Threads / Government Procurement Policy / Government has not demonstrated that it has consistently us…
Committee Material Published 13 Dec 2023 ↗ View on Parliament

Government has not demonstrated that it has consistently used its purchasing power to support local and national policies and objectives, or to drive healthy and competitive markets, including buying from SMEs. Government could not provide evidence that it is consistently using its purchasing power to create new businesses, new jobs, and new skills, to tackle climate change and reduce waste, and to improve supplier diversity, innovation, and resilience. The way that social value requirements ...

Government has not demonstrated that it has consistently used its purchasing power to support local and national policies and objectives, or to drive healthy and competitive markets, including buying from SMEs. Government could not provide evidence that it is consistently using its purchasing power to create new businesses, new jobs, and new skills, to tackle climate change and reduce waste, and to improve supplier diversity, innovation, and resilience. The way that social value requirements are implemented can leave smaller businesses, as well as larger companies unable to meet them constraining their ability to bid on public contracts. Publ Type: recommendation | Number: 4 | Response status: accepted Government response: The government agrees with the Committee’s recommendation Recommendation implemented The Sourcing Playbook outlines how government commercial policy considerations should be balanced by contracting authorities and will be revised in line with the Procurement Act 20