| Allow me now to update the House
on the progress of our efforts to improve financial
management in the public sector under the Budgeting
For Results (or BFR for short) initiative which we launched
in 1994.
Members will recall that 14 organisations
were commissioned as Autonomous Agencies in April last
year. Starting this financial year, another 102 Ministry
Headquarters, Departments and Government-Funded Statutory
Boards are being managed as Autonomous Agencies (or
AAs). What this means is that practically the entire
Civil Service and all Government-Funded Statutory Boards
are now operating as Autonomous Agencies.
Every AA has been provided with greater
autonomy and flexibility to respond quickly to changes,
along with incentives for efficient and superior performance,
and the wherewithal to nurture enterprise and creativity.
Over the next few years, we will consolidate and fine-tune
the various changes that have been introduced so that
AAs can better manage their resources and achieve even
higher performance. This will help us achieve our objective
of creating a leaner, more efficient and enterprising
public service to help Singapore succeed.
Last year, some members of the House
expressed concern that financial management reforms
under the BFR initiative could lead to increases in
the price of public services or create a profit-oriented
mindset in Government without regard to the larger goal
of providing quality public services.
I wish to reassure the House again
that this will not be the case. Pricing of public services
is a policy matter, and prices of goods and services
provided by the public sector should not therefore increase
on account of improvements in financial management.
On the contrary, a more efficient public sector would
be better placed to moderate price increases. |