CMA recommends overhaul of road and rail procurement to cut costs and drive economic growth through infrastructure investment
Civil engineering market study sets out recommendations to tackle long-standing delivery issues in road and rail infrastructure.
- Report shows fragmented, short-term procurement approach is driving up costs, slowing delivery, and holding back investment and innovation.
- Report sets out fixes to the road and rail infrastructure market, highlighting external research showing potential savings of up to £5 billion a year.
- CMA recommendations could be applied across other public infrastructure sectors.
The Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) has published the findings of its market study into road and rail infrastructure and is recommending concrete actions to drive down costs and drive up innovation and productivity.
Following 11 months of in-depth analysis and engagement across government, procuring authorities and businesses, the CMA’s market study on public road and rail infrastructure highlights the cost of historic approaches, and the scale of the opportunity for reform.
The CMA is recommending government embraces a more strategic and coordinated approach to delivering road and rail infrastructure with a clear plan for the sector. Alongside recommending concrete actions in road and rail, the CMA believes that the lessons learned have broader applicability across public infrastructure procurement.
Sarah Cardell, Chief Executive of the CMA, said:
Our work on civil engineering shows that a short term and fragmented approach to procurement in road and rail is driving up costs, slowing delivery and holding back innovation.
This is an opportunity for systemic change – but it requires strong central coordination, and a reframing of road and rail procurement as a lever for growth and innovation. The CMA will continue to play its part, bringing independent advice, analysis and practical solutions to drive economic growth.
Civil engineering shows the cost of getting procurement wrong
Around £19 billion of taxpayers’ money was spent on public road and railway infrastructure in 2023/24 (excluding High Speed 2). These markets have long underdelivered on productivity, innovation and the speed of delivery. The CMA’s market study identifies the key drivers – funding uncertainty, short-term decision making, complex regulation and capability gaps – and proposes concrete steps to address them.
External research, highlighted in the CMA’s report, shows UK and devolved governments could potentially save up to £5 billion a year by addressing the challenges in the market, while also reducing delivery times, increasing innovation and investment, and supporting UK firms to grow and compete.
A clear agenda for reform
Key recommendations from the CMA’s targeted package of reforms in public road and rail civil engineering include:
- Strategic ownership for driving change: the CMA recommends that HM Treasury takes strategic ownership for driving and overseeing the necessary system-wide changes to actively shape the market (recognising its overarching responsibility for infrastructure strategy across the public sector, and its ability to deploy the necessary convening powers and levers within the UK Government).
- A clear plan for the sector: the UK Government, in consultation with the Scottish and Welsh Governments and the Northern Ireland Executive, should publish a strategic sector plan for civil engineering in the road and rail sector and report annually on progress.
- Credible long-term pipelines: multi-year funding and clearer forward project pipelines to give firms the confidence to invest in skills, capacity and innovation.
- Procurement designed for long-term value: improving how projects are scoped, procured and delivered to promote competition, lower costs, support investment and incentivise innovation.
- Building public-sector capacity: tackling capacity and skills shortages in procuring authorities through strengthening capability, shared expertise and smarter joint procurement.
Taken together, these changes would strengthen competition in the sector, increasing productivity and opportunities for UK scaleups. They would also speed up delivery and help ensure public investment works harder for the economy. Applied more systemically, they could help public procurement become a major driver of growth.
The CMA stands ready to support the UK and devolved governments in implementing the recommendations. At the same time, the CMA’s broader work on public procurement across priority sectors of the industrial strategy continues, as do its efforts to tackle public sector bid rigging.
Sam Gould, Director of Policy and External Affairs at the Institution of Civil Engineers said:
The recommendations in today’s CMA study align with many the ICE has championed. We’re particularly happy to see the CMA recommend mandatory use of the Construction Playbook. This will help enable faster infrastructure delivery. We’re also glad the CMA has echoed the ICE in saying that the Treasury should oversee driving system-wide change, with the support of NISTA.
While the current recommendations only apply to rail and road, embedding them could provide useful insight and lessons for other sectors. The government should consider applying them more broadly. Now the government must accept and enact the recommendations so civil engineers and infrastructure professionals can get on with delivering the infrastructure the UK needs.
Ben Goodwin, Director of Policy and Public Affairs for the Civil Engineering Contractors Association, said:
By calling for the UK and devolved governments to set a strategic direction for infrastructure, the CMA’s recommendations show a clear path towards greater pipeline visibility, more efficient procurement, and better outcomes for businesses, communities, and the wider economy.
We strongly support the CMA’s conclusion that reforming the civil engineering market can deliver a powerful multiplier effect: improving value for money from public investment, strengthening supply chain confidence, and making the UK a more attractive place to invest.
We look forward to working with our members, clients, and industry stakeholders to ensure this report acts as a catalyst for the reform that is needed - supporting growth, creating jobs, and delivering world-class infrastructure for the 21st century.
Next steps
Recommendations have been made to the UK and devolved governments, with the CMA writing to key Cabinet members within the UK Government and devolved nations, as well as metro mayors.
The UK Government has committed to responding to CMA recommendations within 90 days.
Further CMA analysis and recommendations on public procurement and market shaping will follow later this year. For more information, visit the civil engineering market study page.
Notes to editors
- Civil engineering is concerned with the design, construction, and maintenance of infrastructure which ranges from transport links, access to clean water and sanitation, and electricity and telecommunications networks. This market study is focused on public road and railway infrastructure.
- The market study has been carried out in line with the UK Government’s strategic steer to the CMA and the CMA’s 2026-2029 strategy – to identify practical opportunities to strengthen competition and improve outcomes in this market; and to support growth and investment in UK infrastructure. The Government supported the launch of the civil engineering market study stating the CMA will help deliver growth with its evidence-based, independent findings.
- The CMA is exploring the role of competition policy in supporting UK scale-ups. It has published a discussion paper and a review of the existing literature on the relationship between investment and competition over a business’ lifecycle.
- CMA Chief Executive Sarah Cardell has previously advocated for applying a pro-competition lens to public procurement to help government shape markets and achieve critical policy objectives. This includes speeches at the Chatham House Competition Policy Conference and The Economist Antitrust Summit.
- The National Infrastructure Commission (2024) indicates a range of possible efficiency savings of 10-25%. When applied to annual expenditure, which the CMA estimated to be approximately £19 billion for 2023/24, this amounts to approximately £2-5 billion of potential savings.
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