Treausry greenbooks3/30/2023 ![]() ![]() ![]() The Green Book 2003 has precisely zero mentions of social value. Although not without its faults, there are some significant changes since 2003 and since the 2011 amendments – most notably on the concept of social value. Green Books have been guiding government policy for nearly half a century, and the last one was 15 years ago. The Treasury Green Book was last updated in November 2018. Of course, there are many other guidelines, such as how projects will be managed, how measured (IPA Guide to Benefits Management in Major Projects), how appraised (supplements to the Green Book such as the Aqua Book and Magenta Book). These guidelines are summarised in the Treasury Green Book (Appraisal and evaluation in Central Government – Treasury Guidance). These guidelines explain what HM Treasury is looking for in order to approve spend (both at the stage of a business case, and when reviewing a project tranche). Her Majesty’s Treasury (HM Treasury) has produced a set of guidelines to help those who want to win contracts (you and me, the contractors or subcontractors). Everyone can be involved in the Supply Chain. These are big projects they include a lot of different services – not just construction or IT companies, but strategic consultancy, catering, uniforms, project management, supply chain management, agency staffing, and so on. ![]() The biggest chunk of these are managed by Infrastructure Projects Agency (IPA) and these are mainly in construction (new transport links/ road and rail hospitals and schools government buildings) and ICT (NHS Digital programmes, government cybersecurity). At any one time, there’s about £500bn worth of major projects going on, funded by the government. ![]()
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