PbR jargon demystified (3) M-R
Third in a series of infographics which demystify the jargon and technical terms associated with the payment by results commissioning model.
Tags are keywords. I put tags on every post to help you find the content you want. Tags may be people (Dominic Raab, say), organisations (The Howard League, PRT), themes (women offenders, homelessness) or specific items (heroin, racial disparity, ROTL). If you’re looking to research a particular issue, they can be invaluable.
Third in a series of infographics which demystify the jargon and technical terms associated with the payment by results commissioning model.
Latest post in Payment by Results: Lessons from the Literature series examines what the research tells us about PbR’s capacity to save public money.
Once again, the intensely party political shaping of public policy makes for uncomfortable results. It takes a politician with the drive and uncompromising approach of Chris Grayling to effect change within a five year cycle. But there is not sufficient time to establish a properly thought-through model which has a decent chance of delivering improved public services. In some ways Transforming Rehabilitation crystallises this problem – the payment by results pilots were cancelled in order to focus on a rapid roll-out of a completely untested model.
Like a wolf on the fold Justice Secretary Chris Grayling has made it very clear that payment by results is going to come down on