair payment throughout
the construction sector. The hierarchical structure of most industry supply chains means
that payment tends to flow from the client to the main contractor, who then pays the
project’s sub-contractors, who in turn pay their own sub-contractors. Both the main
industry umbrella bodies representing sub-contractors—the National Specialist
Contractors’ Council (NSCC) and the SEC Group—told us there remains a “deep-seated
culture among main contractors of delaying, reducing or simply avoiding payment to their
sub-contractors”.214 At worst, poor payment practice can lead to firms’ insolvencies. In this
section we consider current payment practices in the construction industry, and
particularly the issue of retentions. We then look at the various ways in which the
Government has sought to address the issue in recent times, including by amending the
Construction Act, and what further work it can do.
Retentions
138. Retention is a contractual mechanism, whereby a proportion of all payments made to
a main contractor is held back by the client until expiry of the defects liability period of the
main contract. This is usually about 12 months after the completion of the project. The
practice tends to be mirrored down the supply chain, with the main contractor holding a
retention against its sub-contractors. The sum held is usually around 3-5%. As a rule, half
the retention is paid to the sub-contractor upon completion of their work on a project. The
other half is paid on receipt of the final certificate or ‘making good defects’ certificate.215
The practice is common throughout the construction industry. A recent survey by the
NSCC estimated the total amount currently held in retention against its members at about
£950 million.216 The SEC Group estimate a total of £3 billion is held across the industry at
any one time.217
139. For many clients, retentions may provide a means of protecting themselves against a
poor quality end-product. However, the HVCA told us: “Retentions do not promote
quality; this is achieved through rigorous qualification and inspection procedure and
engendering positive relationships”.218 For infrequent clients, though, it is easy to see why
they use retentions as a means of insurance. This is less the case for frequent clients, where
there is always the option of withholding future work. The SEC Group told us a particular
concern was the practice of many local authorities withholding retentions, not as a means
of protecting themselves against poor quality service, but to use the money for other
purposes or just to earn interest.219
140. Retentions are a major concern for sub-contractors, and particularly for small
businesses. The NSCC noted that sub-contractors involved at the very early stages of a
project often have to wait years before the retention is paid.220 Even then, more often than
not, it is not paid automatically. Rather sub-contractors have to pursue payment
themselves. In some instances companies have reported up to 20% of their turnover being
tied up in retentions.221 This has major implications for firms’ ability to invest. The SEC
Group cited evidence of how firms might otherwise have used retention monies: 20% said
they would invest in more training; 14% said they would employ more operatives; 13%
stated they would invest in IT; and 10% would invest in new equipment and tools.222
Furthermore, only about a quarter of contractors are ever requested to return and rectify
defects—the main rationale for holding a retention in the first place.223
141. Overall, retentions can undermine efforts to create integrated supply chains by
promoting a lack of trust between firms. The practice is also divisive because main
contractors tend not to deduct retentions from other team members such as consultants
and manufacturers.224 Our predecessor Committee looked specifically at this issue over five
years ago. Its Report concluded that retention “is an out-dated practice that should not be
necessary in a modern, productive industry which delivers a high quality product”.225 In a
follow-up Report the Committee concluded that “departments should set an example to
other public sector procurers and the private sector and work to eliminate the practice of
retention as soon as possible”.226 Indeed, government has other means by which it can
protect itself against poor quality end-products. For example, framework arrangements,
which we considered in Chapter 2, effectively managed can provide an incentive for firms
to make good any defects or else be denied further work.
142. A number of large companies, such as Sainsbury’s, BT and Yorkshire Water, have
already stopped holding retentions. However, as the construction industry’s largest client,
the public sector is in a powerful position to instil the culture change necessary to phase out
retentions entirely. Some parts have already done so, including the Highways Agency and
Defence Estates and a smattering of local councils. Yet, there remains room for
considerable progress. Even where government departments have a policy of no retention,
this is often not enforced down the supply chain. This enables the main contractor to earn
interest on the monies held against its sub-contractors.227 Overall, the Building Services
Research and Information Association (BSRIA) highlighted survey evidence stating that
just 7% of building services contractors reported satisfaction scores of eight or more out of
ten with respect to retentions. 37% gave the lowest score possible.228 This suggests the
sector has not made a great deal of progress during the intervening years since we last
considered this issue.
225 Trade and Industry Committee, Second Report of Session 2002-03, The use of retentions in the UK construction
industry, HC 127, November 2002
226 Trade and Industry Committee, Fifteenth Report of Session 2002-03, Retaining Retentions? Comments on the
Government’s response to the Committee’s Report on the use of retentions in the UK construction industry, HC 976,
September 2003
145. Central Government construction clients have been expected to adopt the principles
of the Guide and the Charter since January 2008. BERR told us the OGC is currently
putting in place processes to measure clients’ compliance.229 The Minister responsible for
construction also told us that if “people […] come across examples of agencies in the public
sector not complying with best practice I would like to know about it, and I would be very
happy to take action in response”.230
146. We welcome the introduction of the ‘Fair Payment’ Charter. The OGC should
ensure all central government construction clients have affirmed their adoption of the
Charter by the end of 2009. The Office should then aim for all local authorities to have
signed up to it by the end of 2010. The OGC’s monitoring of implementation should
ensure that clients are adopting the principles of the Charter throughout the
construction supply chain, and not simply between themselves and their main
contractors. Where construction firms believe their client is not abiding by the
principles of the Charter, we urge them to make representations to the Minister and to
the OGC.
148. The surety and transparency of cash flow brought by a project bank account can help
facilitate integrated working. Sub-contractors no longer have to price in the risk of late or
no payment. The process also decreases financing charges across the supply chain and
reduces the impact that the insolvency of a firm may have on those it owes money. The
SEC Group cited a survey of its members, which found 65% thought their costs would be
reduced through the use of project bank accounts. The majority of respondents believed
their costs would reduce by up to 5%.231 Both Barclays and Bank of Scotland have now
begun to offer project bank accounts for construction customers, which BERR described as
“welcome progress”.232 However, the National Specialist Contractors’ Council (NSCC) told
us an issue still to resolve is that the industry has not yet demonstrated to clients how such
accounts can help them better manage their projects.233 Indeed, because they are a fairly
new financial product, there is still a relatively low level of awareness amongst infrequent
construction clients that project bank accounts are available.234
149. Both the Office of Government Commerce and the National Audit Office have
endorsed the use of project bank accounts as a means of improving payment practices
and facilitating integrated working. Central government procurers should now start to
make use of project bank accounts, where practicable and cost-effective. The OGC
should monitor take-up and evaluate the benefits.
• requires the payer to give the payee early communication of what is to be paid;
• provides that the payer may not withhold monies unless they have communicated in a
notice the amount they intend to withhold from the sum due, and the grounds for
doing so;
• provides that the payee may suspend performance when the amount due is not paid by
the final date for payment; and
• prohibits contractual terms which make payment dependent upon the payer being
paid.235
151. The overall aim is to provide sub-contractors with “fairer, quicker, and simpler
mechanisms to ensure certainty of payment”.236 The Act also requires adjudication
procedures to be set out in construction contracts. This gives any party to a construction
contract the right to have a dispute resolved by an adjudicator. Their decision is binding on
the parties until the dispute is finally decided by arbitration, litigation or agreement. The
process is meant to be quicker and more cost-effective than legal proceedings or
arbitration.
152. Although the Act significantly improved payment and dispute resolution procedures
in the construction industry, the SEC Group, and others told us firms’ interpretation of it
quickly brought to light a number of weaknesses in its provisions. These include the fact
that contracts can still be drafted to enable the payer to delay payment by making spurious
challenges to a payment claim, or just by ignoring the claim and forcing the payee to go to
adjudication. In addition, although the Act requires the payer to notify the payee of the
amount they intend to pay, there is no sanction for failure to give notice, and, in practice, it
is rarely given. Furthermore, in response to the ban on ‘pay when paid’ clauses, firms have
tended to use ‘pay when certified’ or ‘pay what is certified’ provisions instead. Weaknesses
in the adjudication process have also become apparent. Challenges to the adjudicator’s
jurisdiction have increased the cost of adjudication, while bespoke procedures inserted into
contracts have increased the process’s complexity. In addition, these procedures often
impose upon a party an obligation to meet the other side’s legal costs.237
153. Since 2004, the Construction Act has been subject to review and a consultation,
outlining a number of proposals. The Department held a second consultation in 2007.
Over summer 2008 BERR will conduct what it hopes will be a final technical consultation
on the specific clauses it intends to insert into the Act. These include:
• Removing requirements for the construction contract to be in writing. This will allow
more disputes to be referred to adjudication, and will remove the potential for one of
the parties to challenge the adjudicator’s jurisdiction on the grounds that the entire
contract is not in writing;
• Introduction of a statutory framework for the costs of adjudication. This will make
ineffective any contractual clause on the allocation of the adjudication costs;
• Removal of restrictions about which party can issue a payment notice. Whether it is the
payer, payee or a third party will be a matter for the parties to agree in their contract;
• Introduction of a ‘fall back’ provision, so that if the payer fails to issue a payment
notice, the payee is able to do so;
• Prohibition of ‘pay when certified’ clauses. This should create greater clarity on when
payments become due and what the sum due is;
• Clarification that the payer must always submit a withholding notice to the payee when
they intend to pay less than the sum due, except in cases of insolvency; and
154. The Minister responsible for construction told us that “by and large the Construction
Act has done a good job […] and that is the general view across the industry”.239 The
changes the Department wishes to make are aimed at improving cash flow and
encouraging the resolution of disputes by adjudication. However, the Minister also said
that the industry has to “find a consensual way forward”.240 The process has taken so long
primarily because it has been difficult to reach an industry-wide consensus. Indeed, just
before the 2007 consultation the Construction Confederation and others told us that (with
the exception of improvements to the adjudication provisions) given the existence now of
the ‘Fair Payment’ Charter, further changes to the Act on payment practices were
unnecessary.241 On the other hand, the SEC Group and the HVCA felt the Government’s
current proposals did not go far enough.242 The Department’s intention is to ‘piggy-back’
the amendments on the forthcoming Community Empowerment, Housing and Economic
Regeneration Bill, which the Government plans to introduce during the 2008–09 Session.
This would mean the clauses could be on the statute book by autumn 2009. However, this
is dependent on the feedback BERR receives from its consultation on the draft clauses, as
well as progress with the Bill on which the Department is ‘piggy-backing’. The fact that the
Bill is being sponsored by a different department poses an additional risk factor.
155. The Construction Act provides the legal foundations for successful team-working.
However, it is widely accepted that it still has some weaknesses. After years of
consultation the Government has developed proposals, which it believes will address
many of the industry’s concerns, particularly those of sub-contractors. They appear to
strike a sensible balance between the interests of main contractors and sub-contractors.
BERR’s aim now should be to ensure the amendments fulfil the policy objectives the
Department has set out, and do not leave room for exploitation. It is vital that the next
Session’s opportunity to reform the legislation is taken.
Measuring performance
156. Integrated working give teams an incentive to evaluate their performance in terms of
how they have met the client’s original objectives, and learnt lessons for the future. This
process, often referred to as post-occupancy evaluation (POE) is essential for teams
working together on repeat projects.243 POE involves the in-depth analysis of how well a
new or refurbished building is performing; how it is affecting those who use it; and how it
meets the operational needs of its occupants.244 It should take place at the time when the
main contractor hands over a building to the client, and over subsequent years to assess
241 Ev 214, para 58 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
242 Ev 263, para 11 (HVCA) and Ev 323, para 3.9-3.17 (SEC Group)
whether the original investment case for the building has been met and what might have
been done differently.245
157. Generally, the design and construction team has little incentive to spend time handing
over a new building to its new occupant because at that stage their contractual obligations
are minimal. Where a building contains a high level of innovative content, the client is
often poorly placed to make those innovations work because the construction team has not
briefed them on how to do so.246 The Building Services Research and Information
Association (BSRIA) note that if buildings do not function as intended from the outset, this
can undermine their performance over their lifetime—“teething problems can become
long-term chronic shortcomings”.247 Hence, it recommends setting aside a proportion of
the contract value—between 0.25% and 1%—to carry out a ‘soft landing’ handover.
158. The features of a ‘soft landing’ should include fine-tuning of the building to iron out
any defects, as well as professional aftercare by the designers during the first year of
occupancy, for example through energy-use assessment and occupant surveys. As yet, the
approach has only been used once for a pilot project at the University of Cambridge. Its
benefits there included greater clarity during the briefing and early design stages that
reduced re-working by the design team; more effective building readiness; and better
feedback to the designers and constructors to improve future buildings.248 BSRIA told us
there is not yet a full methodology that defines the procedures for carrying out a ‘soft
landing’. It is currently working with the Usable Buildings Trust to develop a toolkit for
wider adoption by the construction industry.
159. At present relatively little public sector construction output is subject to any form of
post-occupancy evaluation. Tools such as the online Design Quality Indicator (DQI),
discussed earlier in this Chapter can assist firms and their clients to assess the quality of
their buildings. However, they are not yet used as standard. Where they are, the results
have been worrying. The Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE)
has a service level agreement with Partnership for Schools to evaluate the performance of
new secondary schools.249 In 2006 it published results for 52 schools in which it categorised
50% as ‘mediocre’ or ‘poor’, 29% as ‘partially good’, 15% as ‘good’ and just 4% as ‘excellent’.
