Advocacy

Why social enterprise matters

WA has a housing crisis, a cost of living crisis, and a workforce that still leaves too many people behind – young people, people experiencing homelessness, survivors of violence. Government and charity alone haven’t solved these problems. Social enterprises offer something different: businesses that generate real revenue by tackling them, creating jobs for people who struggle to find them, delivering services where gaps exist, and putting profits back into WA communities instead of offshore.

There are an estimated 995 social enterprises in this state already doing this work – in construction, hospitality, retail, and more. The question isn’t whether social enterprise works. It’s whether WA is ready to back it properly.

Image: Foundation for Sustainable Health (FISH)

The state of play in WA

Something is shifting across WA. Businesses, educators, funders, and consumers are all moving in the same direction – away from profit-at-any-cost models that extract value and leave, toward enterprises that are rooted here and invested in what happens next. TAFEs and universities are teaching social impact. Accelerators want to back ventures that make a difference and a living. Supply chains are seeking local businesses that give back. Funders are choosing sustainable models over charity. And our research shows WA consumers actively want to spend with businesses doing good.

Since 2019, WASEC has been building the foundations – WA’s only social enterprise directory, the first WA Social Enterprise Awards, and the state’s only Social Impact Incubator. We’re ready to scale. But we need government to come with us.

Image: Kardan Construction

Learning from others

Other jurisdictions have already shown what’s possible when government backs social enterprise properly – and the results are hard to ignore.

Queensland invested $80 million through its Social Entrepreneurs Fund, established an Office of Social Impact, and funds the Queensland Social Enterprise Council as peak body to the tune of $1.6 million annually. Victoria committed $2.9 million to a Social Enterprise Strategy and has directed millions in government procurement toward certified social enterprises. In the UK, more than 100,000 social enterprises generate £78 billion annually, embedded in government procurement and commissioning – and in 2025, the government launched an Office for the Impact Economy.

WA doesn’t need to start from scratch. The models exist, the evidence is there, and the returns – more jobs, stronger communities, profits that stay here – speak for themselves.

What WASEC would like see

You can support what we do by becoming a WA Social Enterprise Council member.