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Wikipedia

Government procurement

Government procurement or public procurement is the procurement of goods, services and works on behalf of a public authority, such as a government agency. Amounting to 12 percent of global GDP in 2018,[1] government procurement accounts for a substantial part of the global economy.

To prevent fraud, waste, corruption, or local protectionism, the laws of most countries regulate government procurement to some extent. Laws usually require the procuring authority to issue public tenders if the value of the procurement exceeds a certain threshold. Government procurement is also the subject of the Agreement on Government Procurement (GPA), a plurilateral international treaty under the auspices of the WTO.

Overview edit

Need for government procurement edit

Government procurement is necessary because governments cannot produce all the inputs for the goods they provide themselves. Governments usually provide public goods, e.g. national defense or public infrastructure. Public goods are non-rival and non-excludable, which means that one individual's consumption does not diminish the quantity or quality of the commodity available to others, and individuals cannot be prevented from freely consuming the commodity, or "free-riding". Consequently, private markets cannot provide public goods. Instead the government provides those goods and finances them by raising taxes from all citizens.[2]

In addition to public goods, governments often also provide merit goods, such as education or health care. Merit goods are private goods which are rival and excludable and are therefore provided by private markets. Nevertheless, governments also provide merit goods because of reasons of equity and fairness and because they have positive externalities for society as a whole.[3]

In order to provide public and merit goods, the government has to buy input factors from private companies, e.g. police cars, school buildings, uniforms etc. This process is called government or public procurement.

Scope edit

Government procurement regulations normally cover all public works, services and supply contracts entered into by a public authority. However, there may be exceptions. These most notably cover military acquisitions, which account for large parts of government expenditure, and low value procurement.[4] The GPA and EU procurement law allow for exceptions where public tendering would violate a country's essential security interests. Additionally, certain politically or economically sensitive sectors, such as public health, energy supply or public transport, may also be treated differently.[5] Government procurement, is linked to economic growth, competition enhancement, policy achievement, and innovation promotion.[6]

Potential problems edit

Government procurement involves a high risk of corruption, collusion and unwanted favoritism.[6] An important role in this has the great size of financial turnover and the complexity of many procurement processes in which businesses interact very closely with politicians and civil servants. Often the personal interests of the public officials are not the same as the interests of the public. The vulnerability of public buyers to private subversion has led every country to restrict the discretion of procuring entities in what they buy and pay. But while the regulation of the private sector empowers public officials and enables them to extract bribes in exchange for regulatory relief, the regulation of government constrains public officials. Public procurement regulations reduce the discretion of buyers, typically with the intent of reducing corruption.[7]

Strategic purchasing in public procurement edit

One of the consequences of the financial crisis of 2007–2008 was an attempt to reduce public spending in order to control public debt. This trend has affected government procurement for its significant share in public spending.[8] Therefore, various purchasing strategies have been implemented to increase quality and to decrease cost of government procurement. These strategies include public e-procurement, centralized purchasing or framework agreements.[8]

Public e-procurement edit

Public e-procurement stands for replacing various phases of public procurement with electronic means. Purpose of using e-tools is reducing administrative costs by automation. E-procurement can also mitigate some barriers to entry for smaller suppliers, consequent increase of competition can reduce price of procurement.[9]

Public procurement and innovation edit

The large buying power of the public sector has led to the consideration of using public procurement as a stimulus to foster innovation. The activities of public procurement and innovation intersect in three specific areas: public procurement for innovation, public procurement of innovation, and innovative public procurement.[10] First, multiple studies have established that public procurement for innovation is a viable and efficient tool to stimulate innovation as a demand - side tool in the innovation policy mix.[11] Second, public procurement may also be used to innovate the public sector itself (public procurement of innovation), through the inclusion of "innovativeness" as a procurement goal (often as a secondary criterion).[12] Third, novel procurement approaches (such as eProcurement or Public-Private Partnerships) may be introduced to innovate public procurement processes and entities.[13][14]

