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£500m jobs fund called for in social entrepreneurship manifesto

11 February 2010

'There needs to be more start-up support, more education and more risk taking. And there needs to be more investment at a local level, which will save money by cutting out the middle management'

 

Nick Temple, SSE policy and communications director

A £500m jobs fund specifically for social entrepreneurs is one of five big asks being called for today by an influential group of sector leaders.

The Social Entrepreneurship Policy Group has published a manifesto calling for the government to create something similar to the Future Jobs Fund, a £1bn programme from the Department for Work and Pensions that funds six-month work placements for the long-term unemployed.

However, the group - a partnership between chief executives and policy makers at the School for Social Entrepreneurs (SSE), Ashoka, Changemakers, CAN, Training for Life and UnLtd - said the loans and grants in an entrepreneurs fund should be focused on enterprise, apprenticeships, employability skills and sustainable employment.

The manifesto comes a week ahead of the official launch of the Social Enterprise Coalition's manifesto, which is also expected to call for a sector job fund.

The group also asked for a government commitment to get 125,000 young people into social enterprise programmes by 2015, £25m dedicated to practical skills development, at least one community-led asset in every town and city and £500,000 of local authority investment to encourage innovation on a local level.

Nick Temple, SSE's director of policy and communications, said the manifesto had been devised to represent 'a broader spectrum' and more start-ups than the coalition's.

'Given Labour's focus on unemployment and creating new enterprises, and the Tory's focus on grassroots enterprise, we felt there was a real need for a manifesto from our partnership,' he said.

'There needs to be more start-up support, more education and more risk taking. And there needs to be more investment at a local level, which will save money by cutting out the middle management.

'This manifesto is what we think should be in place over the next five to 15 years. They are ambitions and while we're realistic, we think they are achievable.'

To read the full manifesto, visit www.se-manifesto.org.uk

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Comments

£500m jobs fund called for in social entrepreneurship manifesto

The difficulty with manifesto driven policy is that, while it acknowledges need is some areas, it avoids the realities in many others.
For the last 25 years at least - and esepcially in disadvantaged areas - the problem has been as much multiple agencies all attempting to stimulate new business start - including community/social enterprise - starts, as much it has been lack of enterprise. Indded it could be argued that disadvantyaged areas encourage some extremely enterprising activity, it's just that some #of it isn't legal!
In such areas yet one more policy driven initiative is needed as much as a hole in the head.
What IS needed - quoting from Andrew Mawson's experience - is DELIVERY driven investment. By all means reserve 10% for new ventures, but for goodness sake invest the majority in established successful groups, encouraging them to do more of what they do well and to mentor others to do the same.
PLEASE no more duplicate business/SE start quangos!

Brian Craven Business Advisor Social Enterprise Development St Helens Chamber T. 01744 742000 ext 2227 M. 07825 383613