Citizenship Survey axed to save £4m despite opposition

UK— The Department of Communities and Local Government (CLG) is pressing ahead with cancellation of the Citizenship Survey in spite of opposition to the plans from other government departments, voluntary organisations and academics.

Opponents of the move, among them the National Statistician Jil Matheson, fear that the loss of the survey will set back work in areas such as equality measurement, measuring wellbeing and the pursuit of the ‘Big Society’. There have been complaints that it would remove a key source of information on perceptions of public services,with the Place Survey having already been axed.

But CLG said: “As part of the current drive to deliver cost savings across government and to reduce the fiscal deficit, research budgets are being closely scrutinised to identify where savings can be made. In this climate, the department has therefore concluded that, going forward, the Citizenship Survey results are not of sufficient importance to users to allow the survey to continue.”

CLG lost 40% of its administration budget in the government’s spending review. The annual cost of the Citizenship Survey, run by Ipsos Mori and TNS BMRB, is £4m.

The survey was established in 2001, initially running every two years but moving on to a continuous design in 2007. It involved face-to-face interviews with 10,000 adults in England and Wales, plus an ethnic minority boost sample of 5,000 and a Muslim boost sample of 1,200.

Issues covered by the survey include respondents’ views about the local area, community cohesion, racial and religious prejudice and discrimination, identity, values, civic engagement and volunteering and charitable giving.

CLG said that in the absence of the Citizenship Survey it would expect “other providers who have a priority need for data of this type to take steps to provide it themselves, in the academic or external market”.

We hope you enjoyed this article.
Research Live is published by MRS.

The Market Research Society (MRS) exists to promote and protect the research sector, showcasing how research delivers impact for businesses and government.

Members of MRS enjoy many benefits including tailoured policy guidance, discounts on training and conferences, and access to member-only content.

For example, there's an archive of winning case studies from over a decade of MRS Awards.

Find out more about the benefits of joining MRS here.

2 Comments

Rod

Its an easy target. Have to wonder how wise it is though. Its not like the rest of the economy where there are thousands of indicators of how the market is performing, or how well the demand is being met. How's the CLG is going to understand its audience? If it wants to save money how will it know where its money is best spent? And given the importance of long term tracking, the gaps in knowledge that this will leave is indeed worrying.

Like Report

Display name

Email

Join the discussion

Anon

A degree of cynacism suggests that we might ponder politically expedient motivations behind the removal of overviews such as such, the loss of the Place Survey and the demise of the Audit Commission: http://www.guardian.co.uk/society/joepublic/2010/aug/17/who-replace-axed-audit-commission

Like Report

Display name

Email

Join the discussion


Display name

Email

Join the discussion

UK

Newsletter
Stay connected with the latest insights and trends...
Sign Up
Latest From MRS

Our latest training courses

Our new 2025 training programme is now launched as part of the development offered within the MRS Global Insight Academy

See all training

Specialist conferences

Our one-day conferences cover topics including CX and UX, Semiotics, B2B, Finance, AI and Leaders' Forums.

See all conferences

MRS reports on AI

MRS has published a three-part series on how generative AI is impacting the research sector, including synthetic respondents and challenges to adoption.

See the reports

Progress faster...
with MRS 
membership

Mentoring

CPD/recognition

Webinars

Codeline

Discounts