Most of those schools scoring highest had been built in the last year of the study, suggesting
that construction teams were applying lessons learnt from earlier projects. Last year CABE
also published findings from a national housing audit in which it found 82% of new
housing built over the last five years failed to measure up on design quality, with 29% of
developments being so poor they should not have received planning permission.250 Results
such as these emphasise the importance of evaluating buildings after completion and using
this information to inform future construction work.
250 Ev 199, para 11 (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment)
Construction matters 59
160. Post-occupancy evaluation is not a new concept. Indeed, the DTI carried out a
number of POE studies in the late 1990s and one of the Achieving Excellence in
Construction guides focuses specifically on project evaluation. The OGC’s Common
Minimum Standards also recommend use of the DQI to evaluate project success. However,
CABE, Constructing Excellence and others argued that government needs to invest more
in monitoring and evaluating the performance of existing and completed buildings in
order to provide a feedback loop between project teams and clients.251 To this end, CABE
recommended the development of a ‘comprehensive living database’ to inform the way in
which buildings are designed, constructed and operated. In response, the OGC told us
POE would be mandated from April 2008 for all central government clients, through its
Property Benchmarking Service, which has been in development since 2006.252 The initial
pilot saw the introduction of a standardised framework for measuring the performance of
the government estate against a range of indicators, including workplace productivity and
environmental sustainability. The OGC has also set up a database to track performance
annually and draw comparisons across departments.
161. Integrated working should give teams an incentive to evaluate their performance
and apply lessons learnt to future projects. Greater use of post-occupancy evaluation
(POE) has the potential to benefit construction teams, their clients, and future clients
through increased use of evidence-based design. We welcome the OGC’s decision to
mandate POE for central government departments, building on its initial pilot project,
although we note that the work is mainly focused on office buildings. Once established,
the scheme should be extended to cover all parts of the public sector as soon as possible
to collect information on a range of different types of building. We hope the OGC and
the industry will be able to use the information gathered to inform the construction of
future public sector buildings.
162. Overall, integrated team working can provide the way out of the vicious cycle of
adversarial relationships and poor performance that have characterised the
construction industry for so long. This Chapter has outlined a number of ways in which
this can be facilitated. However, it requires a culture change by all the sector’s
participants—clients, contractors and sub-contractors. As the single largest
construction client, government should be taking the lead in tackling that challenge.
251 Ev 201, para 26 (CABE), Ev 179, para 31 (Buildoffsite), Ev 171, para 25 (BSRIA) and Ev 229 (Constructing Excellence)
Self-employment
164. Over 900,000 people in the construction industry are defined as self-employed—a
much higher proportion of the workforce than for other industries. This is in addition to
the further 600,000 workers in the informal economy. The status of self-employment
defines the relationship between a person and the company they are undertaking work for
as subject to commercial rather than employment law. For the individuals concerned, the
main motivation is essentially about tax, whereas for contractors engaging self-employed
workers, it provides greater flexibility in terms of engagement and contract termination.253
165. Although self employment has advantages, it also has drawbacks for both the
employee and employer. A self-employed worker does not receive a number of the rights
to which a direct employee is legally entitled. These include holiday pay, sickness benefit,
pension provision, medical healthcare and occupational healthcare. Furthermore, the
Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians (UCATT) told us it is hard to
organise health and safety provision for self-employed workers. Not only is the risk of an
accident greater, they also do not have the employer protection to ensure their financial
well-being in the event of an accident. As the union said, “the family goes on the breadline
because there is no back-up”.254 Self-employed workers also have less access to training.
Contractors who directly employ their workforce have a greater incentive to invest in their
employees’ skills so as to make them more productive to the company over time.255 Too
great a dependence on self-employed workers therefore threatens the industry-wide
availability of skilled labour in the long term.256
166. In general, the unions supported the mandating of direct employment for all public
sector construction clients.257 However, the Minister responsible for construction told us
there is “a perfectly proper place for genuine self-employment” and that “how the industry
256 Unite—the union, Sustainable Solutions for the Long-Term Supply of Skilled Operatives to the UK Construction
Industry
organises itself must be a matter for the industry”.258 Government can create the incentives
for contractors to take on more direct employees by providing a steadier stream of work
for the industry. As we discussed in Chapters 2 and 3, it can do this both through the
setting up of framework arrangements and through its long-term construction
programmes, such as Building Schools for the Future.259 In addition, Constructing
Excellence told us there are recent signs that firms are rediscovering the competitive
advantage of direct employment, through the benefits it brings to their employees and the
reflection of this in the quality of the end-product.260 It remains to be seen whether this
trend will continue through the current industry downturn.
‘Bogus’ self-employment
167. The level of self-employment in construction is so great that the sector has a specific
Construction Industry (tax) Scheme (CIS), which sets out the rules for how contractors
must handle payments to their sub-contractors—in particular whether they should be
categorised as self-employed or direct employees. Sub-contractors defined as self-employed
have a standard tax rate of 20% deducted from their payments, although UCATT told us
the effective rate can be as low as 9% because workers are able to claim money back for
expenses.261 Directly employed workers, on the other hand, are subject to the same tax
regime as all other employees in the UK, paying income tax at the basic rate of 20%.
However, they and their employers must also make National Insurance Contributions.
Because self-employed workers and their contractors make lower contributions than those
for direct labour, there is a financial incentive on both sides for workers to be classified as
self-employed. ‘Bogus’ self-employment is where this tax differential is exploited through
the wrongful categorisation of workers as self-employed when, to all intents and purposes,
they are actually direct employees. As UCATT put it: “This is a tax subsidy, a tax fiddle,
nothing else other than that”.262
262 Ibid.
169. UCATT believe the practice is rife across the construction industry, but particularly
prevalent among migrant workers. Its own research on Polish workers found almost all to
be self-employed, often not getting a choice in the matter as it is a condition of being
hired.265 The union’s memorandum states that there have been cases of workers being
signed up for ‘bogus’ self-employment schemes in the UK even before they have left their
home country. In addition to not having the employment rights of direct employees, such
workers may also experience high and unfair deductions from their wages by employment
agencies to cover expenses such as accommodation. Unite argued that migrant workers are
often discouraged from talking to union representatives when on site, which makes it
difficult for them to access information about their employment rights in the UK.266 The
problem is particularly acute in the South and London where self-employment constitutes
89% of firms and migrants form 42% of the workforce.267 Although a proportion of these
firms represent genuine self-employment, even by the Government’s conservative
estimates, a sizeable number will be ‘bogus’ self-employed.
170. Not only does ‘bogus’ self-employment have implications for the workforce, it also has
consequences for clients.268 For example, in the housing repair and maintenance sector,
clients have little opportunity of recourse against companies who supply ‘bogus’ self-
employed labour when they receive poor service. As UCATT told us, “if something goes
wrong then the company goes into liquidation and then sets up next week as another
company”.269 The client is left high and dry.
171. ‘Bogus’ self-employment also costs the Exchequer income tax and national insurance
contributions. Work undertaken by the University of Manchester for UCATT in 2001
estimated the cost to the Treasury at £1.5 billion a year. Given the sector’s expansion in
recent years, the union believes this figure could now be closer to £2.5 billion.270 Taking
account of the knock-on effects from greater dependence on the state later in life through
lack of pension provision, etc, UCATT believe the overall cost of ‘bogus’ self-employment
could be around £5 billion a year.271 On the other hand, HMRC calculate the figure as more
likely to be around £340 million a year, largely reflecting its lower estimate of the total
number of ‘bogus’ self-employed workers.
265 Qq 116 and 123 (Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians)
Department introduced a radical overhaul of the Scheme, with the main aim of reducing
the number of people abusing the system. Rather than carrying CIS cards to verify their
registration with the Scheme, sub-contractors are now required to register online.
Contractors must verify directly with HMRC whether a sub-contractor they have taken on
is part of CIS in order to gauge how much tax they should deduct from their payments.
The intention of this approach is to reduce the ‘paper chase’ that had characterised the
previous system.273
173. The new CIS also emphasises consideration of sub-contractors’ employment status.
Contractors must now submit a monthly return detailing all their sub-contractors paid
during the tax month, and certifying that none of them are in fact employees. HMRC has
established an online Employment Status Indicator tool, which asks questions of the
contractor to establish whether a sub-contractor should be classified as self-employed. It is
based on a number of indicators of direct employment:
• the contractor has the right to control what the worker has to do—where, when and
how it is done—even if the contractor rarely uses that control;
• the worker does not risk his or her own money and there is no possibility that he or she
will suffer a financial loss;
• the worker has no business organisation, for example, a yard, stock, materials, or
workers; and
174. This contrasts with the following indicators of self-employment, defined by HMRC:
• Within an overall deadline, the worker has the right to decide how and when the work
will be done;
• the worker supplies the materials, plant or heavy equipment needed for the job;
• the worker bids for a job and will bear the additional cost if the job ends up costing
more than the worker’s original estimate;
• the worker has a right to hire other people who answer to him or her and are paid by
him or her to do the job;
• the worker is paid an agreed amount for the job regardless of how long it takes.274
175. These criteria are broadly similar to those set out in Unite’s own evidence to us.275
HMRC’s guidance also states explicitly that “employment status is not a matter of choice”.
We received some contrasting views as to whether the new CIS was proving a success. On
the one hand, the Construction Confederation thought the new approach was working,
273 Ev 213, para 53 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
274 HM Revenue & Customs, Are your workers employed or self-employed? Advice for contractors
although it cautioned that “we have all got to support it, and we have all got to make it
work”.276 On the other hand, the unions were highly critical of the new Scheme. Both felt
the move towards an online registration system, which has done away with the previous
photo card approach would create “a recipe for fraud, confusion and lost payments”.277
They argued that it will now be difficult for employers to discover if an individual
presenting themselves for work is the same person registered under the Scheme. However,
the Minister responsible for construction told us: “One of the purposes of the new CIS […]
is to try and get away from the cards which were often used by individuals to say “Here, I
have got a card, I am self-employed””.278 It seems to us that the success of the new Scheme
will largely depend on a combination of contractors honestly assessing the employment
status of their sub-contractors, and effective enforcement by HMRC. The Minister also told
us that: “In terms of the effectiveness of these operational arrangements it is still quite early
days”.279
176. The unions were also keen to see an extension of the Gangmasters Licensing
Regulations to cover the construction industry, citing evidence of increased gangmaster
activity in the sector.280 However, the Construction Confederation felt this would create an
additional regulatory burden for employers, most of whom do not use gangmasters
directly.281 BERR told us the conduct of employment agencies and employment businesses
in construction was regulated by the Employment Agency Standards Inspectorate (EASI).
The Employment Bill, which is currently passing through Parliament, will increase the
investigative and enforcement powers of the Inspectorate. BERR has also made changes to
the regulations governing employment agencies, specifically to address some of the key
abuses affecting vulnerable agency workers. In addition, the Minister told us about the
Vulnerable Worker Enforcement Forum, which is an industry and government group
looking at the nature and extent of abuse of workplace rights for vulnerable workers,
including within the construction sector.282 It is due to report its conclusions in summer
2008.
178. We welcome the setting up of the Vulnerable Worker Enforcement Forum and
look forward to its recommendations. We hope it will give particular attention to
280 Qq 128 (Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians) and 201 (Unite—the union, T&G branch)
181. The Confederation of British Industry (CBI) told us a shortage of skilled labour was a
key issue for almost two-thirds of firms in construction.286 Areas of short supply include
mechanical and electrical engineers, project managers, building control, specialist
tradesmen and assessors, and quantity surveyors.287 An additional challenge is that the
skills needs of the sector are evolving. The development of modern construction methods
and an increasing demand for environmentally sustainable buildings require workers to
develop new skills.288 The industry’s slow response to these changes, in part, contributes to
283 Ev 154, para 4 (Association of Colleges and British Association of College Heads) and Ev 306, para 8.2 (Linda Clarke)
284 Qq 142 (ConstructionSkills), 305 (Federation of Master Builders), 420 (Home Builders Federation) and 593 (BERR);
Ev 376 (Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians)
287 Ev 294 (New Civil Engineer), Ev 213, para 48 (CC, CIC and CPA), Ev 286 (National House Building Control), Ev 290,
para 5.C.c (National Specialist Contractors’ Council) and Ev 269, para 15 (Home Builders’ Federation)
288 Ev 180, para 36 (Buildoffsite), Ev 120, para 43 (BERR) and Ev 306, para 7.1 (Linda Clarke)
66 Construction matters
183. The lead partner in ConstructionSkills is the Construction Industry Training Board
(CITB), branded CITB-ConstructionSkills. It is one of only two remaining statutory
training boards established in 1964, which gives it the power to raise a levy on employers to
fund training. There is a tendency in the sector for smaller firms to train most new
entrants, and for them to go on to work for the industry’s larger firms later in their careers.
The CITB-ConstructionSkills Levy provides a means for those larger firms to pay towards
the cost of training the new entrants, which they subsequently benefit from. Employers
with a total wage bill exceeding £76,000 must pay the Levy, which is set at 0.5% of the
salaries for direct employees, and 1.5% of the value of payments for labour-only sub-
contractors. The higher rate for sub-contractors is meant to provide an incentive for firms
to employ workers directly. The £76,000 threshold also exempts smaller firms from paying,
although they are still able to claim grants to fund training. In 2006, firms which did not
pay any Levy employed over 10,800 new entrant trainees.
