Upload
ross-fletcher
View
232
Download
3
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
Agenda
Steve Robinson, Operational Manager, Corporate Services - Procurement & Supplies, Cardiff Council
Challenges and policy initiatives to support LED in Wales
Winile Mntungwa - Business Support Programme Manager, eThekwini Municipality, South Africa
eThekwini initiatives to improve the procurement process and use it to support SMME development and LED
Dr Kath Ringwald and Scott Parfitt –Glamorgan Business School,
University of Glamorgan
Thresholds and Advertising / Use of Approved Lists / Consortia and Tier Contractor Opportunities
Dr Sue Hurrell – Value Wales
Welsh Assembly Government
Pre-Qualification / Community and Social Benefits
Challenges and policy initiatives to support LED in Wales
Steve Robinson, Operational Manager, Corporate Services - Procurement &
Supplies, Cardiff Council
About Wales
• A population of three million• A constituent country of the
United Kingdom and part of the European Union
• Deprivation related ill-health in Wales is the highest in the UK
• Small, Medium Enterprises account for 99% of Welsh businesses
• 344,000 employed by public sector (27.5% of all employees)
• This leaves Wales vulnerable to budget cuts in public sector
Importance of Procurement in support of LED• The Welsh public sector spends over £4.3 billion per
annum, or around one third of its budget, on external goods and services
• Multiplier Effect – could result in as many as 2000 jobs being created both directly and indirectly as a result of a 1% increase in public sector spend within Wales.
• Community Benefits –regeneration of communities through training and employment and community projects
About Cardiff Council
• Unitary authority since 1996 – serving the City and County of Cardiff
• Largest employer in Wales – 22,000 employees• Deliver a wide and diverse range of public services
including:– Social Care– Education– Highway Maintenance– Waste Management– Culture, Leisure and Parks– Housing
What do we buy
Social Care25%
Construction andSpecial Projects
19%Environment15%
Corporate11%
Transport11%
People and Professional
Services10%
FacilitiesManagement
9%
2009/10 spend on bought-in goods, services and works - £328 million
How do we buy
Spend Distribution by Region 2009/10
135,880,683
28,384,732 25,734,031
129,962,340
8,657,879
2809
971 911 938
4191
-
20,000,000
40,000,000
60,000,000
80,000,000
100,000,000
120,000,000
140,000,000
160,000,000
Cardi
ff
CF (E
x. C
ardiff
)
Wal
es UKOth
er
Val
ue
£
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
3000
3500
4000
4500
Nu
mb
er o
f S
up
pli
er
During 2009/10 we traded directly with 9,800 suppliers and contractors
60-65% with SMEs
The Challenge
• Public sector facing unprecedented financial pressure and need to reduce overall cost
• Deliver improved citizen-focused services• Need to secure greater efficiency and effectiveness• Focus on procurement
– Deliver improved value and cashable savings– Reduce overall spend– Process efficiency improvements
Implications for LED• Reduction in non-essential spend – buying less• Benefit from economies of scale by aggregating spend
and increasing collaboration across the public sector – buying bigger
• Will lead to a consolidation in the number of suppliers• Larger value contracts
• Huge potential implication for Welsh SMEs and local economy
Need to Change
• Council recognises implication for suppliers and the need to change
• Source Cardiff study with University of Glamorgan– Improving access to opportunities– Supporting supplier development
• Delivering the Opening Doors Charter / Barriers to Procurement recommendations
• Maximise opportunities for Community Benefits
Legislation and Procedures• The Council must comply with EU and UK Public
Procurement legislation• EC Treaty Principles
– Non-discrimination and equal treatment, transparency, proportionality and mutual recognition.
– Obligation of transparency means that a contracting authority must ensure a degree of advertising - sufficient to allow the services market to be opened up to competition and the impartiality of procedures to be reviewed – you cannot favour local
• EU Public Procurement Directives– Requires all tenders / contracts with spend in excess of £156k
for goods and services and £3.9m for works to be subject to open competition across EU
– Principles should be adhered with for lower value contracts– Specific requirements in terms of procedure and timescales
eThekwini initiatives to improve the procurement process and use it to
support SMME development and LED
Winile Mntungwa - Business Support Programme Manager, eThekwini
Municipality, South Africa
Thresholds and Advertising / Consortia and Tier Opportunities
Dr Kath Ringwald and Scott Parfitt
Glamorgan Business School
University of Glamorgan
Thresholds and Advertising
• SMEs and local businesses want public sector opportunities advertised more widely and at SME-friendly thresholds.
• Policy on thresholds and advertising varies across the public sector.
• The paradox– Aggregation – consortia purchasing, category
management – increases contract value
– Fears that increased advertising will increase transaction costs, no advantage.
Thresholds
• Each public sector body will have their own thresholds for quotations, tenders and advertising.
• Upper limits defined by EU Procurement Directives• Reports and recommendations
– Gershon (2004)– Opening Doors Charter, Value Wales (2005) £25,000– Glover (2008) – Glover (2008)– Ringwald & Cahill et al (2009) £25,000– WLGA (Nov 2010). £50,000
• Construction contracts excluded from these thresholds
Advertising
• Evidence in Wales 2005-2009, very limited increase in advertising. SMEs reported very little change.