Centralized purchasing in public procurement edit

Centralized purchasing means awarding procurement contracts on behalf of one or more procuring entities. This method has been used to gain various benefits emerging from demand aggregation. Centralized procurement can be done by ordinary contracting authorities or established central purchasing body. Centralized procurement is regulated by local legislation. For instance, directives 2004/17/EC and 2004/18/EC are dealing with this issue in the EU. Commonly mentioned benefits of procurement centralization are as follows:

  • Final unit price decrease – Higher procurement value coming from demand aggregation can increase buyers bargaining power and decrease final price. Moreover, higher value can attract more companies to bid in the tender, increased competition might lead to better price as well.[15]
  • Transaction costs reduction – Key objective of centralized procurement is preventing duplication of some procedures. Contracting units can reduce their transaction costs in cooperating with other entities. This aspect is often considered as most relevant argument for procurement centralization.[16]
  • Knowledge sharing – Cooperation in purchasing can also result in sharing best procurement practices. Some central procurement bodies also perform research activities.[15]

However, other centralization aspects are often criticized. Discussed drawbacks are often connected to the decentralization theorem stated by American economist Wallace E. Oates in 1972. The theorem claims that a decentralized system is more efficient, because of the information asymmetry between local and central government.[17]

Procurement centralization might also negatively impact supply side. Higher procured values might require higher capacity of supplying company and it might create barrier to entry for small or medium companies. Consequently, it might lead to monopolizing public procurement market.

Critics also mention that only some goods can be purchased centrally. Goods that are heterogeneous or they have many characteristics are not suitable for this strategy.[16]

Thresholds edit

Under many jurisdictions, there are certain thresholds in value which oblige procurers to publish tender details and information on contracts awarded and expenditure incurred, and to follow specific procurement procedures. Greater transparency and regulatory compliance are incurred at higher levels of expenditure.[16] For example, the GPA applies to the letting of "any procurement contract with a value that reaches or exceeds the amounts ('thresholds') set in the Agreement".[18]

Framework agreements edit

A framework agreement is another method for aggregation of demand. It is a type of two-stage bid tendering procedure, that establishes incomplete contracts awards with one or more suppliers for given period of time.[17]

The discussed advantage is an administrative costs reduction again as tender procedure do not have to be duplicated for agreed period of time.[8] On the other hand, the term "Winner's curse" is associated with framework agreement as there is a price uncertainty in time.[17]

All of these three procurement strategies are not mutually exclusive. So, framework agreements can be processed centrally through e-procurement.[17]

Regulation by jurisdiction edit

Albania edit

Albania's Public Procurement Agency (Agjencia e Prokurimit Publik) is a central body with legal and public personality reporting to the Prime Minister, and financed by the State Budget.[19] Its activity is based on:

  • Law No. 9643/2006 "On public procurement", as amended
  • Law No. 125/2013 "On concessions and public private partnership", as amended, which repealed the previous law "On concessions" (Law No. 9663, dated 18 December 2006),[20] and
  • Law No. 9874/2008 "On public auction", as amended.

The main duties and competencies of the Public Procurement Agency are:

  • preparation of project-proposals for public procurement regulations, public auctions and those in the field of concessions/public private partnerships, preparation of Standard Tender Documents and issuing the necessary instructions in order to assist the contracting authorities undertaking these procedures;
  • verification of the implementation of public procurement, concessions and public auction procedures after the phase of contract signature and in case of infringements of the legal and sublegal provisions, penalizes with fines or proposes administrative measures;
  • monitoring the progress of the public procurement system, and the implementation of measures and activities in order to achieve and maintain a completely transparent and efficient system of concessions/public private partnerships;
  • preparation and publication of the Public Notices Bulletin;
  • exclusion of economic operators from participation in public procurement, concessions or public auctions for a period of 1 to 3 years;
  • promotion and organisation of training for central and local government officials involved in public procurement activities.[21]

The Public Procurement Commission (PPC in English, KPP in Albanian) is a quasi-judicial state body with responsibility for providing legal protection in relation to public procurement.[22]

The US Department of Commerce reports that businesses "occasionally complain about problems in the technical and financial criteria of contracts, resulting in biased and distorted competition" and that "improper implementation of [Albania's] public procurement procedures" has also been noted as a problem.[23]