184. The Levy provides the main source of income for ConstructionSkills. In 2007 it
distributed almost £137 million in grants for firms to, for example, take on new apprentices
or train-up their existing workforce. The Sector Skills Council estimates that the benefit to
the industry of these grants equates to £2.03 for every £1 of Levy collected.291 CITB-
ConstructionSkills requires parliamentary approval for it to continue raising Levy funds,
and this is subject to it retaining the support of the majority of firms that have to pay it.
ConstructionSkills told us that currently about 70% to 75% of the industry support the
Levy.292 The CBI stated that: “The sector is an example of how a training levy can work
effectively where there is employer buy-in”.293
185. The structure of the construction industry and the nature of its work create
disincentives for many employers to invest in training and skills. The CITB-
ConstructionSkills Levy provides an effective means of tackling this problem, which has
the support of the majority of those who pay it. The Levy provides a vital means of
funding for training, which contributes to the long-term skills needs of the sector. We
support its continued use.
187. One way in which the Government has sought to engage schoolchildren in
construction as a potential career choice has been to introduce the subject to the 14–19
curriculum. In 2003 the then Department for Education and Skills approved the idea of
piloting a GCSE in Construction and the Built Environment (CBE). The first intake began
in September 2005, and in 2007 over 1,200 students completed either a single or double
award in the subject. However, in November 2007 Edexcel, the body piloting the initiative
announced that that it would withdraw the GCSE in order to focus its resources instead on
the Government’s new CBE Diploma. The last examination for the GCSE will be in 2010.
The Minister responsible for construction did not seem to be aware of this development in
January 2008 when he highlighted the role of the GCSE in getting young people into the
industry.296
188. The main reason for abandoning the GCSE was because of concerns over the potential
overlap with the CBE Diploma. The Government is introducing this in certain schools
from September 2008, alongside diplomas in four other fields, all of which are designed to
provide an alternative vocational route for schoolchildren into employment, further
training or higher education. The Diploma covers a wide range of different industries
within construction, such as architecture, structural steelwork, painting and decorating,
glazing, and surveying. It will be available at three levels—Foundation (equivalent to 5
GCSEs below grade C), Higher (equivalent to 5 GCSEs above grade C) and Advanced
(equivalent to three A-Levels). The courses will include compulsory elements such as
functional maths, English and ICT, as well as team-working and self-management skills.
Students will also be required to undertake a minimum of 10 days’ work experience. The
CBI was supportive of the new diplomas, highlighting the fact that they seek to develop
generic ‘employability skills’, which firms too often find lacking in school leavers.297
However, there have been some concerns about the complexity of the diplomas and the
extent to which schoolchildren will favour them over academic qualifications.298
298 See for example, The Times, New diplomas ‘are doomed to fail’, 8 March 2008
68 Construction matters
189. Given that migrant labour is unlikely to provide a stable long-term solution to the
skills needs of the construction industry, it is vital to attract more domestic recruits to
the sector. The initial take-up for the now abandoned Construction GCSE suggests
there is an appetite within schools to engage with the industry early on. We support the
development of the new Construction and Built Environment Diploma and hope that it
will provide a credible qualification and entry route for those considering a career in
construction, as well as meeting the skills needs of employers. Given the importance of
developing skills in this vital sector of the economy, its effectiveness must be rigorously
and regularly reviewed.
190. Construction employees currently take a variety of training routes into the industry,
perhaps the most traditional of which is through an apprenticeship. This is a structured
three-year programme that combines a mix of college-based training and paid work
experience with a sponsoring employer. Those completing the scheme earn a Construction
Award (for craft entrants) or a National Certificate (for technical entrants) as well as a
National Vocational Qualification (NVQ) at either Level 2 (equivalent to 5 GCSEs at A to
C) or 3 (equivalent to 2 A-Levels), depending on the apprenticeship. In 2007 the Strategic
Forum for Construction reported that 8,289 people completed apprenticeships in England,
Scotland and Wales—a fraction of the level achieved during the 1970s. It currently has a
target to increase the annual rate of completion to 13,500 a year by 2010, and the new
industry targets extend this to 18,700 in 2012.
193. ConstructionSkills were also keen to see greater flexibility in the way in which
government allowed it to deliver apprenticeships. One area of concern was the growing
need for specialist trades throughout the supply chain and the sector skills council’s
inability to meet this demand because of the higher cost of training.307 It is currently
seeking to pilot Specialist Apprenticeships in response to this. Another difficulty is the
absence of significant resources to support adult learners entering training because the
Government’s emphasis is on those in school and further education.308 Current policy
towards publicly-funded apprenticeships assumes that employers will pay a greater share of
the costs for those over 19.
310 Ev 155, para 5 (Association of Colleges and British Association of College Heads) and Ev 132, para 14 (BERR)
70 Construction matters
NVQ Level 2 or 3, to a senior manager at NVQ Level 5. All the cards require the holder to
have passed a health and safety test.
196. The industry has set itself a target to achieve a fully trained, qualified and competent
workforce on all projects by 2010 as demonstrated by take-up of CSCS. All parts of the
sector have bought in to the Scheme, including main contractors, specialist contractors and
home builders.311 ConstructionSkills has played an important role through its On-Site
Assessment and Training programme, which helps experienced workers get the
qualifications to prove their competency and gain a CSCS card. Overall, the sector skills
council reports that 48,000 workers achieved a Vocational Qualification in 2007.312
Elsewhere, it has also recently established the National Skills Academy for Construction,
part of which includes the setting-up of portable training centres located on or near the site
of large construction or infrastructure projects. ConstructionSkills told us it had 8 project
sites already up and running, with a total of 52 in the pipeline, including the Olympic
construction sites.313
197. To date over 1.2 million CSCS cards have been issued and coverage of the industry’s
workforce is estimated at about 80%.314 Government, too, has stated its support for the
Scheme. The Office of Government Commerce’s Common Minimum Standards for
construction procurement stipulate that contracts should contain a clause requiring all
workers involved in the supply team to be registered on the CSCS, or able to prove
competence in some other appropriate way. Yet the National Specialist Contractors’
Council told us many public sector clients are not enforcing this requirement. Contractors
who have not committed to the Scheme are still being invited to tender for projects, while
workers are allowed on sites without a CSCS card or with inappropriate cards. This can
frustrate those contractors and sub-contractors that have expended resources achieving a
fully carded workforce.
198. There has been considerable progress in raising the skill levels of the existing
construction workforce. We welcome the establishment of the National Skills Academy
for Construction and support its project-based approach to delivering training. We
also commend the high level of take-up of the Construction Skills Certification Scheme
(CSCS) and hope the industry will be able to achieve 100% coverage by 2010. However,
clients must play their part in reaching this target. Public sector clients in particular
should adhere to the Common Minimum Standards, and contractually oblige their
supply teams to ensure their workforces are CSCS-carded. Contractors not committed
to the Scheme should not be invited to tender for work.
Workforce diversity
199. The average construction worker in the UK is white and male. Women make up only
10% of the industry’s workforce and just 1% in the manual trades.315 Similarly, ethnic
311 Q 415 (Home Builders Federation); Ev 293 (National Specialist Contractors’ Council) and Ev 135, para 17 (BERR)
200. The ‘casualisation’ of the industry was seen as a primary reason why women and
ethnics minorities are underrepresented in the industry. Unite told us the sector’s ‘hire and
fire’ culture, with employment opportunities being predominantly through word-of-
mouth or family connections, tended to exclude ethnic minority groups.319 The Equal
Opportunities Commission stated that the industry’s long hours culture and its inflexible
working times often precluded women, or those with caring responsibilities, from entering
construction.320 As noted in the previous section, funding streams for training also tend to
favour young people over adults, therefore excluding groups that are more likely to enter
the industry later in life.321 The Institution of Civil Engineers told us women and ethnic
minorities experience “marginalisation, discrimination, disempowerment, prejudice and
‘glass ceilings’ to their career progression”.322 The problem is reinforced by the negative
image of the industry as one that does not welcome diversity.
201. The Commission for Racial Equality estimates that in the next six years only 20% of
the UK workforce will consist of the white, non-disabled men who have traditionally
constituted the construction industry’s workforce.323 If the sector is to avoid capacity
constraints it needs to attract those groups not engaged in construction at present. The
Equal Opportunities Commission cited survey evidence that 12% of schoolgirls were
interested in working in construction.324 Though low, this is still slightly higher than the
current proportion of women in the sector’s workforce. The Commission stated also that
eight out of ten employers thought a better gender mix would provide a wider range of
skills and talents.
202. The new Construction Commitments emphasise the importance of providing equal
opportunities and encouraging a diverse workforce. ConstructionSkills and CABE have
both recently run campaigns aimed at changing attitudes towards the industry to help
draw in atypical recruits.325 The sector skills council also told us about a programme it had
funded that placed 600 people, who were either female or of an ethnic minority, for a 13-
week trial period with small and medium-sized employers in construction. In addition, it
325 Ev 200, para 16 (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment); Q 154 (ConstructionSkills)
72 Construction matters
has worked with housing associations and registered social landlords, encouraging more
diverse recruitment with their framework sub-contractors. Furthermore, its National Skills
Academy for Construction will draw greater involvement from underrepresented groups.
Elsewhere, the Prince’s Trust told us its ‘Get Into Construction’ scheme had helped a small
number of women and ethnic minority workers gain experience of the industry.326 In the
future, the introduction of the Construction and Built Environment Diploma should also
help change perceptions of the sector amongst schoolchildren.
203. However, there is clearly still more to do to address the gender and racial imbalance in
the construction workforce. Both the CBI and the Equal Opportunities Commission
highlighted the need for better careers advice that sought to challenge traditional
occupational stereotypes.327 The introduction of more flexible working should also attract
atypical recruits. As the largest client of construction work, the public sector could play a
significant role in creating a more diverse workforce. We note that the Office of
Government Commerce’s Common Minimum Standards for construction procurement
do not currently refer to diversity issues.
204. The vast majority of the construction workforce is white and male. This means
there is a potentially huge pool of untapped talent which could relieve capacity
constraints in the sector, and make the composition of its workforce more
representative of wider society. Government as client to the sector is in a powerful
position to effect change by ensuring contractors provide employment opportunities to
atypical recruits. We welcome the explicit inclusion of promoting a diverse workforce
in the industry’s new Construction Commitments. We recommend that the
Government strengthens this by making equal opportunities part of the Common
Minimum Standards for public sector construction procurement.
327 Ev 252, para 31 (Equal Opportunities Commission) and Ev 186, para 47 (Confederation of British Industry)
328 National Statistics, Health and safety statistics 2006/07, November 2007
promotes training, provides an advisory service, and can submit proposals for new or
revised regulations and approved codes of practice.
Recent trends
206. The UK’s performance in construction health and safety compares favourably with
the rest of Europe. In 2003, the latest year for which figures are available, the fatal injury
rate for the UK was 3.6 per 100,000 workers, compared to an EU average of 10.6.331
Figure 1 below shows the sector’s performance over the past 15 years. 2001 marked a
turning point. A large increase in fatalities in the late 1990s prompted the then Deputy
Prime Minister to convene an industry-wide summit at which he called on the sector to
improve its record or else face legislation. Since then, working with the HSE, the industry
has made considerable efforts, with the result that there has been a gradual decline in the
number of fatalities from a peak of 105 in 2000/01 to 60 in 2005/06.332 A key initiative has
been the commitment to a fully qualified workforce by requiring all employees to have
registered on the Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS), discussed earlier, which
includes a health and safety test. ConstructionSkills report that 1.5 million workers have
passed the test to date.333
Figure 1: Number and rate of fatal injuries to workers in construction
Number of fatal injuries Rate of fatal injury
120 6.0
100 5.0
80 4.0
60 3.0
40 2.0
20 1.0
0 0.0
92/93 93/94 94/95 95/96 96/97 97/98 98/99 99/00 00/01 01/02 02/03 03/04 04/05 05/06 06/07
Number of fatal injuries to workers
207. However, 2006/07 saw an increase in the number of fatalities from 60 to 77—the
highest rate since 2001/02 and a rise of 28% on the previous year.334 More than half of those
deaths were the result either of a fall from a height, or being hit by a moving or falling
object. In April 2008, the HSE reported provisional figures suggesting 69 workers had died
in 2007/08.335 Although this is a 10% improvement on the previous year, it is still above the
335 Health and Safety Executive, HSE urges construction industry to do more to prevent deaths at work, 9 April 2008
74 Construction matters
2005/06 level. It is not clear at this stage whether these figures for the past two years mark a
change in the long-term trend, or if they have been very unfortunate blips.
208. We asked witnesses what lay at the root of the rise in construction fatalities. The
National House Building Council noted in its evidence that the increased use of migrant
workers in the UK might present a risk if they were not able to communicate well in
English and therefore understand health and safety training.336 However, the Construction
Confederation told us migrant workers operated under exactly the same regime as other
operatives on major construction sites, and that they had to undergo the same induction
training and wear the same personal protective equipment (PPE).337 BERR also told us that
out of the 77 deaths in 2006/07, five were migrant workers—6.5%.338 This is slightly less
than the overall percentage of migrant workers within the construction workforce as a
whole.
