Maximising social inclusion from local investment
Including TR&T requirements in contracts and agreements can:
- Maximise jobs for disadvantaged groups from public and private investment;
- Provide business opportunities for small and medium-sized enterprises;
- Maintain 'a level playing field' in competitive tendering;
- Ensure compliance with UK and EC procurement policy and rules;
- Increase value for money from public expenditure;
- Demonstrate a commitment to disadvantaged communities.
Many public bodies have a policy commitment to maximise job, training and business opportunities for the communities they serve. They may also want to ensure that their actions benefit people facing particular problems in the labour market. This can be described as a targeted recruitment and training (TR&T) policy.
Public bodies that don`t take action to implement a TR&T approach may be making one of the following assumptions:
- any local investment will generate opportunities and these will automatically trickle-down to their local community,
- providing people facing problems in the labour market with improved skills and employability is sufficient to help them obtain sustained employment;
- opportunities for the target groups will be achieved by developing good relationships with employers, possibly leading to voluntary TR&T agreements.
Despite an evidence-based policy environment there is little to suggest that the trickle-down or voluntary agreement approaches do maximise the opportunities for target communities arising from major developments, or that training/information alone will help them work their way out of poverty. Some good outcomes may be achieved from some developments for a period of time. However, the inclusion of TR&T requirements in contracts and agreements can help secure improved and measured outcomes for a sustained period of time.