HC Deb 12 June 1984 vol 61 cc433-4W
Mr. Sheerman

asked the Secretary of State for Employment what powers he has to instruct Manpower Services Commission staff on the particular form of layout for their correspondence.

Mr. Peter Morrison

Under the Employment and Training Act 1973, the commission has a duty to give effect to directions given it by the Secretary of State in relation to the performance of its functions.

Mr. Sheerman

asked the Secretary of State for Employment which Manpower Services Commission publications take advertising; and how their rates compare with the equivalent commercial publications.

Mr. Peter Morrison

"Newscheck", "Executive Post" and "Candidate Focus" take advertising. Precise comparisons are difficult. However, "Newscheck" charges £450 per full page, which is about in the middle of the range charged by other publications in the same market. "Executive Post" has no direct competitors other than, in the main, national daily and Sunday newspapers. It is not possible to make meaningful comparisons because advertising charges are on a different basis.

Mr. Sheerman

asked the Secretary of State for Employment what publications there are of the Manpower Services Commission; how much they cost; and what are their circulation figures.

Mr. Peter Morrison

The information requested for regular Manpower Services Commission publications is currently as follows:

Publication Costs of Publication (per issue) £ Number of Issues per year Circulation
MSC Annual Report 5,400 1 12,000
MSC Corporate Plan 6,200 1 7,000
Labour Market Quarterly Review 1,700 4 5,500
New Outlook (on employing disabled people) 11,000 3.4 80,000
Youth Training News 7,500 10 51,000
Community Programme News 5,200 6 40,000
Open Technical News 7,500 4 38,000
Newscheck (Careers and Occupational Information Centre) 2,050 11 27,000
Executive Post (PER) * 130,000
Candidate Focus (PER) * 30,000
Mosaic (MSC staff newspaper) 1,100 12 22,000
* The publication costs of "Executive Post" and "Candidate Focus" are regarded by the commission as commercial 'in confidence.'