209. BERR and several of the industry representatives we spoke to highlighted the fact that
the recent rise in fatalities has occurred largely amongst smaller firms operating in housing
repair and maintenance.339 According to the HSE over half of construction deaths in
2006/07 occurred in that sector—up significantly on the previous year.340 However, it is not
yet clear why this is the case. The Federation of Master Builders (FMB) noted that the size
of the sector has grown from £12.8 billion in 2002 to £15.8 billion in 2006.341 The
Government’s own memorandum to the Committee argues that the level of economic
activity in the construction industry will inevitably put more pressure on the workforce,
which could lead to a deterioration in health and safety performance.342 The fact that
barriers to entry are lower for workers and firms in the housing repair and refurbishment
sector, and over half of construction activity is in the black economy, must also be
contributing factors. Yet this does not explain why in previous years the number of
fatalities had been falling, and the particular jump within repair and maintenance in
2006/07.
339 Qq 59 (Construction Confederation), 206 (Unite—the union, T&G branch) and 676 (BERR); Ev 151, para 2.4 (ARUP)
340 Health and Safety Executive, 1,000 spot checks of refurbishment sites across Great Britain, 6 February 2008
to drive out the informal economy. The Strategic Forum’s Health and Safety Task Group
was asked to co-ordinate implementation of the proposals.343
211. BERR told us the size of the informal economy contributes to the challenge the
Government faces in trying to improve standards in the repair and maintenance sector.
The HSE’s strategy for policing health and safety is to prioritise those areas that present the
highest risk, therefore, deploying its resources were they can be used most effectively.344 It
has a dedicated Construction Division that looks solely at the sector, and construction
accounted for 40% of its prosecutions in 2005/06. The agency also adopts a risk-based
approach within industries. In February 2008 it specifically targeted construction
refurbishment sites, carrying out over 1,000 spot checks across Great Britain. Inspectors
immediately stopped work on 30% of the sites visited because health and safety standards
were so low they put the lives of workers at risk. The Chief Executive of the HSE stated:
“Our inspectors were appalled at the blatant disregard for basic health and safety
precautions”.345
212. Despite the HSE’s risk-based focus, several witnesses raised concerns over the level of
sanctions the agency imposes, and its overall staffing levels. On the first of these, the unions
in particular wished to see much harsher penalties for contractors found to be in breach of
health and safety regulations. Unite told us the average fine in construction in 2006 fell to a
“disgusting” £8,400.346 UCATT went further, stating that “deaths on construction sites will
not substantially decrease until an individual director is sent to prison for their
involvement in killing an employee”.347 By contrast, the Construction Products Association
told us the HSE did have strong sanctions through its ability to close a site immediately.348
The Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007 created a new offence from
April 2008 for convicting an organisation where a gross failure in the management of
health and safety results in a person’s death. Found guilty, an organisation is liable to an
unlimited fine. They may also be required to publicise the details of their conviction and
fine. Individuals cannot be prosecuted under the Act, although legislation already exists to
prosecute those culpable of gross negligence manslaughter and health and safety
offences.349
213. Given that sanctions exist to punish those in breach of health and safety regulations, a
more important consideration for construction contractors is likely to be the probability of
inspection in the first place. We were shocked to hear that on average an employer will
receive a visit from an HSE inspector only once in every 13 years.350 Despite more than
270,000 construction firms operating in the UK, the agency had only 124 operational
construction inspectors in 2007/08, with just 18 to cover the whole of London.
343 Department for Work and Pensions, Hain and construction sector vow to cut deaths, September 2007
345 Health and Safety Executive, Unacceptable performance by refurbishment sector of the construction industry, March
2008
349 Ministry of Justice, Understanding the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007, October 2007
Furthermore, many witnesses expressed their concern to us that the number of HSE staff
has been cut in recent years.351 Since 2003, the agency’s Field Operations Directorate has
seen a 17% reduction in staff.352 Within construction, there are now 10 fewer front-line
inspectors than in 2005/06.353 The Minister responsible for construction told us the HSE
would “vigorously refute” the suggestion that any changes they had made might have
contributed to the recent trend in construction fatalities.354 Whilst we do not wish to
suggest this is the case, it seems illogical to argue that the number of inspections has no
effect on health and safety standards. Indeed, the HSE’s own recent campaign on the repair
and maintenance sector highlights the importance of inspections. Our colleagues on the
Work and Pensions Committee recently reached the same conclusion.355
215. One of the most important recent developments has been the introduction of the new
Construction, Design and Management (CDM) Regulations 2007. These aim to improve
health and safety in construction by placing a greater emphasis on effective planning and
risk management at the outset of a project, as well as reducing paper work and encouraging
team work.356 The Specialist Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group told us that up to 60%
of fatalities on construction sites can be attributed to choices made before work on site
begins.357 The CDM Regulations place shared legal duties on virtually everyone involved in
construction projects—clients, designers, contractors, sub-contractors, and workers—
recognising that improved health and safety performance requires the engagement of all
stakeholders. The new regulations have been generally well-received by the industry.358 The
Construction Confederation said “it is a great piece of regulation”.359 The primary reason
for this is that CDM increases the role of the client in ensuring adequate consideration of
health and safety, and also promotes integrated team working. Indeed, the only critic of the
Regulations was the industry body that represents clients.360 The Construction Clients’
351 Qq 61 (Construction Products Association), 295 (Federation of Master Builders); Ev 211, para 27 (Construction
Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association) and Ev 383 (Unite—the union,
T&G branch)
352 www.hse.gov.uk/aboutus/reports/staff.htm
353 House of Commons Work and Pensions Committee, Third Report of Session 2007-08, The role of the Health and
Safety Commission and the Health and Safety Executive in regulating workplace health and safety, HC 246, April
2008
358 Ev 210, para 24 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association);
Ev 151, para 2.3 (ARUP) and Ev 277, para 9.1 (Institution of Civil Engineers)
Group (CCG) had a legitimate concern that the CDM Regulations had not been drafted to
enable small, infrequent clients to comply with their obligations. The CCG is currently
working on a proposal to help resolve this issue. It is also disappointing that the Approved
Code of Practice, which provides practical guidance on complying with the Regulations, is
not free to download from the HSE website. Instead, it is available by mail order at a cost of
£15. This can only hamper the dissemination of good practice on compliance.
216. Whilst the CDM Regulations provide the legal basis for much greater client
involvement, there are additional ways in which procurers, particularly the public sector,
can show leadership in promoting health and safety. For example, considering whole-life,
by definition, requires the factoring in to the planning process of heath and safety
concerns. The long-term benefit is a reduction in the costly delays that arise from
accidents. The Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS) is also an important driver
of health and safety. As noted above, the OGC requires all workers on public sector
construction sites to have registered for the Scheme. Sir Michael Latham, Chairman of
ConstructionSkills, however, expressed his surprise that this is not enforced.361 The
Construction Confederation also cited survey evidence that only 52% of respondents were
required to undergo a health and safety assessment during the bidding process for public
sector projects. Whilst there are some examples of best practice, such as Jobcentre Plus,
Defence Estates and Birmingham City Council, it described government’s performance as
at best “patchy”.362
217. Yet government’s purchasing power cannot foster culture change in the housing
repair and maintenance sector, where homeowners are not subject to the CDM
Regulations and are not likely to be aware of the Construction Skills Certification Scheme.
Here, only radical steps to address the size of the informal economy are likely to improve
the sector’s health and safety record. The Construction Confederation noted that
“domestic consumers continue to be attracted to cheap cash deals”.363 Its proposal is to
reduce the rate of VAT on all repair and maintenance work to 5% so as to remove the
competitive advantage of those who avoid registration for VAT. Some parts of the sector
already benefit from a reduced rate, such as conversion of residential buildings to a
different residential use, and for the installation of microgeneration technologies. Given
that over half the sector operates in the informal economy, the Federation of Master
Builders argued that such a move could actually increase the overall amount of tax revenue
from the sector.364
218. We welcome the Strategic Forum’s commitment to ambitious targets for reducing
the number of workplace fatalities and major injuries over the coming years. After a
period of steady decline in construction fatalities since the turn of the century, the
number of deaths has increased significantly since 2005/06. Housing repair and
maintenance has had the worst record, primarily because so much of the sector
operates in the informal economy. To tackle this the Health and Safety Executive must
devote more resources to inspection, whilst HM Treasury should look at ways of
362 Ev 211, para 27 (Construction Confederation, Construction Industry Council and Construction Products Association)
363 Ibid.
reducing the size of the informal economy, for example by conducting a full analysis of
the overall consequences of cutting the rate of VAT on all repair and maintenance
work.
219. More generally, government as client has a vital role to play in improving
performance. The Common Minimum Standards already state that clients should
ensure all contractors are assessed for health and safety when tendering for work, and
all workers should be registered on the Construction Skills Certification Scheme. But
this is not happening. The new Construction, Design and Management (CDM)
Regulations 2007 place a much greater emphasise on the client’s role in ensuring health
and safety, whilst the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act 2007
provides the punishment in the event of a fatality due to organisational failings. The
Government should use both of these to enforce a change of approach in public sector
construction procurement, and to drive culture change across the sector.
Construction matters 79
Cutting waste
222. Construction and demolition accounts for almost a third of all waste generated in the
UK each year.365 This would be even greater were it not for the comparatively high level of
recycling. Out of the 120 million tonnes of construction waste produced every year, 65
million tonnes are recycled, mainly as aggregates. A further 35 million tonnes (mainly inert
excavation waste) are used for landfill engineering or quarry restoration. The remaining 20
million tonnes go to landfill.366 This figure has fallen significantly in recent years because
the Government has increased the cost of landfill through taxation. As part of its Strategy
for Sustainable Construction the Government has set a target for 2012 to reduce the
amount of construction, demolition and excavation waste to landfill by 50% on 2008
levels—a reduction of 10 million tonnes per year. This will need to be achieved through a
combination of reduced wastage, more recycling, and greater use of recovered materials.
223. In 1996 the then government introduced the Landfill Tax Levy. This was initially set at
a standard rate of £7 per tonne for active waste (which either decays or contaminates land)
and £2 per tonne for inert material, such as rocks and soil. Over the years the standard rate
has increased to its current level of £32 per tonne. From April 2008 to at least 2010, the
Government has stated its intention to further increase the standard rate by £8 each year to
£48 for the 2010/11 tax year. Landfill operators are liable for the tax. Under the Landfill Tax
Credit Scheme, they can contribute up to 6.6% of their tax liability to environmental
366 www.wrap.org.uk
80 Construction matters
bodies, and reclaim 90% of this as a tax credit. To date landfill operators have given almost
£1 billion to around 2,300 organisations for a variety of local environmental projects.
224. The construction industry was generally supportive of the Landfill Tax Levy and saw it
as providing an important economic incentive to reduce the amount of waste that goes into
landfill, and invest more in recycling facilities. This is particularly the case for larger
companies and frequent construction clients, who need a systematic approach to waste
management. The Construction Products Association said that it had been a “successful
tax”, and also praised the fact that the Government has clearly stated its intention to ramp
up the Levy rate over the coming years, thus giving the industry time to invest in its ability
to reduce the amount it sends to landfill still further.367 However, the Federation of Master
Builders, which represents smaller construction customers, was critical of the Government
for not providing sufficient recycling facilities to allow firms to avoid the cost of landfill.368
Additionally, local authorities in England reported that they had dealt with more than
2.6 million incidents of fly-tipping in 2006/07—up 5% on 2005/06.369 It is widely believed
that much of this is the result of tipping by smaller builders seeking to avoid the rising cost
of landfill disposal.
225. In 2002 the Government also introduced the Aggregates Levy. This is a tax on the
commercial exploitation of aggregates, such as sand, gravel and rock, to take account of the
environmental costs of quarrying, for example through loss of biodiversity as well as
resultant noise and disruption. The aim of the Levy is also to encourage greater levels of
recycling. It is broadly revenue neutral, as many of the monies raised are returned to
business through a 0.1% cut in employers’ National Insurance Contributions. However, a
proportion goes towards the Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund. This supports projects
that, among others, promote environmentally-friendly aggregates extraction and address
the impacts of past extraction. In its first four years the Fund has distributed almost
£70 million to almost 1,200 projects.370 However, the Quarry Products Association was
sceptical of the impact of the Aggregates Levy on the supply of recycled and secondary
materials, suggesting that any effect had been modest.371
226. Meeting the target for 2012 to reduce the amount of construction, demolition and
excavation waste to landfill by 50% on 2008 levels will require a step-change in the
industry’s current approach to managing waste. The Quarry Products Association told us,
however, that for aggregates the potential for greater use of recycled and secondary
materials is constrained by the fact that most available materials are already in the market.
These aggregates constitute a quarter of the market—much higher than the European
average of 7%.372 Future waste reductions are more likely to come from improvements in
manufacturing processes that reduce the amount of unnecessary material delivered to site
369 Campaign to Protect Rural England “Stop the Drop” campaign website
370 Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs, Aggregates Levy Sustainability Fund in England 2002-2007,
February 2006
372 Ibid.
Construction matters 81
in the first place.373 Furthermore, clients too will have a vital role to play in providing clarity
about what it is they want, therefore reducing waste from having to undo work on site that
has already been done. The setting up of an integrated project team is key to achieving this.
