In March 2024 the International
Trade Centre and UN Women launched a Global Campaign on Gender-Responsive
Public Procurement. Gender-responsive procurement encourages public
entities to leverage purchasing opportunities to promote gender equality and go
beyond a conventional cost-management focus. In supporting this campaign,
Australia has committed to collect gender-disaggregated data on all
procurements by 2026. To achieve this, the Government has proposed to
‘establish a new voluntary Commonwealth supplier registration process within
AusTender to identify women-owned and led businesses.’ This Flagpost provides a
brief overview of measures to encourage gender equality in the context of
Government procurement.
Initiatives supporting gender equality
The 2024–25
Budget (p 162) allocated $60.1 million to the Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) for several priorities, including implementing Working for Women: A Strategy for
Gender Equality. This included working with the Department of Finance
to upgrade AusTender (the
government’s procurement information system). As further outlined in the Women’s
Budget statement (p 83), the new registration process will support
data collection on how self-nominated women-owned and led businesses interact
with Government procurement. This data will reportedly build ‘the evidence base
on the experiences of women owned and led businesses.’
Importantly, this new information would not be used to
discriminate in favour of (or against) any business, as such discrimination is
explicitly prohibited by the Commonwealth
Procurement Rules (CPRs) in paragraph 5.4. However, media
commentary has noted the register’s lack of specific targets, and advocated
for more investment to support women-owned and led businesses to upscale.
Procurement Connected Policies (PCPs)
Since
2013 the Workplace
Gender Equality Procurement Principles have required that suppliers
with 100 or more employees in Australia show compliance with the Workplace
Gender Equality Act 2012 (WGE Act) when tendering for contracts
over a certain threshold. However, variable compliance and enforcement of this Procurement
Connected Policy (PCP) led to a review of the WGE
Act, released in December 2021. The report identified scope to
strengthen the PCP’s obligations for employers to report to the Workplace Gender Equality Agency (WGEA).
The report also recommended a review of the Workplace
Gender Equality Procurement Principles, which commenced in August
2023.
In March 2024, Minister for Women, Finance and the Public
Service, Katy Gallagher, announced
the Government’s intention to strengthen the gender equality PCP, through
mandating that businesses with 500 or more employees meet new targets. These
targets include governing body and workforce gender composition, equal
remuneration, flexible and care-friendly work arrangements, workplace
consultation on gender equality, and efforts to prevent and address sexual
harassment. Businesses that meet these targets would receive a WGEA certificate
of compliance, allowing them to bid for government contracts. As
reported, Minister Gallagher said ‘we are using our purchasing power to
leverage other outcomes that we want to see across government’.
In a related Budget
measure (p 94), the Department of Workplace Relations received $10.6
million over 4 years to implement a reporting solution for the new Skills
Guarantee Procurement Connected Policy. Beginning on 1 July 2024, this
policy introduces targets for apprentices working on government funded major
projects, and specifically for women employed in historically male-dominated
industries.
Policy research into gender-responsive procurement
Since its establishment in late 2012, the WGEA has published
extensively on workplace gender equality, including gender-responsive
procurement. For example, in 2020 its Gender
equitable procurement and supply chains report outlined various
gender-equitable procurement models, including identifying women-owned
businesses and encouraging gender equality from suppliers. The report also
investigated overseas examples in identifying gender issues within the supply
chain.
The Women’s
Economic Equality Taskforce (chaired by Sam Mostyn, prior to being
appointed Governor-General) also identified government procurement reform as a
key driver of women’s economic equality. The taskforce’s findings further
informed the National Strategy to
Achieve Gender Equality released in 2024.
The United
Nations has published a corporate
guide on gender-responsive procurement, to support signatories of the Women’s Empowerment Principles. The OECD
and International
Trade Centre have also published public governance research papers, with
the latter estimating that public procurement constitutes 10–15% of developed
countries’ GDP and up to 40% for developing countries. However, only 1% of
government contracts go to women-owned businesses.
Government access to improved gender-responsive procurement
data will likely inform further policy initiatives and signal further focus on
procurement's broader social impacts. Accordingly, this will be a growing area
of interest for researchers and policy-makers going forward in Australia and
overseas.