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Insider UK
Business
Peter A Walker

Women-led business 'continue to lose out on public procurement'

Women’s Enterprise Scotland (WES) has warned that women-led businesses continue to lose out on public sector contracts.

The warning comes as WES prepares to launch its bi-annual survey of Scotland’s women-owned and women-led businesses. It also comes prior to this week’s Business in the Parliament, when WES will lead the session on procurement.

The annual report from the Cross Party Group on Women in Enterprise covers the topics that were reviewed during its 2022 schedule of meetings. A key theme raised by a range of women business owners was the procurement process and the barriers to making a successful tender that are faced by SMEs and micro businesses, many of which are led by women.

Evidence delivered by the Federation of Small Businesses revealed that despite making up 93% of the entire business community, micro businesses receive less than 5% of procurement spend by value. With the majority of SMEs and microbusinesses being women-led, the result is a lack of opportunity for these businesses to engage in the public sector procurement process, WES argued.

Ann Johnson, WES ambassador and founder of Blaze Manufacturing Solutions, commented: “There is a lack of notice being given about public sector contracts, which makes it harder to bid for them.

“Additionally, in some sectors, there are supply chain strategies that exclude most SMEs, which is the category almost all women-led businesses in Scotland fit into.”

Sophie Rooney, secretary of the WES cross-party group, commented: “The evidence given by women business owners during our session on procurement shows that significant changes are needed to the system if women-led businesses are to have an opportunity to tender.

“Community wealth building - a commitment to growing and maintaining the wealth of local places - is a major policy directive of the current Scottish Government.

“However, the barriers which SMEs and micro businesses face during the procurement process means that they have little chance of success, with the result that local communities do not benefit from this spend as it gets channelled into large, often multinational companies.”

WES - the community interest company which works to close the gender gap in enterprise - is now urging policy makers to look at ways to improve public sector spending with SMEs and micro-businesses so that businesses of all sizes have a fair opportunity to engage in the procurement process.

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