As CABE told us, waste is “never going to be eliminated just by shouting at the industry to
do better”.374
229. The success of the initiative has led to the wider adoption of the principles of
considerate construction. In the late 1990s the Construction Umbrella Bodies established a
nationwide version, known as the Considerate Constructors Scheme. The Code of
Considerate Practice for this states that all work should be carried out “with positive
consideration for the needs of traders and businesses, site personnel and visitors, and the
general public”. It also requires that contractors should be aware of the environmental
impact of their site and minimise the effects of noise, light and air pollution.378 All
376 Constructing Excellence and BERR, Industry Performance Report 2007, September 2007
378 www.considerateconstructorsscheme.org.uk
82 Construction matters
registered sites are monitored to assess compliance with the Code, with the role of
inspection being to encourage a site operator to want to improve their performance. Over
27,000 sites have registered with the scheme since its introduction, and nearly 36,000
inspections have taken place.379 The Office of Government Commerce’s Common
Minimum Standards state that all public sector clients should include contract clauses for
contractors to be members of the scheme or a local equivalent, and to comply with its code
of practice. The new Minister responsible for construction has also publicly given her
encouragement for all construction companies to sign up to the scheme. However, there
are no measures of the extent to which public sector clients currently insist upon this.
230. Reducing the environmental impact of the construction process is a key part of
Government and industry’s Strategy for Sustainable Construction. We support new
targets for reducing waste, and for cutting energy and water consumption.
Achievement of these is likely to stem mainly from economic incentives, as well as
higher fuel costs. Any increase in taxation must be accompanied by greater
enforcement activity against fly-tipping. The public sector as client also has an
important role to play in improving the construction process. Integrated team delivery
can reduce the waste arising from construction projects through early planning and
engagement with the supply chain. We saw examples of this in our visits to the Royal
London Hospital and the 2012 Olympic site in Stratford. Rigorous enforcement of the
Common Minimum Standards by the Office of Government Commerce should also
include requiring that all public sector projects are registered for the Considerate
Constructors Scheme, or some equivalent. This will demonstrate best practice to the
private sector, and help improve the public image of the industry.
The end-product
231. Reducing the impact of the industry’s output on the environment is also an integral
part of the creation of a sustainable construction sector. In this section we look at
government’s role as client in embedding environmental sustainability in construction
procurement. We then consider actions it can take as regulator to influence the private
housing sector.
380 Ev 200, para 24 (Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment) and Ev 152, para 3.2 (ARUP)
Construction matters 83
233. Consideration of whole-life value is key to the investment case for environmentally
sustainable buildings. However, clients’ decisions can be skewed by their tendency to focus
on initial costs. As the Government’s own Sustainable Procurement Task Force put it:
“Incentive systems neither reward sustainable procurement nor do they punish failure to
comply with existing policies in this area”.381 Various witnesses told us government needed
to break out of this mind-set.382
234. In reality, sustainable buildings need not be significantly more expensive than
traditional ones. Constructing Excellence cited evidence from its demonstration projects,
which suggests increasing the sustainability of new buildings can be achieved at little or no
additional capital cost (although this is not the case for the refurbishment of existing
buildings, which can be more complex).383 Rather, the additional cost is in part the result of
perception and process. Contractors do not yet routinely deliver sustainable projects, and
so increase their cost estimates because they perceive greater risk and uncertainty in such
ventures.384 If the design process treats sustainability as an ‘add-on’ at the end, that too is
likely to lead to a more expensive solution than if sustainability is key to the design premise
from the outset.385
381 Sustainable Procurement Task Force, Procuring for the future, June 2006
382 Ev 170, para 13 (BSRIA), Ev 212, para 37 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA), Ev 278 para 10.1 (Institution of
Civil Engineers) and Ev 255, para 8 (FETA)
provide the kind of information that will be able to inform future project appraisals, but the
OGC will need to extend the scheme to cover all parts of the public sector, if it is to gather
evidence on a range of different buildings, and not just offices.
238. Since 2002, all public sector new build projects have been required to achieve a rating
of ‘Excellent’ and all major refurbishment projects a rating of ‘Very Good’ or better, as set
out in the OGC’s Common Minimum Standards. Yet, in a damning report last year the
National Audit Office (NAO) found many departments were consistently failing to
conduct such assessments, and that very few of the projects which were assessed actually
met the required standard.389 Just 14 out of 106 new build projects considered by the NAO
achieved an ‘Excellent’ rating, and only 27 out of 335 refurbishment projects were rated as
‘Very Good’. In response, the Minister said: “There is certainly a long way to go”.390 The
NAO also concluded that, on its own, the BREEAM standard is not sufficient to ensure all
new projects and refurbishments contribute to the Government’s targets for improving the
sustainability of its operations. Rather, departments should set more output-focused targets
for construction procurement, such as for reduced water and energy use, and lower carbon
emissions.
239. The joint Government and industry Strategy for Sustainable Construction includes
a range of challenging targets for improving the environmental performance of the
buildings it procures. If the Government is to meet these, a whole-life approach to
project design will be key. HM Treasury must mandate the use of carbon accounting for
the appraisal of all public sector construction projects. The Office of Government
Commerce should also rigorously monitor progress against the BREEAM
requirements for all new build to be rated ‘Excellent’ and all refurbishments ‘Very
Good’. However, the BREEAM standard should not be used in isolation to assess
projects—it should be complementary to more specific output-focused targets for
environmental performance.
389 National Audit Office, Building for the future: Sustainable construction and refurbishment on the government
estate, HC 324, April 2007
is to regulate for better quality homes. Successive changes to the Building Regulations in
recent years have created large improvements in the carbon performance of buildings. The
Institution of Civil Engineers noted that new projects today are 40% more energy efficient
than in 2002, and 70% better than in 1990.392
241. The Government has set a target for all new homes to be carbon neutral by 2016. To
this end, in April 2007, the Department for Communities and Local Government (CLG)
launched its Code for Sustainable Homes. This sets a national standard for the
homebuilding sector in the design and construction of sustainable homes. It places certain
requirements on new build for energy use, carbon emissions, waste, materials, pollution
and water use. Under the Code, new homes are given a rating of one to six, the lowest of
which is above the current Building Regulations requirements, and the highest is for
carbon neutral developments. The Code is at present voluntary for the private sector, but
Level 3 as a minimum is mandatory for all publicly funded new housing.393 The
Government plans to use a similar approach for the non-domestic sector, where its
ambition is to achieve carbon neutrality by 2019.
242. Although the long lead time for the target should give the industry opportunity to
develop technologies, and trial new methods and materials, it will not be easy to introduce
zero carbon homes.394 Moreover, there is widespread concern that the Code and the
Government’s target focus on new build rather than the existing housing stock.395 Housing
is responsible for over a quarter of carbon emissions in the UK. The replacement rate of the
existing stock is just 0.1% per annum, and new build adds only 1-2% each year. This means
that by 2050, pre-2007 homes will still constitute more than 70% of all housing. The
relative cost-effectiveness of promoting energy efficiency in new as opposed to existing
homes is also important. The Construction Products Association told us for every pound
spent achieving beyond Level 3 of the Code for Sustainable Homes in new homes, it was
possible to get a return 50 times greater in terms of carbon savings by investing that money
in the existing housing stock.396
243. Government needs to provide the incentives for homeowners to invest in making
their homes more environmentally sustainable. In the current climate of rising energy
costs, there is an increasing willingness amongst homeowners to make such changes,
though some witnesses felt existing tax breaks were not sufficiently attractive.397 In our
Report on local energy in the 2006–07 Session we noted how tax incentives to install
microgeneration systems in particular were ad hoc and inconsistent with those faced by
larger commercial energy producers. We called then for “a comprehensive review of the
395 Ev 212, para 39 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA), Ev 152, para 3.3 (ARUP), Ev 288 (National House Building
Control) and Ev 257 (Federation of Master Builders)
397 Q 313 (Federation of Master Builders); Ev 311 (Royal Institution of Chartered Surveyors)
86 Construction matters
way in which local energy is treated within the fiscal system, both at a national and local
authority level”.398 We believe this conclusion still stands.
244. What the Government cannot influence through its purchasing power it must
achieve through regulation. Changes to the Building Regulations have led to significant
improvements in the energy efficiency of new buildings. We support the Government’s
target for all new build homes to be carbon neutral by 2016, and the role of the Code for
Sustainable Homes in achieving this, but we recognise the extremely ambitious nature
of this target. The existing housing stock also needs to be made more sustainable. To
this end, we continue to believe the Government should conduct a comprehensive
review of the incentives for homeowners to improve the environmental sustainability
of their dwellings.
245. Overall, we welcome the Government and industry’s joint Strategy for Sustainable
Construction and hope that it will set the agenda for improving the long-term
environmental performance of the sector. However, policy responsibility for
sustainable construction is particularly fragmented across government. The Strategy
itself is the product of six different departments. It sets out which bodies are
responsible for particular targets, but no individual has overarching responsibility for
its delivery. A Chief Construction Officer would make an important contribution to co-
ordinating policy delivery across departments and promoting sustainable construction.
398 House of Commons Trade and Industry Committee, Local energy—turning consumers into producers, HC 257,
January 2007
Construction matters 87
7 Raising standards
246. Ultimately, the industry itself bears the greatest responsibility for its standards. While
lower standards in the short term may reduce costs and increase profit margins, in the long
run they threaten the reputation of individual companies, and of the industry as a whole—
high standards may give a competitive advantage. However, given the fragmented nature
of the industry, it is sensible to support efforts to improve. Moreover, since the problems
are compounded by the fact that, in many cases, clients focus on costs rather than value,
and may have limited information about the way in which the industry works, or the
competence of individual firms, it makes sense to invest in measures that help clients to
demand more from the industry. In this chapter we look at the work of government in
helping to raise standards across the industry. First, we analyse the role of research and
innovation in achieving this. Second, we look at the function of the Building Regulations in
defining minimum standards for buildings. Then we consider the various schemes for
contractors, designed to help clients hire only firms that meet a required standard. Finally,
we look at the current inquiry by the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) into price-fixing
amongst contractors.
Netherlands 0.12
France 0.12
Denmark 0.13
Japan 0.40
Finland 0.74
Source: OECD
399 Ev 231, para 12 (CIC—East Midlands), Ev 280, para 12 (Local Authority Building Control), Ev 233 (CIRIA), Ev 169
(BSRIA), Ev 213, para 50 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA), Ev 163 (BRE et al), Ev 314, para 6.1 (Royal
Institution of Chartered Surveyors) and Ev 225, para 27 (Constructing Excellence)
249. Second, profit margins in the UK industry are low—typically just 2% to 3%. This
means that any activities such as investment in R&D or training, which can be cut without
short-term disadvantage, are frequently jettisoned to protect firms’ profit margins. The
Construction Confederation and BRE said countries such as Sweden and Japan have much
higher rates of R&D investment because their markets are more concentrated and enjoy
higher profit margins.403
250. Thirdly, the end-product in construction is usually the one-off result of a team of
firms working together on a project. Process innovation may take place within the team
over a project’s lifetime, but there are no industry-wide means of capturing that innovation
so that it can be used in subsequent ventures.404 It is here that framework arrangements can
be useful.405 By creating a relationship between the client and the supply chain that endures
over a number of projects, teams are able to apply lessons learnt and innovative processes
from one project to the next.
251. A fourth reason for the construction industry’s poor R&D performance is that it is
almost impossible to protect intellectual property rights. As BRE put it: “Basically anything
you invest in terms of advanced process, new integration, a new way of doing things will be
copied the next day by anybody who visits your site”.406 Unlike manufacturing,
construction firms do not benefit much from ‘first mover advantage’, and so gain little
competitive edge from innovating.
252. A fifth factor is that firms are often unwilling to take risks with experimental products
or processes because the cost of getting it wrong and having to put right a problem, can far
outweigh the benefit. We were also told on our visit to the Royal London Hospital
redevelopment project that the availability of high levels of migrant labour has reduced the
incentive to innovate to increase productivity in the industry.
253. Yet more reasons for poor investment in R&D lie with the client. Those purchasing
construction projects are often not able to differentiate between a more advanced product
and that which the industry might produce ordinarily. This reduces the incentive for
contractors to offer a more innovative solution. In addition, construction clients are
naturally conservative, especially where they are purchasing a one-off project from the
industry. BRE told us clients “want a good quality building but they do not want to be the
test bed for new thinking”.407 Overall, the usual commercial drivers that lead businesses to
invest in R&D are either missing or very weak for a large part of the construction industry.
The only exception is for construction product manufacturers and suppliers—the part of
the sector which most closely resembles other manufacturing industries.408
255. BERR told us the closure of the programme was a response to a review by the then
Chief Scientific Adviser, Sir John Fairclough, which recommended that “the industry
should take greater responsibility for defining and funding the research needed to support
its future competitiveness”. It also recommended that government should target
collaborative funding programmes “selectively at the key competitiveness issues” and
gradually withdraw funding outside of these areas.410 However, we do not believe that this
can be construed as a justification for the complete closure of the DTI’s construction
programme, especially given that the same report states that “the available resources for
construction R&D are the minimum the sector deserves, bearing in mind its size and
importance”.
