Industry news

  • 30 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Huawei and Telefonica have partnered up to promote the migration of traditional IT services to the cloud. The deal will allow clients who wish to outsource computing, storage and backup services’ management to Telefonica, to do so without the need for further infrastructure investment.

    The partnership will see Huawei responsible for running Telefonica’s Open Cloud service in eight of Telefonica’s data centres, with Telefonica capitalising from Huawei’s knowledge and experience on its public cloud service in the Chinese market.

    The Chinese equipment maker and B2B services provider Telefonica Business Solutions has chosen Brazil, Chile and Mexico for the introduction of the new services in the first half of 2016. Five other locations have already been chosen for later in the year.

    The new cloud services will run on a pay per use basis. According to Juan Carlos Lopez-Vives, CEO of Telefonica, “The combination of Telefonica’s and Huawei’s capabilities represents the best guarantee for our customers”.

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    Related: CCMS launches software to help clients find best contact centre service

  • 27 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    George Osborne has presented parliament with the government’s spending review for the next five years.

    While the Chancellor’s U-turn on tax credit policy, as well as the unexpected safeguarding of police budget have made the biggest headlines, the Review establishes important changes to other areas of the budget such as central and local government, the NHS and business. Here are some of the key points:

    Economic Forecast

    In the speech before the Commons, Osborne revealed that the forecast for debt over the course of parliament has been revised downwards, saving the government £27bn and decreasing the amount borrowed by £8bn.

    The extra savings will come from growing tax receipts and lower debt interest payments.

    In total, borrowing this year will amount to £73.5bn. The forecast predicts that by 2019/2020 the deficit will turn into a £10.1bn surplus.

    GDP growth is expected to stay at 2.4% this year, as well as the next.

    Central and Local Government

    The Review establishes changes to local government funding arrangements by allowing councils to keep 100% of revenues from council-owned property sales, as well as 100% of receipts from business rates by 2020.

    Total government spending is expected to drop to 36.5% of national income from the current 40%.

    NHS

    The health service budget will increase by nearly £20bn until the end of this parliament, reaching £120bn by 2020/2021. According to the chancellor, the extra money will enable £5bn extra spent on research, 800,000 more elective hospital admissions, £5m more spent on outpatient appointments and £2m on diagnostic tests.

    Tax Evasion

    The Spending Review sets in place new and harsher penalties for tax abuse, as well as action on disguised remuneration schemes and stamp duty avoidance.

    The chancellor expects that an additional £800m injected in the fight against tax evasion will enable proceeds of up to ten times the amount on extra tax receipts collected.

    Osborne has also announced plans for a digital platform that would enable users to manage their taxes online. The platform is directed at both individuals and small businesses, and is expected to be up and running by 2019.

    Business

    The Department of Business budget will be cut by 17% but science budget will rise to £4.7bn.

    Osborne also revealed plans to extend the small business rate relief scheme to 600,000 companies and create 26 new enterprise zones.

    Business taxation rates will no longer be uniform and will instead be decided by individual councils and elected mayors, who are able to both cut and raise rates at their own discretion.

    Finally, an apprenticeship tax of 0.5% will be levied on the employer’s wage bill. The new tax is designed to raise £3bn extra in revenues a year to fund three million apprenticeships.

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    Related: NHS England secures £3.8.bn increase in funding for 2016/2017

  • 27 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The government has announced this Monday that the G-Cloud 7 framework will include 1,616 suppliers.

    Compared to the sixth iteration launched in February, the seventh iteration has increased the number of suppliers by 11.2 per cent. Deborah Saunby, the sales and marketing director at G-Cloud 7 supplier Software Europe, admitted that the “the process for joining the G-Cloud framework has been simplified” since their previous successful submission in 2011.

    The G-Cloud 6 ends at the beginning of February 2016. However, it may be extended in order to ensure that suppliers have time to apply for the G-Cloud 8 framework.

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    Related: Spending Review 2015: The Key Points

  • 27 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Capita has increased its public sector revenue by 12 per cent compared to the last year – a surplus of £1.8bn. Moreover, Capita’s share of the public sector IT market has increased by one quarter since 2012.

    The overall performance of the top 20 suppliers of software and services in the last year was very positive compared to previous years. These suppliers made a revenue of £10.7bn – an increase of 3 per cent compared to other years.

    Despite the overall positive performance of the top 20 suppliers, there are still many challenges ahead. According to TechMarketView analysts, “there are changes on the horizon… there are still numerous large legacy ICT outsourcing contracts set to come to an end”.

    In addition, the overall positive performance of the Top 20 IT suppliers displays a relationship improvement between the IT suppliers and the public sector - a sign of the healthiness of the sector.

