The Business Plan and Structural Reform Plans are the key tool of the Coalition Government for making departments accountable for the implementation of the reforms set out in the Coalition Agreement. They replace the old, top-down systems of targets and central micromanagement. DFID's Structural Reform Plan (SRP) sets out some of the steps we will take to help achieve the Coalition Government’s objectives on international development. It focuses on the main internal, structural reforms we will make in DFID. We expect to be held to account by Parliament and by the public on whether we deliver these reforms. Underpinning the SRP is DFID's Business Plan to cover the Spending Review period. This will outline DFID’s vision over the next four years. It will include the Structural Reform Plan, an Information Strategy and a list of indicators that DFID will report on regularly. This is developed in consultation with the business, including the different review processes. The 2011-2015 Business Plan is now published. To help ensure delivery of the overall Business Plan we have developed a format for DFID Operational Plans. These Operational Plans will be the single layer of planning across the organisation. They are designed to significantly streamline our planning and reporting processes.
Our corporate responsibilities are therefore to:
1. The Management Board is collectively responsible to Ministers for the delivery of DFID's corporate goals and targets. It provides strategic direction to the management of DFID's operations, ensures that corporate goals are cascaded through the organisation and that performance indicators are met. The Board monitors and manages risk through the Corporate Risk Register and reviews this on a quarterly basis along with corporate management information.
2. Operational Plans should translate the outcomes of the Spending Review 2010 as well as the Bilateral Aid Review, Multilateral Aid Review and Humanitarian Emergency Response Review processes into plans that will set out the operations of different units of DFID for the next four years. Director Generals are responsible for determining the appropriate level for operational planning in their Directorates.
For Country Programmes the operational unit is the country office (or regional office). For International and Policy Divisions the operational unit is the Department.
3. Directors must ensure they have a monitoring system, which enables them to report on these corporate requirements in line with the agreed timeframes set out in the corporate performance management system.
4. Directors' annual statements of assurance set out both the actions they will take during the year and their guarantee of the robustness of systems and processes to ensure that they can manage, monitor and report against corporate requirements.
5. Corporate Performance Group (CPG) will issue Commissioning Minutes and Guidance notes for Business and Operational planning processes along with Annual Report (AR), Autumn Performance Review (APR), monitoring exercises and all other external monitoring reports.
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