Business

Procurement and supply chains

Education Minister Peter Weir visits St John the Baptist PS in west Belfast to announce the School Enhancement Project in which 18 schools will benefit from a £45m investment in their buildings and estates. Photo: Mal McCann
Education Minister Peter Weir visits St John the Baptist PS in west Belfast to announce the School Enhancement Project in which 18 schools will benefit from a £45m investment in their buildings and estates. Photo: Mal McCann Education Minister Peter Weir visits St John the Baptist PS in west Belfast to announce the School Enhancement Project in which 18 schools will benefit from a £45m investment in their buildings and estates. Photo: Mal McCann

THE procurement process has come into sharp focus in recent times with high-profile stalled projects and bungled capital build projects. More broadly, major blows to firms often mistakenly considered too big to fail have threatened jobs, supply chains and the wider regional economy.

The collapse of major firms in such instances has a disastrous effect on employees and suppliers first and foremost. It sends shockwaves throughout the wider supply chain and threatens small businesses who rely on orders from larger companies.

The ‘New Decade New Approach’ agreement outlines major investment in capital build projects which will give many of our local manufacturing, engineering and construction companies a much-needed boost in the form of substantial contracts.

It also commits the new Executive to taking ‘forward reviews of civil service reform, including procurement’, as a matter of priority, which I hope make workable and transformative recommendations on transparency and efficiency of the procurement process.

As these planned capital build and infrastructure projects begin to go ahead, tendering processes must be rigorous and comprehensive to ensure the best possible value for money for taxpayers.

Take, for example, the School Enhancement Project announced by Education Minister Peter Weir, one of the new Executive’s first major announcements.

Eighteen schools across Northern Ireland will benefit from a £45 million investment in their buildings and estates. Construction work will begin in 2022/23 which means the procurement process for design, construction and materials will begin in the near future.

The Executive and the civil service have the opportunity here to set a real marker of how they intend to procure services and goods going into the new decade. Given the levels of investment of taxpayer money at stake, procurement processes for major public infrastructure and building projects need to be incredibly rigorous and procurement departments need to be confident of a strong and reliable supply chain.

While, in the past, those lead contractors which governmental departments procure to provide goods and services may pass all necessary health and stress checks, there is little to no scrutiny of those further down the supply chain where a financially weak key sub-contractor saddled with bad debt and a history of consistently missing payments, may get involved in a major public construction project.

Transparency and a strong safety net ought to be of the highest importance to procurement departments going forward. The ‘MEAT’ method of assessment (the Most Economically Advantageous Tender) can no longer be the standard for procurers. Many of those in the construction industry are perched on a knife edge financially.

Procurers need to be confident that contractors have a strong credit rating as even a small chink in the chain can threaten the entire project and leave a trail of destruction which derails the scheme, burns business owners and, ultimately, leaves public bodies high and dry.

Supply chains are always at risk of bad debt and a weak local economy puts businesses in further danger. Having trade credit insurance in place can act as a safety barrier between business or project failure and most prudent business will have a robust credit control function in place which is underpinned by trade credit insurance.

As well as underwriting your trade receivables the market intelligence available from credit insurance underwriters will keep you informed about the financial health of your customers and will flag when their credit worthiness deteriorates or improves which allows you to be make safer and more informed business decisions.

:: Nigel Birney is head of trade credit in Northern Ireland for Willis Towers Watson (www.willistowerswatson.com)