For the current REF see the REF 2021 website REF 2021 logo

Output details

19 - Business and Management Studies

University of South Wales

Return to search Previous output Next output
Output 6 of 12 in the submission
Article title

Competing agendas in public procurement: an empirical analysis of opportunities and limits in the UK for SMEs

Type
D - Journal article
Title of journal
Environment and Planning C: Government and Policy
Article number
-
Volume number
29
Issue number
4
First page of article
641
ISSN of journal
1472-3425
Year of publication
2011
URL
-
Number of additional authors
3
Additional information

Government procurement policy in the UK is an uneasy mixture of different policy legacies, where the dominant objectives of cost-efficiency and value for money compete with alternatives which emphasise public procurement as central to innovation policy and/or a critical demand-side instrument in local and regional economic development. Quantitative analysis of which types of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) benefit, and how, from different levels of government as a customer is, however, rare in the UK (and indeed more widely across the EU). Utilising data from the Federation of Small Businesses 2008 biannual survey, we address this important task. Results reveal different patterns of procurement depending on the territorial scale of government, in terms of both the innovativeness of SMEs supported through public procurement as well as demand-side contributions to local and regional economic development, allowing us to judge future possible policy directions with regard to the use of public procurement.

Interdisciplinary
-
Cross-referral requested
-
Research group
1 - Centre for Enterprise
Proposed double-weighted
No
Double-weighted statement
-
Reserve for a double-weighted output
No
Non-English
No
English abstract
-