Last updated: 23 November 2008
16 November 2006
CAB/067A/06
Liam Black, chief executive of Jamie Oliver's Fifteen, and other trailblazing social entrepreneurs joined forces with Ministers today to get young people involved in businesses that change lives.
Chancellor of the Exchequer Gordon Brown and Cabinet Office Ministers Hilary Armstrong and Ed Miliband praised ‘social enterprises’ for lighting the way toward a fairer society – by using business acumen to tackle social and environmental challenges.
In spite of well known success stories like The Eden Project, The Big Issue or Jamie Oliver's Fifteen, only one in four people know what a social enterprise is1: a firm founded for a social purpose that reinvests its profits in the company or community.
Recent research shows young people are extremely attracted by the dynamic combination of business skills and social impact2. Today an action plan will put social enterprises into the business studies curriculum in schools.
Today's social enterprise action plan will raise awareness of what social enterprises can achieve and invest money in encouraging more people to get involved and make a real difference to people's lives. The plan includes measures to:
These measures, along with others in the plan by the Office of the Third Sector in the Cabinet Office, aim to get a generation of young people thinking about the social impact business can have and the positive difference they can make to people's lives.
By tackling the market failures that currently exist as barriers to growth, this plan will help ensure social enterprise becomes a mainstream option for anyone of any age setting up a business in the UK.
Gordon Brown, Chancellor for the Exchequer, said:
“In my view, social enterprise is the new British business success story, forging a new frontier of enterprise – a quiet revolution involving 55,000 social enterprises in our country from the smallest community groups to larger businesses.”
Hilary Armstrong, Minister for the Cabinet Office, said:
“Social enterprises are having an incredible impact across the UK – from tackling social exclusion to providing opportunities for the young to help shape our communities. Today's Action Plan today puts in place measures to support the inspiring people devoting themselves to using business acumen to change lives for the better up and down the country.”
Ed Miliband, Minister for the Third Sector, said:
“From classrooms to boardrooms, people need to know what social enterprise is and what it can achieve. That is why we are launching this Action Plan today – to shine a light on a movement that is at the vanguard of social change and enable it to continue to grow and thrive.”
Government is supporting events through the day to help promote social enterprise, including the launch of Make Your Mark with a Tenner – a competition where 10,000 teenagers are given £10 to prove they are tomorrow's socially–minded entrepreneurs.
Welcoming this unique event, Ed Miliband said:
“Make Your Mark with a Tenner hands young people a powerful opportunity to prove to themselves and others what an amazingly powerful and positive impact their actions can have.”
ENDS
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