The Biden administration recently announced that it will
award $6.1
billion to Micron to manufacture semiconductor chips
in the United States. It’s a historic investment, but we won’t know
who will get to be a part of that history. Despite the large sum of
money Micron received, the company is under no obligation to disclose
the business partners it will choose to fulfill its award
commitments. This is the history of buying in the United States.
It’s contributed to the exclusion of minority-owned businesses for decades
and the concentration of wealth among a select few.
In 2021, for
the first time in history, the federal government disclosed the racial and
ethnic breakdown of business owners that win government contract awards. Now it
is time for corporations to do the same. After all, Fortune 500 firms such as
Micron and Intel stand to gain the most revenue and
valuation from the trillions in taxpayer dollars now flowing thanks to historic
federal investment legislation and the market opportunities they create.
Consider the
scale of companies like these. The total revenue of the Fortune 500 in 2023 was $18
trillion, or two-thirds of U.S. gross domestic product. Corporate procurement
data is hard to come by, but according to a 2016 analysis by Bain and Company, on average,
approximately 43% of a firm’s revenues go toward procurement. That means the
largest 500 corporations in America have approximately $7.7 trillion in annual
purchasing power—more than 10 times that of the federal government.
Soon after
President Joe Biden issued an executive order on advancing equity, the federal
government revealed that out of a $560 billion contracting budget in fiscal
year 2020 for which small businesses were eligible to compete, just over 1.6%
(or $9 billion) was awarded to Black-owned small businesses, and a little under
1.8% ($10 billion) to Latino- or Hispanic-owned small businesses.
While the
government certainly has hills to climb to tap into the full potential of
minority-owned businesses, it is likely that major U.S. corporations have
mountains to scale. To achieve minimum contracting parity with the federal
government, the Fortune 500 would need to award at least $123 billion in
contracts annually to Black-owned businesses, and $137 billion to Latino- or
Hispanic-owned businesses. Yet only 39 corporations are in the Billion Dollar Roundtable, comprised of companies that award at
least $1 billion annually in contracts to diverse firms. This suggests that the
Fortune 500 is far from achieving parity with the government on contracting
with minority-owned businesses— excluding millions of top business owners and
employees from a robust path to building generational wealth.
Transparency in contracting is more critical than ever.
Although corporations made significant financial commitments to the Black
community after the Black Lives Matter protests in 2020, a Washington
Post analysis revealed that these same companies
stand to profit from 90% of these commitments, most of which were loans or
investments. Meanwhile, we still do not know to whom they have awarded
contracts—and with them, wealth.
The urgency of
knowing is greater now that the federal government is investing historic
amounts of taxpayer money in infrastructure and advanced manufacturing. To
fulfill their contracts and build chip manufacturing plants, Micron and Intel
will need to partner with a range of businesses, including construction, IT,
banking, security, and even food service firms to feed a growing workforce. The
CHIPS and Science Act does have provisions requiring investments in workforce
and small business development. But corporate federal award recipients can take
a consequential step further by publicly disclosing—by race and ethnicity—who
will be their business partners, and the percentage of taxpayer-subsidized
wealth they will receive.
Recent attacks
on race-conscious business development add to the urgency of making corporate
contracting data more transparent. Black and Latino or Hispanic Americans
represent approximately 26% of all business owners, and minority-owned firms—including Black,
Latino or Hispanic, Asian American, South Asian, and tribal—represent over 30%
of all businesses. Following the June 2023 Supreme Court decision that struck
down affirmative action in college admissions, the courts have overturned a
half-century of precedent in one historic business program after another created
to connect marginalized communities to opportunity. We don’t yet know the full
impact of these court decisions. But transparency in contracting data—apart
from data on access to capital—will allow the country to have an informed
conversation about contracting and its financial implications relative to
one-third of our country’s self-starters, as well as the broader societal
implications.
In fact,
disclosure on lending rates by race has been the law of the land since the
1970s, including through the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act. So why not on
contracting? After all, loans need to be repaid, while contracts do not.
Too often, the
default refrain is that disadvantaged firms need more technical assistance or
training. Although important, this shifts responsibility to the entrepreneurs
and service providers, rather than acknowledging that the buyers can do more to
calibrate demand and expand their networks. The government partners with
thousands of top minority-owned firms in technology, finance, engineering,
security, etc.—to the tune of nearly $20 billion with Black- and Latino- or
Hispanic-owned businesses. But the federal government is just one entity.
Imagine what the Fortune 500 could do.
Publishing
contracting data disaggregated by race and ethnicity among the Fortune 500 is
the new frontier in ensuring that we tap into the full strategic and economic
potential of our nation’s innovators. Our country is counting on it.