Shareholder Executive reviewed
Summary
The Shareholder Executive was established in 2003 to act as
an effective owner of businesses that are owned or part owned by government. It
is now an operational group within the Department of Trade and Industry with a
portfolio covering 27 businesses and a combined turnover of £21 billion.
This Report
'The
Shareholder Executive and Public Sector Businesses’ (HC 409) examines the
status and performance of the agency.
The Committee notes that
the role of the Executive marries both public and private objectives, setting
out to both achieve public policy objectives through the most cost effective
means and to provide a satisfactory return on the public money invested through
the shareholder value. The Committee states that the Executive has delivered
value for the taxpayer by adopting business criteria through a framework that
sets out clear priorities for the businesses, operating performance monitoring,
and holding management accountable for their delivery.
This Report
follows on from a National Audit Office Report
'The
Shareholder Executive and Public Sector Businesses’ (HC 255) published in
February 2007.
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How does it affect me?
If you work in a public sector business or are interested in the management
of businesses that are owned or part owned by government, this affects you.
The Committee sets out a number of conclusions and recommendations.
These include:
- The Department of Trade and Industry is setting
up a Board to provide direction and accountability for the Executive
-
There should be a presumption that all government businesses come within the
Executive's portfolio
- The Executive should market its services
comprehensively and seek to be more visible across government
- The
Executive should be given an explicit responsibility for advising sponsor
departments on the investment needs of their businesses
- The performance
management of the Executive needs to include wider measures that are based on
the results of individual businesses
- The Executive needs sufficient pay
flexibility to continue to recruit high-calibre staff
- The Executive's
responsibility for the postal services industry extends beyond shareholder
value issues and the Committee believes the Department should identify options
for relieving the Executive of responsibility for Royal Mail policy
- The
Executive should set business-level dividend targets which take into account
the risks faced by the business and that it should systematically undertake
valuations of the businesses in its portfolio.

Find out more about
the
Committee
of Public Accounts.
Read more on trade and industry policy on the Department
for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform website.
See more on the
Shareholder Executive.