New Pentagon strategy to bring in small businesses coming soon
A new Pentagon strategy to maximize small business participation in defense contracting is in the works for this spring, defense officials told Defense News.
The Pentagon’s first small business strategy since 2019 would come amid a decline in the number of contracts awarded to small businesses and as Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin has acknowledged the barriers to work with his department are too steep. The strategy would guide efforts to attract more non-traditional companies, new entrants and innovators, according to the director of DoD’s Office of Small Business Programs, Farooq Mitha.
“It’s going to be: How do we all work towards increasing small business participation, because we’ve seen a decline over the past decade in our prime contractors that are small ― a pretty significant decline,” Mitha said. “The bulk of it is how to do make things easier from a structure, engagement and a policy perspective.”
The strategy comes after Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks pledged to create more opportunities for small businesses. She’s acknowledged the U.S. defense industrial base shrank by over 40% over the past decade and warned that if the trend continues, the country could lose an additional 15,000 suppliers over the next 10 years.
The National Defense Industrial Association, which has noticed the shrinking pool for years, warned in a recent report of headwinds for the industrial base that could lead to production or innovation shortages, or further discourage potential new vendors from competing.
The strategy is likely to make recommendations around long-term planning for initiatives like the Small Business Innovation Research, or SBIR, and Small Business Technology Transfer, or STTR, programs ― both considered important vehicles for the military to bring in new vendors and disruptive technologies.
Without congressional action, the latest reauthorization for the government-wide SBIR program expires at the end of the current fiscal year.
“If we want to increase the [defense industrial] base, if we want to bring in new entrants, if we want to transition new technologies [into the military], we’ve got to have stability in the programs that are meant to do these things. I think that’s been something that we’ve been laser focused on, and we’ve gotten some feedback from industry on that as well,” Mitha said.
“It’s a national security benefit to the nation and it’s creating new industries and technologies. I don’t think anyone will tell you that it’s not vital, and I think we need to work collectively to make sure that these programs have long-term legs.”