2025 - 2028 Strategy
Evolving together: Making social investment work better for charities and social enterprises
Access has been established to address to specific failures in the social investment in England, namely the lack of small scale unsecured debt, and the need for long term funding of investment readiness work. We are doing this through providing subsidy in the form of grants in two main ways:
We are a fixed life organisation and it is our explicit goal to share the learning of our programmes so that we may influence other providers and potential providers of grant subsidy to continue or build on our work once we are gone. Developing a significant evidence base is therefore critical to our work.
Our interest in understanding the use of subsidy in the social investment market:
Access is the latest of a number of initiatives which have sought to develop the social investment market and increase the supply of capital to charities and social enterprises over the last few decades. Many of these initiatives have used grant subsidy or blended finance to seek to achieve those goals. While numerous evaluations exist, there is no one single repository of the evidence of how effective these programmes have been and it is not easy to be able to tell a story of what has been learned of how grant subsidy can best develop the social investment market.
We would like to change that. To start with we’d like to bring together those with a keen interest in this area to help us scope how best to consolidate that evidence base and translate it into something which can be useful for us and other providers of grant subsidy as we design future programmes. This evidence base may also serve as something of a baseline to assess our own success during our ten year life.
Defining subsidy in the market to date:
It is not simple to define the sources and uses of subsidy in the social investment market over the last few decades. Initiatives include:
Potential scope:
This project could take a number of forms – and could be overwhelming in scope. Therefore Access wishes to engage with key partners to help define what a realistic project should cover, what would be of most use, and who should participate.
Likely areas of focus include:
First steps:
If this is an area of interest then please get in touch. We are keen to engage with providers of subsidy past, present and future; the organisations who have run these programmes, the charities and social enterprises who have benefitted from them; and anyone interested in helping us with the analysis needed to build and consolidate the evidence base.