§ Mr. HobanTo ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills how much the Department spent on press officers in each year since 1996–97, broken down by grade. [184322]
§ Mr. Charles ClarkeThe information requested is set out in the following table.
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Staff numbers Spend (£000) 1996–97 19: SCS × 1, SIO × 6.5, IO × 11.5 702 1997–98 20.5: SCS × 1, G7 × 1, SIO × 7.5, IO × 10, AIO × 1 729 1998–99 29.5: SCS × 2, G7 × 2, SIO × 11.5, IO × 10. AIO × 3 969 1999–2000 28: SCS × 2, G7 × 3, SIO × 10, IO × 11, AIO × 2 997 2000–01 28: SCS × 2, G7 × 3.5, SIO × 13.5, IO × 6, AIO × 3 1,307 2001–02 28: SCS × 2, G7 × 4.5, SIO × 9.5, IO × 10, AIO × 2 1,097 2002–03 23.4: SCS × 2, G7 × 3, SIO × 9.5, IO × 7, AIO × 2 1,314 2003–04 18.5: SCS × 2, G7 × 4, SIO × 4.5, IO x 6, AIO × 2 1,120 Key: SCS—Senior Civil Service G7—Grade 7 SIO—Senior Information Officer IO—Information Officer AIO—Assistant Information Officer
§ Mr. HobanTo ask the Secretary of State for Education and Skills how much money the Department spent on(a) advertising and (b) public relations in each year since 1996–97. [184323]
§ Mr. Charles Clarke[holding answer 15 July 2004]: Expenditure for both advertising and public relations is listed as follows:
£million Advertising Public relations 1996–97 8.0 0 1997–98 11.0 0 1998–99 16.8 0.6 1999–2000 12.4 0.1 2000–01 29.7 0.8 2001–02 20.5 1.7 2002–03 11.3 2.4 2003–04 19.5 1.9 As can be seen from the figures, spend on advertising fluctuates from year to year. Some campaigns will run over financial years and billing will fall in the later period. The increase in Public Relations (PR) relates to an increase in the use of external organisations to contact those elements of our key audiences that prove more difficult to reach through traditional advertising methods. Examples of this are in the promotion of adult basic skills, Aimhigher and Connexions. Since 2001–02, the Department has changed its approach by concentrating on having fewer, larger, more focused communications, such as that for adult basic skills (to help adults improve their reading, writing, language and maths) instead of numerous smaller campaigns.