256. The programme may also have been the victim of departmental reorganisation. BRE
told us that following the 2001 election, responsibility for construction was transferred
from the then Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions (DETR) to the
DTI, which brought construction sponsorship alongside other sectors handled by the
Department. At that time, the DTI was also undertaking a fundamental review of its
business support activities and the way in which it supported innovation, which resulted in
a move away from sector-specific schemes, such as the one that had benefited the
construction industry, and the pooling of many funding streams into the business-led
Technology Programme, managed by the Technology Strategy Board (TSB). BRE told us
that the funding for the Construction Research and Innovation Programme, “to quote the
407 Ibid.
410 Sir John Fairclough, Rethinking construction innovation and research, 2002
90 Construction matters
Minister at the time, was ‘snaffled’ into the central coffers of the DTI and probably
reappeared in the Technology Programme”.411
257. The TSB provides funding in a variety of ways for ‘key technology areas’, such as
nanotechnology and bioscience, and ‘key application areas’, which includes the built
environment. It has established the ‘Modern Built Environment Knowledge Transfer
Network’, led by BRE, which aims to increase the rate of technology and innovation take-
up of the sector. The TSB has also recently announced its ‘Low Impact Building Innovation
Platform’, which will provide £4 million of funding for collaborative research projects into
new components and materials that reduce the energy and water use, and waste
production of buildings.
258. Although the Research and Technology Organisations (RTOs) welcomed the funding
provided by the TSB, they noted that it did not address the gaps left by the closure of the
previous programme.412 Indeed, Constructing Excellence believed “many of the strategic
issues needing research in the industry are not technology driven” and therefore would not
receive funding from the TSB.413 Overall, BSRIA estimated that current public funding for
construction R&D was between £5 million and £10 million per annum, with most of this
coming from the TSB. That is less than half the amount spent prior to 2002. However,
BERR told us there were a number of other sources of construction-related public R&D
funding across government, including:
• Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (c. £32 million per annum for
academic-led research);
• Department for Communities and Local Government (c. £5 million per annum for
research underpinning the Building Regulations);
• Highways Agency (c. £8 million per annum towards asset management issues,
including construction techniques);
• Environment Agency (c. £4 million per annum for R&D into flood management);
259. The Department suggested that this “indicates there has not been any major shift of
money away from construction but rather some redistribution”.414 The Minister
responsible for construction also thought “the beneficiaries of the previous arrangements
may have a bit of nostalgia for how things used to be”.415 The RTOs argued that there had
been very clear negative consequences of the drop-off in funding following the closure of
the DTI programme. The starkest evidence was the fall in the number of papers published
by the RTOs in recent years, from an average of 173 new titles per year between 2000 and
2005, to just 63 in 2006—a decline of 63%.416 BRE told us the underlying situation was even
worse because a large proportion of these ‘new’ titles were actually just updates of older
documents.
260. The RTOs listed a number of consequences of the lack of direct BERR funding for
construction R&D. First, there is no longer sufficient monitoring of the performance of
new technologies, such as microgeneration, and construction techniques to learn what
does and does not work. Second, funding is no longer available to translate university
research into ‘applied advice’ for industry. Third, the UK is increasingly absent from
international forums and is no longer learning from international practice, whilst also
ceding influence within Europe in standards setting.417 This decline risks undermining the
sector’s international competitiveness and its export earnings.418 BRE referred to the
situation as a ‘slow crisis’ because it has to date gone largely unnoticed. Yet the RTOs
believe “a critical part of the UK’s competitive position and delivery capacity is being
steadily undermined”.419 The Minister responded: “I have certainly not seen any evidence
of damage to UK construction”.420 The RTOs’ concerns were supported by the Strategic
Forum for Construction, (although the Department claimed the contrary).421 We are
surprised that the Government appears to be unaware of industry concerns about such an
important issue.
261. The UK’s National Platform for the Built Environment, managed by Constructing
Excellence, was launched in 2005. It aims to increase the level of business-led relevant
research. It provides a means for industry to articulate its R&D needs to the research
community. It has published a set of research priorities for the future. However, despite a
positive reception from the industry, Constructing Excellence said its progress to date has
been hampered by a lack of available ‘seed funding’.422
262. Overall, there was strong support for reinstating a dedicated construction research
and innovation programme to address the concerns over lack of public funding. The RTOs
believed this could be achieved without additional taxation. Rather, the Landfill Tax Levy,
the Aggregates Levy and the Climate Change Levy could all provide potential sources of
funding through a simple ‘top-slicing’ of a small proportion of the monies raised, a very
large proportion of which come from construction industry firms in the first place.423 It is
likely, though, that this funding has already been allocated for expenditure or reduced taxes
elsewhere. It is over-optimistic to suggest that re-allocating some of this money for
construction R&D could be achieved without a cost; however, some of the funding from
these levies is intended to support the industry, and it seems appropriate to consider how
best it should be spent in the future.
421 Ev 143, para 19 (BERR) and Ev 213, para 51 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA)
263. Unlike most other developed countries the UK does not have a dedicated publicly-
funded research and innovation programme for its construction sector. We believe this
is unwise. Research and innovation is necessary to meet the Government’s targets for
sustainable construction and its own needs as a client. The structure of the construction
industry and the nature of its work mean that the usual commercial drivers of R&D
investment are either missing or very weak—if there is market failure, government
support has to be provided. There needs to be an urgent assessment of the level of
support, and how it should be supplied, followed by monitoring to ensure the support
continues to meet the industry’s needs. A Chief Construction Officer would be best
placed to do this. We recognise that increased spending in one area has to be offset by
decreases elsewhere, or an increase in revenue. However, the industry pays a
considerable amount through the Landfill Tax and Aggregates Levies. We believe there
is scope for recycling a proportion of these funds to the industry to help fund research,
even if this means additional funds have to be provided, either from the taxpayer or the
industry. Finally we note that a Chief Construction Officer could also co-ordinate
public sector spending through the modest programmes that already exist to ensure its
effectiveness is maximised.
265. Construction firms had three main concerns about the Building Regulations. The first
was complexity. The Regulations contain 14 parts and cover hundreds of pages. Witnesses
said they were “too cumbersome”, and needed “a greater emphasis on clarity”.425 Such
complexity has even led to instances where different parts of the Regulations conflict with
each other. A second concern was the notice period for changes to the Regulations. Final
details are often not settled until very shortly before the industry has to implement them.
This can be damaging if, for example, firms have invested in capacity to produce a material,
which is subsequently not favoured by the Regulations.426 It also creates difficulties for
small firms, which often struggle to keep up with the changes.427 Finally, witnesses
425 Ev 255 (Federation of Environmental Trade Associations), Ev 213, para 54 (Construction Confederation, CIC and CPA).
Also, Q 431 (Home Builders Federation)
complained there was a lack of longer-term strategic vision on the part of government as to
the evolution of the Regulations over time. This can inhibit forward investment planning
by the supply chain.428
266. In March 2008, the Department for Communities and Local Government published a
consultation paper, The Future of Building Control. This seeks to address some of the above
concerns. A key proposal is to introduce a periodic review system for the Regulations that
runs over a three-year cycle. Changes would take place over a range of parts, following a
structured process, and replacing the current approach whereby revisions to different parts
are published in a piecemeal fashion. Furthermore, the Department has proposed a ‘two-
cycle rule’ whereby a particular issue will not be addressed in consecutive cycles. In other
words, no issue would be subject to change more than once every six years. The
consultation also proposes the introduction of a ‘standstill’ period of six months between
the publication of new legislation and its implementation. This should allow more time for
the industry to prepare for any changes.
267. The consultation stops short of proposing a wholesale simplification of the existing
regulations and their guidance. It argues that the amount of work involved would distract
from the other reforms. Furthermore, it notes that the required standards for buildings
would remain the same, regardless of how the information is presented. Nonetheless, the
consultation does state that the Department will seek to remove overlaps, or points of
confusion, by reducing the number of parts over time as part of the periodic review
framework. The consultation closed in June 2008. The Government hopes to introduce the
first review cycle in line with its commitment to review Part L of the Regulations
(conservation of fuel and power) in 2010.
268. The construction industry believes the Building Regulations are too complex, and
changed too often. We agree. We welcome the Government’s proposals to create a
framework to manage changes to the Regulations over a three-year cycle, and to limit
amendments on any single issue to once every six years. We hope that this will
effectively address the industry’s concerns on the timing of changes and the way in
which frequent changes hinder its strategic planning. We hope too that the Department
for Communities and Local Government will use the first review cycle, which will begin
in 2010, to address inconsistencies and overlaps in the current Regulations. We are,
though, disappointed that a more radical simplification of the rules is not under
consideration and believe the possibility should be re-examined.
TrustMark
270. BERR estimates that botched home improvement work costs around £1.5 billion a
year and that Trading Standards Officers receive over 100,000 complaints about cowboy
builders a year.430 The Department, in partnership with the industry and consumer
protection organisations has established the TrustMark initiative. Firms carrying the
TrustMark badge have had their technical skills independently checked through regular
on-site inspections. They will also have adopted a code of practice that includes insurance,
good health and safety practices and customer care. The scheme provides a complaints
procedure in the event of a problem or disagreement between the client and the firm.
271. To date some 16,000 firms have registered for the scheme, which now has 25
operators.431 However, one of the scheme’s operators, the Federation of Master Builders
(FMB), was concerned by the low level of consumer awareness of the TrustMark brand.
Because clients are not routinely requesting TrustMark registered firms, they see little
business advantage in joining the scheme. FMB suggested marketing had been hindered by
a recent reduction in government funding.432 In response, the Minister said the initiative
had been designed as self-funding from the outset and that BERR was working with the
TrustMark scheme operators to establish a consumer forum to help raise the brand’s
profile.433 The scheme is still in its infancy, and was only launched to consumers in January
2006. Given the infrequency with which most homeowners employ builders, arguably it
will take some time for brand awareness of the TrustMark logo to develop. This should
happen over time, so long as the scheme retains the support of government and its current
branding.
272. Companies need to be able to show that they are competent to give their clients
confidence and to ensure a level playing field for competition amongst suppliers. We
hope the TrustMark scheme will, in due course, become a recognised symbol of quality
for builders in the same way that CORGI is for gas installers. This will take time, but
with some 16,000 builders already registered, the initiative has made good progress
since its launch in 2006. It is in the interests of reputable companies that the scheme
should succeed and we believe that the onus for funding and publicising the scheme
falls on the industry and not the Government.
Constructionline
273. Firms are usually required to ‘pre-qualify’ before they can tender for public sector
construction work by submitting a range of information including their contact details,
financial standing, evidence of health and safety credentials, and references. This is often
administratively time-consuming and repetitive. Several witnesses highlighted the plethora
of different qualification schemes that existed across the public sector, many of which
required very similar information, but were tailored to suit particular clients.434 The
Association of Consultancy and Engineering said more than half its members had to sign
up for multiple accreditation bodies. For those signing up to four schemes the fees can total
more than £8,000.435 The Specialist Engineering Contractors’ (SEC) Group told us that
small and medium-sized firms might have to pre-qualify for 30 or more different schemes
to obtain work, and the time and cost of the process present a significant obstacle to SMEs
winning public sector contracts.436
274. The 1994 Latham report, Constructing the Team recommended a national database of
pre-qualification information which all public sector procurers were to use. In response,
the then DTI established Constructionline—a joint venture with Capita. Since its
inception, the database has registered 14,500 members, ranging from sole traders to large
contractors, and it is used by 1,600 client organisations.437 However, Constructionline drew
sharp criticism from all the construction umbrella bodies. The Construction Confederation
noted that public sector clients, especially local authorities, continue to use their own
bespoke pre-qualification procedures, because the system relies on self-certification, and
therefore does not command clients’ confidence.438 The National Specialist Contractors’
Council (NSCC) told us “it had not delivered”, while the SEC Group said “it is not what we
are looking for in the industry”.439 In response the Minister said the scheme “is performing
a useful role, but I would like to see that further extended”.440
275. One solution suggested by the SEC Group was to develop a set of core criteria for
different pre-qualification schemes that would allow mutual recognition. Firms that
registered under one scheme that met these core criteria would then not need to qualify for
another scheme that also held the same standards. For example, in health and safety a set of
core criteria now exists within the Approved Code of Practice, accompanying the
Construction, Design and Management Regulations 2007.441
276. The Government must reduce the burden that multiple public sector pre-
qualification schemes impose on construction firms, particularly SMEs.
Constructionline was set up to address this, but it has proved unsatisfactory for the
industry. The Government should either make it work, or abandon it. If the consensus
is that Constructionline cannot work as intended, then the Office of Government
Commerce should consider how it might develop core criteria and mutual recognition
between schemes.
434 Q 394 (Specialist Engineering Contractors’ Group); Ev 246 (Electrical Contractors’ Association), Ev 211 (Construction
Confederation, CIC and CPA) and Ev 265, para 27 (Heating and Ventilating Contractors’ Association)
Cover pricing
277. In April 2008, the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) issued a ‘Statement of Objections’
(SO) against 112 construction firms in England over alleged incidences of ‘cover pricing’.442
This is a practice whereby a contractor aims deliberately to lose a tender by submitting an
uncompetitive bid. They might choose to do this because they have discovered late on that
they are not able to carry out the work, or because they wish to stay on a client’s preferred
bidders lists. This practice is not illegal in itself. However, the law forbids firms bidding for
the same contract from contacting each other during the process to gain an estimate of
what might represent a plausible bid, but which would still not win the contract.443
278. The OFT’s inquiry, which began in 2004, has focused on 244 infringements. In the
case of 12 of these (involving 9 companies out of the 112), it is investigating more serious
potential incidents of a successful bidder paying an agreed sum of money to the
unsuccessful tenderer. The OFT’s press notice states that “no assumption should be made
at this stage that there has been an infringement of competition law by any of the
companies named in the SO”.444 Those companies concerned now have an opportunity to
respond in writing or orally to the OFT before it reaches a final judgement. This is not
expected until 2009.
