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Ally's avatar

I’m only about a third through this and really enjoying so far but as a current civil servant this caught my eye: “But they very rarely - in my experience - develop major new ideas that take policy in a different direction.”

I would say the issue is not idea generation but idea progression. In other words, in my experience policy teams (especially those that genuinely interact with industry/frontline) are never short of ideas but the process of taking an idea into reality is so unbelievably painful that most don’t bother or ideas peter out after a certain point. To make policy a reality from the ‘bottom up’ in the CS you need to do so much ‘consensus building’ vertically and horizontally (your G6/7/Dd/Director/DG, all with their own concerns both political and resource-wise, plus those same command chains of other policy teams affected by your idea, and then repeat this for other departments for any policy that requires money or an ask of another dept) even before you get to ministers that it usually simply isn’t worth the effort, no matter how good the idea. This imposes an incredibly high bar on new policy thinking. The system you describe is therefore rational in that it prioritises thinking from the top down. This isn’t a good set up - and I think the CS should and could be much more innovative in how it tries to capture new ideas/thinking from teams - but outside our maybe a couple of policies I’ve seen develop somewhat organically and eventually be implemented that’s been my experience.

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Biondo Flavio's avatar

This is absolutely fascinating - thanks for writing it. It is not exactly surprising how chaotic a lot of the Covid stuff in education was, but it is always interesting to learn the details and particularly to see how much of it seems to have been pushed down on the department from the centre.

Working in [insert HEI], I have to say my over-riding memory was that any time the government wanted us to do something - often an ostensibly bad idea/very unpopular/at extremely short notice - we were a public institution that simply had to obey orders. Anytime any students - often entirely justifiably - complained about something we had been told to do, suddenly we were a private body again, which had to work it through with them, with the prospect of the courts/OfS/HMG intervening if we got it wrong.

I know that wasn't a feeling limited to universities, but there were some moments where it seemed particularly acute. I appreciate it probably also seemed very different from inside Whitehall.

Many more people now seem to accept that closing schools was a huge mistake, but the damage done to the 2018-2020 entry cohorts in universities gets less attention.

One typo that I don't think anyone else has pointed out - 'More broadly, other than short bursts of lockdown where to necessary to stop the NHS being overwhelmed'.

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