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    Related: Capita, CSC and Ebix lock horns over Xchanging acquisition

  • 25 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    After weeks of intense negotiations, Simon Stevens, head of NHS England, has secured an extra £3.8bn in funding for the organisation next year. The sum will help the NHS in England to cope with growing financial pressures brought about by staff shortages, population ageing and growing health demands.

    According to Simon Stevens, the extra funding is a precondition for the introduction of structural changes in the NHS in England anticipated in the organisation’s own “Five Year Forward View”. The latter sets out a strategy for the next five years of the organisation, which it claims can save the health service £22bn in efficiency gains by the end of Parliament.

    The extra money will be included in George Osborne’s spending review due on Wednesday. It represents a front-loading of the £8.4bn the government has promised the organisation by 2021.

    Treasury insiders have announced that part of the extra sum represents an injection of new money into the Department of Health’s budget. Nevertheless, Osborne is unlikely to be spared criticism as it is believed that other parts of the department such as Health Education England and the Care Quality Commission, the NHS care regulator, will be hit by tighter budgets.

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    Related: Virgin Care to run child health services for the NHS in Wiltshire

  • 24 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The UK government will invest £178 billion in defence procurement over the next ten years – an additional £12 billion on top of the original defence budget.

    This procurement plan includes a partnership with Boeing to supply nine new P8 maritime patrol aircrafts and two squadrons of Typhoon aircrafts, as well as the creation of two new strike brigades.

    The decision to increase spend is thought to be in reaction to increased global threats over the past five years. The rise of ISIL, the crisis in Ukraine, cyber-attacks and the risk of pandemics are among the main reasons for the British government’s decision to launch this defence procurement process.

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    Related: Controversial Hungary-Russia nuclear deal alarms EU due to tender process

  • 24 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Mitie, the British outsourcing services giant, announced on Monday that its first-half profits have been hit hard by cuts to local government budgets. In response to the sudden fall in profit, the company has been forced to cease some of its healthcare activities across the UK.

    The company expects the unfavourable state of affairs to last for at least another year, after which its healthcare division is expected to return to profitability.

    Ruby McGregor-Smith, Mitie’s CEO, says that new contracts awarded to Mitie should see the division “do very well” after the one-year critical period. During the first six months of 2015, the division incurred a £2.1m loss. Mitie’s healthcare revenue fell 19 per cent to £39m.

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    Related: Mitie joins Serco and G4S in embracing government’s national wage hike

  • 23 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    The governments of the UK and India have agreed to more than £9 billion in commercial deals as a result of Indian Prime Minister Modi’s visit.

    These agreements will affect several different sectors, ranging from entertainment, education and healthcare to logistics, finance, energy and IT, with both governments seeking to strengthen the commercial bonds between their two respective nations.

    A number of different organisations from the two countries – such as Aviva, Bupa, Standard Life, Merlin Entertainments, State Bank of India, Kloudpad Mobility Research and King’s College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, among others – have also committed to participating in these deals.

    The UK is currently the largest G20 investor in India, with India investing more in the UK than it does in the rest of the EU. One particular deal of note is the agreement between TVS Group and the Ministry of Defence which aims to save £500 million over 13 years through a renewed procurement strategy.

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    Related: Understanding Indian Culture for Effective Business in 2015/16

  • 23 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    Viktor Orban, Hungary’s prime minister, has awarded a Russian state-owned company with a €12.5bn nuclear power project.

    This contract – a new attempt from the Hungarian Government to forge closer bonds with the Kremlin – includes the construction of two new reactors and the refurbishment of another two additional reactors.

    This contract alarmed European Commission officials, who objected to the intergovernmental contract due to the lack of a transparent tender. This controversial contract puts the EU’s own dependence on Russian energy at stake, as well as the principles of the Euratom Treaty and the EU’s rules on public procurement.

    The tender process is politically sensitive, with many EU countries seeking to reduce their dependence on Russian energy – a leverage tool thought by many to be used by the Kremlin in order to achieve their political and economic aims over recent years.

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    Related: Global supply chain threatened by terror and flow of migrants

  • 23 Nov 2015 12:00 AM | Anonymous

    G4S, the private security firm, has announced that the outsourcing of back-office services could save £1bn a year for financially strained police forces across England and Wales.

    The amount disclosed is based on G4S’s own experience with back-office outsourcing, which has saved the company itself approximately £6m a year. According to John Shaw, managing director of G4S public services, the feat can be easily replicated by police forces within the UK.

    In response to the announcement, Steve White from the Police Federation of England and Wales declared that changes made to the working structure of any UK police force should “not compromise public safety” and be reinvested back into the forces.

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    Related: Civil servants shown how to guide on UK outsourcing

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