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The UK landscape for social enterprise Ólöf Jónsdóttir Policy and Public Affairs Manager, SEUK

The UK landscape for social enterprise Ólöf Jónsdóttir Policy and Public Affairs Manager, SEUK. Four things. The history of social enterprise in the UK Major initiatives in the UK Challenges and opportunities Lessons learned. What is social enterprise? .

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The UK landscape for social enterprise Ólöf Jónsdóttir Policy and Public Affairs Manager, SEUK

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  1. The UK landscape for social enterpriseÓlöfJónsdóttirPolicy and Public Affairs Manager, SEUK

  2. Four things... • The history of social enterprise in the UK • Major initiatives in the UK • Challenges and opportunities • Lessons learned

  3. What is social enterprise? • Businesses driven by social and/or environmental purpose, as set out in their governing documents • Trading organisations • Reinvest at least half their profits towards their social mission • Are accountable and transparent • Inclusive governance structures • Assets are often locked for community benefit • The Big Issue: A magazine supporting homeless people • Divine Chocolate: A chocolate company working with worker co-ops in Ghana • Hill Holt Wood: Preserving an ancient woodland and providing education programmes • Sandwell Community Caring Trust: a social enterprise delivering adult social care

  4. Social Enterprise in the UK –a short history • 1844 Rochdale Pioneers ….growth of whole variety of models and business types… • 1960s/70s Fair trade movement emerges • 1980s Growing number of organisations emerge during the recession, ‘social enterprise’ begins to be used (by co-op movt) • 2001 Social Enterprise Unit founded by the government • 2002 Social Enterprise Coalition founded (now SEUK) • 2005 Community Interest Company structure created • 2006 Office of Third Sector created (now Office of Civil Society)

  5. Social enterprise in the UK today • 68,000 social enterprises in the UK (5% of all businesses) • Contributing £24 billion to the UK economy and employing over 800,000 people. • Operate in almost every sector: from health and social care, to renewable energy, transport, retail and housing • There are many routes to becoming a social enterprise including: • spinning out of parts of the public sector • entrepreneur-led organisations • charities becoming more business-orientated

  6. Major initiatives • Voice and recognition: • Social Enterprise UK • Social Enterprise Unit/Office for Civil Society • New legal forms – CIC and CIO

  7. Social Enterprise UK • Established in 2001-2 as the national body for social enterprise • Membership organisation: over 600 members; reach to over 10,000 • Bring together all the different forms of social enterprise under one umbrella • Main purposes: • Influencing government and the political parties • Raising awareness and showcasing • Broker, facilitator, market builder

  8. Office for Civil Society • Social Enterprise Unit established in Department for Trade and Industry 2001 • Subsumed into new Office for the Third Sector • Social Enterprise Action Plan 2006 launched by Ed Miliband, Minister for the Third Sector • Social Enterprise Ambassadors Programme • Re-named Office for Civil Society 2010

  9. New legal forms • CIC launched 2005 as first new legal form for UK organisations in over 100 years • Two options – limited by guarantee and by shares • Around 7500 CICs now created • CIO launched 2012 as new legal form for charities

  10. Major initiatives • Public services and social enterprise: • Trend towards outsourcing • Public sector spin outs • The Social Value Act 2012

  11. Public service outsourcing and spin outs • Growing trend towards outsourcing services, goods and works over the last few decades • Currently driven by Open Public Services agenda • Accompanied by trend in spinning out services • Given impetus by the Department for Health’s Right to Request initiative in 2008 • Boosted by current focus on mutualisation

  12. ThePublic Services (Social Value) Act • The social enterprise sector has long called for social value to be factored into commissioning • Social Enterprise UK included this in our 2010 General Election manifesto • In July 2010, Chris White MP tabled the Public Services (Social Enterprise and Social Value) Bill • The Act applies to : • contracts over the EU thresholds • public services contracts (not goods and works)

  13. Major initiatives • Consumer and business to business buying from social enterprise: • Social Enterprise Mark • Buy Social campaign

  14. Social Enterprise Mark • Lack of UK legal definition led to calls for a social enterprise “identifier” • Certification scheme for social enterprises, akin to Fairtrade mark • National roll out in 2010

  15. Buy Social campaign

  16. Major initiatives • Social finance and investment: • Big Society Capital • Social Impact Bonds

  17. Big Society Capital • Initiated in 2008 as the Social Investment Wholesale Bank • Launched in 2012 as Big Society Capital • Resourced by funds from dormant bank accounts • Aims to lever in private sector capital and has an estimated £600m in currently committed funding

  18. Social Impact Bonds • A form of outcomes-based contract for public services • First social impact bond launched in September 2010 - One* SIB – at Peterborough Prison • New bonds being launched in: • Criminal Justice • Vulnerable Children • Health • Unemployment • Rough Sleeping

  19. Opportunities and challenges • Government • Open Public Services • Localism agenda • Social value • Consumer • Ethical consumerism • Government • Cuts – tighter budgets • Aggregation of contracts • Pace of change • Consumer • Lack of awareness of SE

  20. Lessons learned • Power of collective voice • Importance of cross-party support • Positivity of the sector • Collaboration with other sectors

  21. Any questions?olof.jonsdottir@socialenterprise.org.ukwww.socialenterprise.org.uk

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