279. The statement of objections is not publicly available, so the only available information
relating to the latest developments has been the OFT’s press notice and briefings it
provided to the media on the day of its release. The Construction Confederation has stated
publicly its concern at the “sensationalist” reporting of the OFT announcement, which it
believes has adversely affected the public’s perception of the industry.445 The Construction
Confederation believe that the practice of cover pricing was mostly a symptom of
inadequate procurement regimes within the public sector. It also argues that the use of
cover pricing had all but died out in more recent years because of a move away from
procuring on the basis of lowest price.
280. The controversy has also potentially created confusion among public sector clients
about whether their own contracts have been subject to cover pricing. If it has taken place,
it is not clear either whether the practice would have cost the taxpayer. There were press
reports that customers may have overpaid by around 10%, although the Construction
Confederation argue that cover pricing itself did not give rise to higher prices for clients.446
Given the low average profit margins for the sector—typically 2-3%—it seems unlikely that
if clients did overpay, that it was by the amount speculated.
281. The industry’s low profit margins also have implications for the OFT’s final decisions
on the case, once it has completed taking evidence. The Office has the power to fine a firm
up to 10% of its worldwide turnover if it is found to be a member of a cartel. However, this
is not likely to apply for any companies found guilty of cover pricing. Many have also
442 Office of Fair Trading Press Notice, OFT issues statement of objections against 112 construction companies, 17 April
2008
445 The Daily Telegraph, Builders hit back at OFT over ‘innuendo’, 21 April 2008
446 The Daily Telegraph, Builders in £300m price-fix probe, 18 April 2008
Construction matters 97
applied for leniency in exchange for cooperating with the investigation. There is a risk,
however, that highly punitive fines would send those companies into administration,
giving rise to the paradoxical result of an inquiry into anti-competitive behaviour actually
reducing the competitive capacity of the market.
282. The current controversy over ‘cover pricing’ can only have damaged the
construction industry’s reputation, and is at odds with the drive to raise standards. We
cannot pre-judge the final verdict of the Office of Fair Trading’s investigation.
However, we do believe that its outcome should be to ensure that the practice of firms
coordinating with each other to lose tenders for public sector work, as well as more
serious instances of making compensatory payments, are both stamped out. It must,
however, achieve this without damaging the industry’s capacity. We also recognise that
sensible clients should have procurement systems which do not create incentives to
engage in cover pricing in the first place.
98 Construction matters
284. The Government and the sector appreciate the importance of the Olympics as a
means of demonstrating client best practice and for this to act as a catalyst for wider change
across the industry. In support of this, the ODA and the ministers responsible for the
Olympics and construction, have signed up to the 2012 Construction Commitments.
These are essentially the same as the recently published industry-wide Commitments, but
applied specifically to the Olympic Games. As the ODA said to us: “we are going to put
ourselves right there in the goldfish bowl and say, ‘We will demonstrate that we are doing
what we said we intended to do and we are following the construction commitments’”.448
The following sections briefly assess the performance of the ODA against the sustainability
‘triple bottom line’ we set out in Chapters 4, 5 and 6.
Economic sustainability
285. The fixed deadline for 2012, combined with intense public scrutiny of costs, make the
achievement of economic sustainability fundamental to the success of the Olympics. Our
evidence suggests the ODA is making good progress in adopting best practice in
procurement, particularly in seeking to develop integrated teams for the various
construction projects. Both Constructing Excellence and the Construction Clients’ Group
commended the ODA for engaging early with their suppliers.449 The Authority also
appears to appreciate that an integrated team must extend beyond the client, contractor
and design team, to include specialist sub-contractors as well.450
286. In addition to early engagement, the ODA said categorically that it is adopting a best
value approach to procurement rather than awarding work on the basis of lowest cost.451
This is a particular challenge, given the inevitable and increasing political pressure to
minimise the costs of the Games. An appreciation of best value is vital for the programme,
though, because of the importance placed on the legacy use of the Olympic venues—a key
factor in London’s successful bid. For example, after the Games, the Olympic Village will
287. However, the lack of bidders for some of the main Olympic venues is a potential
barrier to the achievement of best value. The athletics stadium and the aquatics centre both
finished with only one bidder each. The ODA does not believe that this meant it had not
been able to negotiate a good deal.452 The main reason for the lack of competition to build
the main stadium appears to have been that the strength of the bid from the winning team
put off other bidders. It includes Sir Robert McAlpine, which was involved in delivering the
Emirates stadium—widely seen as a highly successful construction project.453 There were
three companies involved at the start of the bidding process for the aquatics centre.
However, for different reasons two of these dropped out, leaving only the eventual winner,
Balfour Beatty.454 In other words, there was sufficient competition at earlier stages to give
the ODA negotiating strength. Other projects received a larger number of bids. The ODA
may be confident it has achieved reasonable value, but the low number of bids for the two
most prominent parts of the Olympic programme shows a rather meek response from the
industry.
288. Elsewhere, the ODA is taking various approaches to encourage integrated team
working. This includes its intention to use the NEC3 Engineering and Construction
Contract for all projects, which encourages partnering.455 It has also taken out project
insurance, emulating its successful use on the Heathrow Terminal 5 programme.456 It has
adopted a policy of not holding retentions from the main contractor, and stated that it
expects this to be reciprocated down the supply chain, in line with the ‘Fair Payment’
Charter. The Authority stated that where this is not happening, “we will take an extremely
dim and proactive view of it”.457
289. The 2012 Olympic Games is a unique and complex construction programme
managed by a one-off client. The adoption of an integrated team-working approach
will be key to the delivery of the Games on time and to budget. Early indications suggest
the Olympic Delivery Authority (ODA) is adopting most of the best practice required
to foster such integrated working. However, construction work has only just begun. We
hope in particular that the ODA will ensure its payment and contract practices are
mirrored throughout the supply chain. We are disappointed that the construction
industry itself has not been more enthusiastic in bidding for the main Olympic
contracts, and we hope the ODA will have a better response for its remaining
construction contracts.
Social sustainability
290. The ODA is also committed to an Olympic Games that fosters social sustainability.
UCATT, the union, wished to see the ODA mandate a direct employment model for all
workers, and for it to agree standard wage levels across the whole programme.458 However,
the ODA stated that, though it recognised the value of direct over self-employment, legally
it was not able to mandate it. Despite this, the Authority did note that currently around
85% of those on site are directly employed.459 It has also declined to implement a unified
pay structure across all the Olympic projects, stating that this was “unrealistic”, and that
what “is important is that people are fairly and appropriately paid within the working rule
agreements and there is a realistic level of parity across the piece”.460
291. The ODA has given a high priority to developing its workforce. In February 2008, it
published its Employment and Skills Strategy. In this the Authority outlined its aim for
previously unemployed people to make up at least 7% of the workforce. The ODA is
currently achieving 10%, and a large number of workers are being re-engaged to work on
subsequent contracts.461 Elsewhere, the Authority is also aiming to get people into trainee
apprenticeships and work placements across the Olympic sites. To this end, a branch of the
National Skills Academy for Construction, with £38 million of funding, will be based on
the Stratford site. To support this, the Major Contractors Group has agreed to make
available 1,000 job placements to young people who have completed further education
courses and need on site experience; 1,000 training placements for local people over 21;
and sponsorship for 50 undergraduates to obtain a construction-related degree. This is the
sort of effort which should help begin to address the domestic skills capacity constraints the
industry currently faces.
292. The ODA has also committed to promoting workforce diversity. In 2007 it published
its Equality and Diversity Strategy. This sets out its aim to work with partner organisations
to encourage women, Black, Asian and minority ethnic (BAME), and disabled people to
apply for jobs in the Olympic construction programme. Currently, just under 12% of the
ODA and its contractors’ workforce are women, suggesting there is still some way to go.
The ODA in conjunction with the London Development Agency is establishing a ‘Women
into Construction’ project, which will focus on supporting more women working directly
on the Olympics construction.462
293. Finally, on health and safety the ODA stated its intention to be “extremely intrusive”
in ensuring best practice was embedded through out its supply chains. At the time of its
evidence to us, the Authority had recently passed its second million man hours without a
reportable accident on site. It has also created a Safety Leadership Group, whose members
include the Health and Safety Executive, contractors and the unions, to ensure all
stakeholders work together to promote the highest standards in heath and safety. In
addition the Authority has stated clearly its requirement for all site staff to carry a CSCS
458 Qq 117 and 118 (Union of Construction, Allied Trades and Technicians)
card or equivalent. Furthermore, the ODA has recently opened an occupational heath
centre on site.463
294. The ODA has made good progress in delivering a socially sustainable 2012
Olympics. It is demonstrating exactly the sort of engagement with the workforce that
we would like to see in all large public sector construction projects. We are particularly
encouraged by its health and safety record to date. We welcome also its commitment to
provide substantial training opportunities and promote workforce diversity. If other
public sector programmes followed this approach, it would significantly improve the
industry’s capacity to deliver. However, these efforts will be undermined if contractors
are allowed to use ‘bogus’ self-employed workers. It is regrettable that the Authority
cannot legally mandate direct employment across the programme, but it should
encourage a strong preference for it as far as possible.
Environmental sustainability
295. An environmentally sustainable Olympics is one of the six themes of the 2012
Construction Commitments. To this end, the ODA has published its Sustainable
Development Strategy, which outlines a number of objectives, covering, among others,
carbon emissions, water use, waste, materials sourcing, and noise and air pollution.
Examples of the approach taken by the ODA include the energy centre for the main site,
which will be a combined cooling, heat and power plant (CCHP), fitted with woodchip
boilers that will provide hot water to all the venues, including the aquatics centre.464
Elsewhere, as part of the site clean-up process, over 1.3 million tonnes of soil,
contaminated with substances such as oil, petrol, tar, arsenic and lead, is being cleaned so it
can be reused to landscape the Olympic Park and provide land for future development.465
In January 2008, the ODA reported that it was achieving more than 90% recycling or reuse
of demolition material. For example, complete buildings are being dismantled and rebuilt
for use elsewhere. As part of an ecology programme, wildlife has also been relocated to new
habitats, including a small nature reserve at the north end of the main site along the banks
of the river Lea.466
296. The ODA has shown that environmental concerns can be met if they are designed
into the construction process from the outset. The challenge for the Authority in the
future will be to ensure that contractors for the various Olympic venues adopt the same
attitude, and that concerns over short-term costs do not militate against designs that
promote whole-life value.
464 ODA Press Notice, Sustainable energy at heart of Olympic park power plans, 18 February 2008
465 ODA Press Notice, On-site lab helps high-tech Olympic park clean-up, 14 February 2008
466 ODA Press Notice, Sustainability at heart of Olympic park creation, 23 January 2008
102 Construction matters
9 Final remarks
297. 2008 marks a potential turning point in the construction industry reform agenda.
Whilst we recognise the current difficulties facing the sector, we hope that this Report,
in conjunction with the launch of the Construction Commitments, the industry’s new
Accelerating Change targets, and the Strategy for Sustainable Construction, will provide
the impetus for widespread improvement in the sector’s performance in the long term.
The industry has recognised that it has ultimate responsibility for ensuring its
continued health, but government actions can help. The Government, because of its
role as both client and regulator, can and must be at the forefront of the drive to embed
best practice, and to facilitate the transfer of learning from frequent to infrequent
clients. It needs to provide organisations such as BERR, the Office of Government
Commerce and the Health and Safety Executive with the resources and power to
achieve this. Furthermore, to give strategic leadership for the sector, there must be
someone who both government and the industry accept as having overall responsibility
for construction. Truly joined-up working between government and industry, and
between different government departments, would be immeasurably improved by the
creation of a post of Chief Construction Officer. And the Government should
remember that, as the industry’s largest single client, helping the sector to improve
means that it and the taxpayer will directly benefit.
Construction matters 103
12. In the wake of the launch of the new industry-wide Construction Commitments, we
recommend the Government reinvigorates the Achieving Excellence initiative by
establishing new targets for public sector construction project performance. The
OGC should also put in place performance measurement systems that collect data
against all of these targets—not just some. (Paragraph 67)
update the Standards to reflect the principles set out in the new Construction
Commitments. The OGC should also work to promote greater awareness of the
Standards; to measure their use across the public sector; and to enforce compliance
by central government departments and their agencies. Local authorities, with the
support of the Local Government Association, should also comply with the
Standards in the interests of the communities they serve. (Paragraph 71)
Labour supply
17. One of the main sources of capacity growth in the construction industry in recent
years has been the availability of skilled migrant workers, predominantly from
Eastern Europe. This imported labour has helped mitigate the effect of skills
shortages and facilitated the continued expansion of the industry. However, it will
not provide a long-term solution to the construction industry’s skills needs since,
over time, most foreign workers will return to their home countries. This means
Construction matters 107
there is an ongoing need for the UK to invest in its own construction skills base.
(Paragraph 92)
21. One of the responsibilities of the Chief Construction Officer should be leading the
Public Sector Construction Clients’ Forum’s work on capacity planning. The post-
holder should work with departments both to improve the flow of information on
construction programmes, and to advise on their co-ordination. As the industry’s
largest single client, the public sector ultimately benefits from such early engagement.
(Paragraph 108)
108 Construction matters
Collaborative contracts
26. Integrated team-working needs to be underpinned by contracts that foster
collaborative rather than adversarial relationships between clients, their contractors
and their sub-contractors. Unfortunately the industry does not seem able to do this
for itself. As a result clients must take the lead. There are useful standard contract
forms such as the NEC3 Engineering and Construction Contract, recommended by
the Office of Government Commerce for all public sector construction projects.