Albania has observer status with regard to the Government Procurement Agreement and is negotiating accession.[24]

Algeria edit

Presidential Decree No. 10-236 of 7 October 2010, supplemented and amended by Presidential Decree No. 12-23 of 18 January 2012, regulates public procurement in Algeria.[25]

American Samoa edit

The Office of Procurement, based in Tafuna, is the central authority on procurement for the American Samoa Government (ASG), being responsible for the procurement of all construction, goods, and services including the management, control, warehousing, and sale of stores/inventory commodities contained in its warehouse.[26]

Angola edit

Public procurement in Angola is governed by Law No. 20/10 of 7 September 2010, the Public Procurement Law, and Law No. 2/2011 on Public-Private Partnerships in Angola. The Public Procurement Law repealed Law No. 7/96 of 16 February 1996 and Decree No. 40/05 of 8 June 2005. Public expenditure, the provision of services, the leasing and acquisition of goods, and public works contracts regulated through the Public Procurement Law.[27]

Argentina edit

Argentina has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement.[24]

Australia edit

The Australian government's procurement activity is governed by the Commonwealth Procurement Rules and overseen by the Department of Finance.[28] The rules were revised on 1 January 2018.[29] States and territories also have their own procurement policies and legislation.

Bahrain edit

The Tender Board of the Kingdom of Bahrain, based in Manama, regulates procurement and undertakes procurement activity for the kingdom's public bodies.[30] The Board was established in 2003 under the directives of His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa.[31]

Bahrain has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement.[24]

Bangladesh edit

The Cabinet Committee on Public Purchase (Bengali: সরকারী ক্রয় সংক্রান্ত মন্ত্রিসভা কমিটি) is the Bangladesh government's highest decision-making body regarding public procurement.[32]

The Swiss Challenge system is utilised in Bangladesh to procure infrastructure development through public-private partnerships.[33]

Belize edit

Belize is a member of CARICOM. Government procurement is subject to the Contractor-General Act, No. 6 of 1993, which received the Governor-General's assent on 5 January 1994. The Act provided for the establishment of the Office of the Contractor-General.[34] The Contractor-General is an independent, non-political appointment made by the Governor-General acting on the recommendations of both Houses of the National Assembly.[35]

Brazil edit

Government procurement in Brazil is regulated by a number of different laws with different procedures depending on the importance and the value of the procurement. The most important law about government procurement which contains basic rules of public procurements and administrative contracts was the Law nº 8.666, 21 June 1993, which contained rules for public tenders and for restricted tenders. This law was succeeded by the law Lei 14.133/21, 1st , April, 2021. There are different rules regulating procurement of public services, as Law nº 8.987, 13 February 1995 (Concession and Permission of Public Services); Law nº 12.462, 4 August 2011 (Differentiated Procurement – RDC in Portuguese) and Law nº 10.520, 17 July 2002, which deals with a reverse auction.[clarification needed] In the internet field (e-procurement) there are executive orders (Decretos) which regulate public procurement, such as Decree nº 5.450, 31 May 2005 and Decree nº 7.982, 23 January 2013: the latter regulates procedures for specific situations of sharing acquisitions of goods or under portioned delivering.[36]

Burkina Faso edit

Burkina Faso's Autorite de Regulation de la Commande Publique (ARCOP),[37] established in July 2008, is the regulatory oversight body which ensures fairness in government procurement processes. Its role is to monitor the execution of all government contracts and it may impose sanctions, initiate lawsuits, and publish the names of fraudulent or delinquent businesses.[38]

Decree N° 2003-269/PRES/PM/MEF of May 2003 on the general regulations governing public procurement instituted a new public contracts code which extended the scope of public contracting and provided for improvements in transparency in procurement procedures.[39] Appeals from bidders regarding the contract award process are heard by a Standing Committee on the Amicable Settlement of Disputes (CRAL).[39]

The US Department of State has noted that Burkina Faso did not as of 2018 operate a "forced localization" policy and did not impose any "offset" requirements (i.e. stipulations which require that foreign suppliers invest in local production or service facilities in order to be awarded a contract).[38]

