Survey: State of Contracting in Public & Private Sectors

Survey: State of Contracting in Public & Private Sectors

Survey by 15 National Business Organizations Reveals Insight into Diverse and Small Suppliers Against a Backdrop of Significant Federal Investments and a Wave of Litigation

November 30, 2023


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Overview

Reimagine Main Street, in partnership with 14 other national business organizations, surveyed businesses about their experiences with corporate and government contracting. The results come out against a backdrop of significant Federal investments and a wave of litigation against diverse businesses, business diversity and efforts to increase contracting with diverse-owned and small businesses.


Contracting with the federal government and large corporations presents significant opportunities for diverse-owned and small businesses. The federal government is the largest consumer of goods and services in the world, spending more than $690 billion on contracts in FY 2022. Corporations spend 58% of their revenue on corporate contracts with suppliers. 


At the same time, public and private sector investments in infrastructure, clean tech, and the reshoring of advanced manufacturing as a result of the Investing in America agenda are creating industries of the future and new on-shore supply chains. Growth, competitiveness, and resilience of the U.S. economy depend on integrating diverse-owned businesses into these new and emerging supply chains. 


Top Findings

Survey findings indicate a clear opportunity to increase contracting with diverse and small businesses in the public and private sectors:

  • Diverse-owned and small businesses have the capacity for contracting: one in three (33%) respondents generates at least $1M in annual revenue and almost half (48%) of the respondents already generate at least 50% of their revenue from contracting.

  • Nearly a third (29%) of the diverse and small businesses surveyed compete in “Investing in America” industries: they include engineering and construction, energy and environment, manufacturing, industrial technology, and telecommunications and they have capacity for contracts.

  • Small and diverse businesses eager to learn more about opportunities from the Investing in America agenda: Respondents see promise in the Bipartisan Instructure Law, the Inflation Reduction Act (IRA), and the CHIPS and Science Act.

  • Diverse businesses say contracting drives their growth strategies: Nearly half (46%) of respondents with $1M+ revenue say that corporate contracting is critical to their growth strategy and one in three respondents says the same about government contracting.

  • Intentional engagement and unbundling of contracts are imperative to level the playing field for competition so that diverse-owned businesses can contribute to building robust and resilient supply chains of the future, for diverse-owned businesses to increase their contributions.

Methodology

This survey reached over 1,900 diverse-owned small and mid-sized employers. The survey analyzed the businesses' experiences with contracting and procurement in the public and private sectors.


The survey focuses on three segments of respondents:


  • >475 diverse businesses with $1M+ revenues
  • >1,450 diverse small employers including 
  • >400 diverse businesses that compete in “Investing in America” industries

Thank You to Our Partners

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