According to the Institute for Government*, four government departments account for over 80% of central government spending with external suppliers.
Spending is dominated by the DHSC, MOD, DfT and DfE. Together they spent ┬г119bn in 2017/18.
Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC)
The biggest spender in terms of procurement is the DHSC. Procurement spend came to ┬г75bn in 2017/18. The vast majority of this was NHS spending.
NHS procurement includes virtually all the expenditure by NHS England and clinical commissioning groups.
Ministry of Defence (MOD)
Procurement spend at the MOD can be broken into resource and capital. This is fairly balanced as resource equates to around ┬г12bn and capital ┬г10bn.
This spend is allocated to a variety of resources, weapons systems and maintaining the MOD estate. In recent years MPs have called for an increase in this spend, to support allies such as the United States.
Department for Transport (DfT)
It is no surprise that the DfT was one of the biggest spenders in 2017/2018.
Recent investments in transport infrastructure such as rail and roads has made it a lucrative marketplace for private sector suppliers.
Tracker Intelligence recently reported that тАЬpositivity in the construction marketplace stems from government investment in infrastructure and visibility of major projects such as Crossrail and HS2.тАЭ
Department for Education (DfE)
In 2017/18 nearly 30% of the DfEтАЩs ┬г7bn spend with external suppliers was on capital projects such as building new schools.
According to GleniganтАЩs тАЬConstruction Industry Forecast 2019 & 2020тАЭ, opportunities within the sector are set to grow by 2% in 2020 spurred on by university and secondary school building projects.
Public sector tender opportunities
Government spends ┬г284 billion a year on buying goods and services from external suppliers. This amounts to around a third of all public expenditure.
To expand your opportunities within the public sector marketplace, request a demo with a member of the Tracker Intelligence team.
* www.instituteforgovernment.org.uk/sites/default/files/publications/IfG_procurement_WEB_4.pdf