Despite this, a large proportion of government construction is still let using a variety
of traditional contractual arrangements. Led by the OGC, departments should work
towards the use of collaborative contracts as a matter of course, and ensure they are
adopted throughout their supply chains. (Paragraph 132)
Project insurance
27. Integrated Project Insurance provides single cover for the entire project team, and
could foster integrated working by encouraging the collective ownership of a
project’s target budget. It is an emerging concept, but one that could deliver benefits
for all members of the project team. We encourage the OGC to set a target for the
approach to be piloted across a range of departmental construction projects so it can
be properly evaluated. (Paragraph 136)
Retentions
28. The practice of holding a retention against contractors as an insurance against
defects undermines efforts to promote team-working and integrated supply chains in
the construction industry. It also damages the cash-flow of smaller sub-contractors
and reduces investment in training and innovation. Government has other means by
which it can ensure the sector delivers good quality projects, for example where it has
long-term framework arrangements in place. Given that the practice is at odds with
the Government’s promotion of integrated working through the Common
Minimum Standards and the Construction Commitments, we urge it to require all
parts of the public sector to end retentions as soon as possible. (Paragraph 143)
Measuring Performance
32. Integrated working should give teams an incentive to evaluate their performance and
apply lessons learnt to future projects. Greater use of post-occupancy evaluation
(POE) has the potential to benefit construction teams, their clients, and future clients
through increased use of evidence-based design. We welcome the OGC’s decision to
mandate POE for central government departments, building on its initial pilot
project, although we note that the work is mainly focused on office buildings. Once
established, the scheme should be extended to cover all parts of the public sector as
soon as possible to collect information on a range of different types of building. We
hope the OGC and the industry will be able to use the information gathered to
inform the construction of future public sector buildings. (Paragraph 161)
‘Bogus’ self-employment
34. The widespread practice of wrongfully classifying directly employed workers as self-
employed, otherwise known as ‘bogus’ self-employment, creates significant costs for
construction workers, clients, the wider industry, and the Exchequer. To tackle the
Construction matters 111
35. We welcome the setting up of the Vulnerable Worker Enforcement Forum and look
forward to its recommendations. We hope it will give particular attention to whether
the Gangmasters Licensing Regulations should be extended to cover construction
workers. More generally, the public sector as client has a major role to play in
providing long-term security of work for construction firms, which departments
should actively take advantage of. Among the benefits this would bring is a real
encouragement for contractors to take on more direct employees. (Paragraph 178)
training. We also commend the high level of take-up of the Construction Skills
Certification Scheme (CSCS) and hope the industry will be able to achieve 100%
coverage by 2010. However, clients must play their part in reaching this target. Public
sector clients in particular should adhere to the Common Minimum Standards, and
contractually oblige their supply teams to ensure their workforces are CSCS-carded.
Contractors not committed to the Scheme should not be invited to tender for work.
(Paragraph 198)
Workforce diversity
40. The vast majority of the construction workforce is white and male. This means there
is a potentially huge pool of untapped talent which could relieve capacity constraints
in the sector, and make the composition of its workforce more representative of
wider society. Government as client to the sector is in a powerful position to effect
change by ensuring contractors provide employment opportunities to atypical
recruits. We welcome the explicit inclusion of promoting a diverse workforce in the
industry’s new Construction Commitments. We recommend that the Government
strengthens this by making equal opportunities part of the Common Minimum
Standards for public sector construction procurement. (Paragraph 204)
42. More generally, government as client has a vital role to play in improving
performance. The Common Minimum Standards already state that clients should
ensure all contractors are assessed for health and safety when tendering for work,
and all workers should be registered on the Construction Skills Certification Scheme.
But this is not happening. The new Construction, Design and Management (CDM)
Regulations 2007 place a much greater emphasise on the client’s role in ensuring
health and safety, whilst the Corporate Manslaughter and Corporate Homicide Act
2007 provides the punishment in the event of a fatality due to organisational failings.
The Government should use both of these to enforce a change of approach in public
sector construction procurement, and to drive culture change across the sector.
(Paragraph 219)
Construction matters 113
Construction R&D
47. Unlike most other developed countries the UK does not have a dedicated publicly-
funded research and innovation programme for its construction sector. We believe
this is unwise. Research and innovation is necessary to meet the Government’s
targets for sustainable construction and its own needs as a client. The structure of the
construction industry and the nature of its work mean that the usual commercial
drivers of R&D investment are either missing or very weak—if there is market
failure, government support has to be provided. There needs to be an urgent
assessment of the level of support, and how it should be supplied, followed by
monitoring to ensure the support continues to meet the industry’s needs. A Chief
Construction Officer would be best placed to do this. We recognise that increased
spending in one area has to be offset by decreases elsewhere, or an increase in
revenue. However, the industry pays a considerable amount through the Landfill Tax
and Aggregates Levies. We believe there is scope for recycling a proportion of these
funds to the industry to help fund research, even if this means additional funds have
to be provided, either from the taxpayer or the industry. Finally we note that a Chief
Construction Officer could also co-ordinate public sector spending through the
modest programmes that already exist to ensure its effectiveness is maximised.
(Paragraph 263)
TrustMark
49. Companies need to be able to show that they are competent to give their clients
confidence and to ensure a level playing field for competition amongst suppliers. We
hope the TrustMark scheme will, in due course, become a recognised symbol of
quality for builders in the same way that CORGI is for gas installers. This will take
Construction matters 115
time, but with some 16,000 builders already registered, the initiative has made good
progress since its launch in 2006. It is in the interests of reputable companies that the
scheme should succeed and we believe that the onus for funding and publicising the
scheme falls on the industry and not the Government. (Paragraph 272)
Constructionline
50. The Government must reduce the burden that multiple public sector pre-
qualification schemes impose on construction firms, particularly SMEs.
Constructionline was set up to address this, but it has proved unsatisfactory for the
industry. The Government should either make it work, or abandon it. If the
consensus is that Constructionline cannot work as intended, then the Office of
Government Commerce should consider how it might develop core criteria and
mutual recognition between schemes. (Paragraph 276)
Cover pricing
51. The current controversy over ‘cover pricing’ can only have damaged the
construction industry’s reputation, and is at odds with the drive to raise standards.
We cannot pre-judge the final verdict of the Office of Fair Trading’s investigation.
However, we do believe that its outcome should be to ensure that the practice of
firms coordinating with each other to lose tenders for public sector work, as well as
more serious instances of making compensatory payments, are both stamped out. It
must, however, achieve this without damaging the industry’s capacity. We also
recognise that sensible clients should have procurement systems which do not create
incentives to engage in cover pricing in the first place. (Paragraph 282)
53. The ODA has made good progress in delivering a socially sustainable 2012
Olympics. It is demonstrating exactly the sort of engagement with the workforce that
we would like to see in all large public sector construction projects. We are
particularly encouraged by its health and safety record to date. We welcome also its
commitment to provide substantial training opportunities and promote workforce
diversity. If other public sector programmes followed this approach, it would
significantly improve the industry’s capacity to deliver. However, these efforts will be
undermined if contractors are allowed to use ‘bogus’ self-employed workers. It is
116 Construction matters
regrettable that the Authority cannot legally mandate direct employment across the
programme, but it should encourage a strong preference for it as far as possible.
(Paragraph 294)
54. The ODA has shown that environmental concerns can be met if they are designed
into the construction process from the outset. The challenge for the Authority in the
future will be to ensure that contractors for the various Olympic venues adopt the
same attitude, and that concerns over short-term costs do not militate against
designs that promote whole-life value. (Paragraph 296)
Final Remarks
55. 2008 marks a potential turning point in the construction industry reform agenda.
Whilst we recognise the current difficulties facing the sector, we hope that this
Report, in conjunction with the launch of the Construction Commitments, the
industry’s new Accelerating Change targets, and the Strategy for Sustainable
Construction, will provide the impetus for widespread improvement in the sector’s
performance in the long term. The industry has recognised that it has ultimate
responsibility for ensuring its continued health, but government actions can help.
The Government, because of its role as both client and regulator, can and must be at
the forefront of the drive to embed best practice, and to facilitate the transfer of
learning from frequent to infrequent clients. It needs to provide organisations such
as BERR, the Office of Government Commerce and the Health and Safety Executive
with the resources and power to achieve this. Furthermore, to give strategic
leadership for the sector, there must be someone who both government and the
industry accept as having overall responsibility for construction. Truly joined-up
working between government and industry, and between different government
departments, would be immeasurably improved by the creation of a post of Chief
Construction Officer. And the Government should remember that, as the industry’s
largest single client, helping the sector to improve means that it and the taxpayer will
directly benefit. (Paragraph 297)
Construction matters 117
• Procurement decisions will be transparent, made on best value rather than lower cost,
use evaluation criteria and where appropriate, specialist advisors, whilst encouraging
the contribution of smaller organisations;
• All members of the construction team will be identified and involved at an early stage,
particularly during the design process and encouraged to work collaboratively;
• To ensure effective and equitable cash-flow for all those involved, all contracts will
incorporate fair payment practices, such as payment periods of 30 days, no unfair
withholding of retentions, project bank accounts where practicable and cost effective
and will include mechanisms to encourage defects-free construction;
• The duties of each project team member will be identified and shared at the outset of
the project and appropriate insurance policies, such as project insurance, put in place;
• Risks will be clearly identified, financially quantified and allocated in line with each
party’s ownership and ability to manage the risk;
• The employment practices of all organisations, including sub-contractors and the self-
employed, will be scrutinised by the client and the supply-chain to avoid abuses.
Commitment to people
Valuing people leads to a more productive and engaged workforce, facilitates recruitment
and retention of staff and engages local communities positively in construction projects.
• Local employment projects and local training initiatives will be utilised in order to
create sustainable communities;
• Local communities will be fully involved and engaged from the outset of all projects;
118 Construction matters
• Training and development will be offered to all staff, including the client, to meet
individual, project and company needs;
• Construction sites will be clean, tidy and provide good quality facilities, including
catering, appropriate to the diverse needs of the workforce; and
Client leadership
Client leadership is vital to the success of any project and enables the construction industry
to perform at its best.
• The client structure and responsibilities will be clearly identified and adequately
resourced to ensure continuity in leadership for the duration of the project;
• A clearly expressed and well researched vision and business case for the construction
project will be developed by the client;
• A detailed brief with clear financial objectives, programme and definition of what is
meant by success will be developed by the client before the design stage for all projects
and this will be shared at the outset with all those involved;
• The client will champion best practice in design, teamworking, innovation, health and
safety and sustainability and demand an appropriately trained and qualified workforce;
• A clear, collaborative and flexible procurement policy will be developed by the client,
together with a clearly expressed industrial relations’ framework;
• The client will work within the project team from the outset of the project to identify
and manage project risks; and
Sustainability
Sustainability lies at the heart of design and construction. A sustainable approach will bring
full and lasting environmental, social and economic benefits.
• Each project will develop a specific Sustainability Action Plan which will address
environmental, social and economic aspects and aim to exceed the highest levels within
relevant standards and include all aspects of the supply chain;
• Targets, including the business case, will be set within all contracts and performance
will be monitored and appraised regularly;
• Projects will incorporate best practice approaches to resource use, waste minimisation,
low-carbon performance, employment, training and community engagement;
• Development plans will seek to enhance, create and protect the local natural
environment;
• Projects will actively aim to enhance the vitality and viability of local communities.
Design quality
The design should be creative, imaginative, sustainable and capable of meeting delivery
objectives. Quality in design and construction utilising the best of modern methods will
ensure that the project meets the needs of all stakeholders, both functionally and
architecturally.
• Designers will be selected according to ability and quality, together with other criteria
appropriate to the scale and complexity of the project;
• Every opportunity will be taken to encourage visionary designs, including art sculpture
and to provide opportunities for emerging designers and artists;
• The design must suit the practical, functional and operational requirements of the
building and meet both the client’s and users’ needs, to ensure that whole-life value is
delivered by addressing buildability, maintainability and usability, whilst driving health
and safety throughout;
• The design will be tested using third party design reviews and other tools for assessing
design quality; and
• All designs will address health and safety issues and all projects will have a risk register;
120 Construction matters
• Every project will have a strategy to deal with occupational health and provide full-time
qualified medical staff on site;
• All health and safety risks, including those relating to occupational health, will be
assessed, managed, action taken and communicated from inception to design;
• Companies will sign up to and implement the Strategic Forum Health and Safety Code;
and
• All professional and site staff will hold Construction Skills Certification Scheme (CSCS)
cards or equivalent.
Construction matters 121
Formal Minutes
Tuesday 8 July 2008
Members present:
Draft Report (Construction matters), proposed by the Chairman, brought up and read.
Ordered, That the draft Report be read a second time, paragraph by paragraph.
Resolved, That the Report be the Ninth Report of the Committee to the House.
Ordered, That embargoed copies of the Report be made available, in accordance with the
provisions of Standing Order No. 134.
Written evidence was ordered to be reported to the House for printing with the Report.
Written evidence was ordered to be reported to the House for placing in the Library and
Parliamentary Archives.
Witnesses
Tuesday 23 October 2007 Page
Sir Michael Latham, Chairman, Mr Peter Lobban, Chief Executive and Mr Peter
Rogerson, Deputy Chairman, ConstructionSkills Ev 25