• Buyers reported concerns over unwanted responses to advertised opportunities.
• 2009-2011 (following Barriers report) shows a considerable increase in advertising.
• In the current financial year 772 lower value opportunities have been advertised – an increase of 24% when compared to the corresponding period in the previous financial year.
• This means that 57% of opportunities advertised were below OJEU level.
• Currently undertaking research to assess the implications on the workload for procurement staff
Approved Lists of Suppliers
• Once a common feature of public sector procurement. • Companies would be required to ‘qualify’ for the list, then
expect to be invited to quote / tender for business• Approved lists, when run badly, could be open to legal
challenge• Some public sector bodies claim they have no lists.• Some are operating a phased withdrawal• In reality there will always be exceptions due to specialist
qualification eg: contracts for care
Key to effective use of thresholds and advertising• Choose contracts which lend themselves to
SME friendly approaches eg: lotting strategies• Prepare thoroughly. SMEs will de-select
themselves if they can see they do not meet the criteria.
• Use appropriate pre-qualification processes• Fair and transparent processes, with feedback
Consortia Bidding
• Encouraging groups of SMEs to collaborate to submit a more attractive bid.
• The Supplier Development Service report that this is unpopular with SMEs– Difficult to find SMEs willing to exchange commercially sensitive
data.– Problems with legal entity as a basis for the contract– Suspicious of motives for collaboration
• These views supported by research– ‘Barriers’ Report (2009)– Scottish Government ‘Opportunities and Barriers to Consortia
Bidding for Public Sector Contracts (2009)• Limited success found where complementary offerings exist
Tiering
• Collaboration, aggregation and consortium procurements leads to economies of scale, but large ‘lots’ which can exclude small suppliers
• Contracts with 1st tier suppliers can require the 1st tier to advertise 2nd and 3rd tier opportunities to local SMEs. Used for London 2012 Olympics procurement.
• Sell2Wales facilitates this.• SMEs argue that this limits their opportunities
– No guarantee of winning work– Margins reduced
– Public Sector does not ‘police’ this requirement with sufficient
rigor.
Tiering
• Public sector argue– Cannot ‘impose’ a local quota on 1st tier suppliers– Can impose social clauses eg. Employing local
labour, advertising contracts in SME friendly ways.• Public sector has no legal influence beyond 1st tier.
Where is SCM?• Lotting strategies, Framework Agreements
• Possibilities for Supplier Networks linked to Category
Management.
Pre-qualification
• Which bidders are capable? = pre-qualification• Which bidder demonstrate the best quality and price? =
tender stage• Often done in two distinct “stages” under EU law• Suppliers say pre-qual is bureaucratic, opaque and
biased towards big business.• More than £20m spent by suppliers in pre-qualifying
each year in Wales• 90% of questions (and answers) the same each time, but
data is rarely re-used.
SQuID
• Suppliers want more standardisation, AND more tailoring to each project
• = contradiction?• Solution – a set of standard, common, core questions• Answers stored for re-use• Risk-based methodology for buyers to choose
questions – not value-based• Flexible process – questions added/deleted, project-
specific• “If you don’t know why you’re asking a question, or what
you’re going to do with the answer, don’t ask it!”
Risk assessment
• What costs are incurred if the supplier fails to deliver?– Penalties– Reputational– Cost of temporary alternative– Re-procurement costs
• E.g. staff uniforms vs. software for social care workers with at-risk children…
Consultation and Training
• Paper version developed at workshops with practitioners
• 8 month period of testing on live projects
• 450 procurement staff from all sectors trained
• On-line version being built on www.sell2wales.co.uk
Will it help SMEs?
• Yes – reduces bid costs and encourages newcomers• But – reduces bid costs for bigger suppliers too• Wider advertising attracts more competition – more
“losers”• Yes – greater clarity allows self-deselection (reduces
wasted effort)• Maybe – will acceptance thresholds be set too high? • Maybe – will scoring favour bigger bidders• It all depends on how it is used!
Community Benefits‘Public procurement can make an enormous difference to the social, economic and environmental well being of Wales and I would urge all those involved in spending public money to use this guide to ensure they get maximum value for every pound we spend.’
Jane Hutt – Minister for Business and Budget
“One Wales” – coalition plan
• “we will ensure that all projects seeking to benefit from public funding, including all structural funds, seek to meet sustainability criteria”
• “we will encourage procurement which incentivises training opportunities for the unemployed”
• “we will, by working within the European legal framework, make it easier for small local firms in all parts of Wales to win government contracts”
• “we will improve targets for recycling with legislation and support for better and more coordinated waste management”
Main aims:
• Specifying and including in contracts:–Recruiting and training
economically inactive people
–Supply chain initiatives
Other aims Retaining existing workforce Training existing workforce Promoting Third Sector and Supported Businesses &
Factories Equal opportunities Contributions to education Resources for community initiatives Community consultation and engagement ‘Considerate Contractor' schemes Environmental benefits
Outcomes
Reseach into 3 recent Welsh construction projects:
Including community benefits clauses in the contract helped deliver 30% more value for the Welsh economy