Canada edit

Public procurement in Canada is regulated on various governmental levels (federal, provincial, municipal). Most federal procurement is organized by the Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC) agency and is governed by their Code of Conduct of Procurement in combination with principles laid out in the Federal Accountability Act and in the Financial Administration Act. Public procurement is guided by the principles of fairness, transparency, openness, and non-discrimination and complies with all international agreements that Canada is a member of (WTO Government Procurement Agreement [GPA], NAFTA, CETA, and various bilateral FTAs). Foreign suppliers from member nations to these agreements can bid on Canadian government procurements and are treated the same as domestic suppliers.[40]

The principal statutory provisions regulating government procurement are:

  • Department of Public Works and Government Services Act (1996)
  • Financial Administration Act (1985) and the Government Contracts Regulations[41]
  • Defence Production Act 1985 (consolidated version published 2011)[42]
  • Federal Accountability Act, 2006[43]

In general, bids must be solicited by the procuring department unless estimated expenditure does not exceed $25,000, or $100,000 "where the contract is for the acquisition of architectural, engineering and other services required in respect of the planning, design, preparation or supervision of the construction, repair, renovation or restoration of a work".[44] For contracts above $25,000, tenders are published on the transparent Government Electronic Tendering Service (GETS). A non-competitive procurement process is only used in certain special circumstances. One such area of exception are security-related procurements. In that case the Defence Production Act applies, which allows using a special process and favouring domestic suppliers in acquiring defence supplies and conducting defence.[45]

China edit

During the period from 1949 to 1978, Chinese public bodies acquired the goods and services they required in accordance with administratively directed transactions, whereas since the economic reforms of 1978, "central planning has started to give way to market forces". Researchers Ping Wang and Xinglin Zhang suggest that for comparative law purposes, it only makes sense to speak of "government procurement" or "public procurement" after the implementation of the 1978 reforms.[46]

The "Government Procurement Law of the People's Republic of China", adopted at the 28th Meeting of the Standing Committee of the Ninth National People's Congress on 29 June 2002, is the primary legislation in China.[47] The "Implementing Regulations of the Government Procurement Law", which supplement and clarify the Law, came into effect on 1 March 2015.[48] Regulations on military procurement are formulated separately by the Central Military Commission (Article 86).[47]

The finance departments within each section of government are responsible for the supervision of departmental public procurement (Article 13).[47]

China has observer status with regard to the Government Procurement Agreement and is negotiating accession.[24]

Costa Rica edit

On 28 September 2023, Ronald Saborío, Costa Rica's Ambassador to the WTO, submitted an application on the country's behalf to join the Government Procurement Agreement.[49]

East Timor edit

The Ministry of Finance in East Timor or Timor-Leste is responsible for the oversight of government procurement.[50] The Government uses the Timor-Leste eProcurement Portal for purchasing.[51]

Equatorial Guinea edit

In Equatorial Guinea, the procurement system introduced when the country became independent from Spain in 1968 has been described by the World Bank as "obsolete". In 2022 the World Bank proposed a draft law on public procurement and contracts which is intended to address some of the recognised weaknesses in the country's procedures and regulations.[52]

Eritrea edit

The Government of the State of Eritrea received financing in 2020 from the African Development Bank to support a "Public Financial Management and Statistics Capacity Building Project". The government has stated that it intends to use part of this funding to appoint a consultant to draft a Public Procurement Law and related documents.[53]

Ethiopia edit

Government procurement in Ethiopia is governed by the Ethiopian Federal Government Procurement and Property Administration Proclamation No.649/2009,[54] which replaced the proclamation on Procedures of Public Procurement and Establishing its Supervisory Agency, Proclamation No. 430/2005. The Public Procurement and Property Administration Agency advises the federal government on "all public procurement and property administration policies, principles and implementation" and provides "technical assistance to the regional governments and city administrations".[54]

European Union edit

Government procurement in the European Union accounts for more than EUR 2.2 trillion, or 14% of the EU GDP.[55] It has been regulated and harmonized by community law since the 1970s in order to guarantee transparency and non-discrimination of EU companies in government procurement in all member states. EU laws apply only to tenders that exceed certain thresholds in value. These thresholds vary depending on the area the contract is for and if the procurement is done by a central government or by other public authorities (e.g. municipal government). National laws are applied for tenders below these threshold values.[56] Relevant EU Directives regarding government procurement currently in force are Directive 2009/81, Directive 2014/24, and Directive 2014/25. Title VII of the EU's Financial Regulation adopted in 2018 governs the procedures to be followed in acquiring goods and services for the EU's own needs.[57]

There are five different procedures for public procurement:[56]

  • Open procedure: any company is allowed to submit a tender
  • Restricted procedure: only companies that have been preselected are allowed to submit a tender
  • Negotiated procedure: there are direct negotiations with at least three companies
  • Competitive dialogue: if it is not possible to define technical specifications at the beginning, a competitive dialogue with at least three companies is started after which tenders can be submitted. This procedure is applied for complex procurements.
  • Electronic auctions: companies that pass a pre-evaluation process can bid in electronic auctions for public contracts.

The EU Directive 2014/24 foresees two award criteria, namely the lowest price criterion or economically most advantageous offer criterion. In terms of contractual forms, the relationship between contracting authority and economic operator can be regulated by a public supply contract, framework agreement or dynamic purchasing system.[58]

The European Commission is working on further improving efficiency and transparency in government procurement in the EU with its current public procurement strategy.[59]

Austria edit

Government procurement in Austria is regulated by the Federal Procurement Act 2017.[60] The Austrian Federal Procurement Office (Bundesvergabeamt) is a permanent body authorised to hear procurement compliance cases where the federal government of Austria is the contracting authority. The Federal Procurement Office is an example of decision-making body with both first instance and last instance (final court of appeal) powers.[61]: Para 30  The Federal Procurement Office has the power to declare that a violation of procurement law has taken place but it cannot award damages: this role lies with the Austrian civil courts.[61]: Para 36 

After the Austrian State Printing House (Österreichische Staatsdruckerei GmbH) was privatised, Austria maintained a legal obligation for federal authorities to award contracts for security printing for documents such as passports and driving licences to the State Printing House without a competitive procurement process. The European Commission challenged this practice as not compliant with the public procurement directives and issued a reasoned opinion to Austria in 2014. As of December 2015 the Austrian government had taken no action to address this matter and the Commission referred Austria to the European Court of Justice.[62]

Belgium edit

Belgian legislation on public procurement is set out in the Act of 17 June 2016 implementing the 2014 EU procurement directives.[63] The Laws of 17 June 2016 on public procurement and on concession contracts, and the Law of 16 February 2017 on remedies, failed to meet the EU's transposition deadline (18 April 2016). Royal Decrees issued on 18 April 2017 for general public procurement, 18 June 2017 for procurement in the water, energy, transport and postal services sectors, 22 June 2017 containing new rules on the performance of public works contracts and concession contracts for public works and 25 June 2017, for the award and performance of concession contracts, have augmented the earlier laws.[64]

Article 51 of the Royal Decree of 18 April 2017 includes a "revolving door mechanism", which targets the situation where a person previously working for a contracting authority is now being employed by an economic operator involved in a public procurement procedure established by that contracting authority. In this type of situation the person would be presumed to have a conflict of interest for a two-year period following the termination of his/her employment with the contracting authority.[64]

Bulgaria edit

Government procurement in Bulgaria is a critical area in corruption risk. Public procurement contracts have been awarded to a handful of companies amid widespread irregularities, procedure violations and tailor-made selection or award criteria.[65] The Bulgarian public procurement portal reported in September 2016 that since the beginning of 2016, "a total of 15,105 contracts were signed on the basis of public procurement orders".[66] At the beginning of 2015, the Bulgarian government announced a 130-kilometer extension to the barbed wire border fence along its border with Turkey in order to completely secure the land border. Prime Minister Boyko Borisov described the extension as "absolutely necessary" in order to prevent persons from illegally entering the European Union member state.[67] The Bulgarian Parliament authorised amendments to procurement legislation to allow continued construction of the fence without launching a public procurement procedure "because of the need to safeguard national security".[68]

Croatia edit

The first public procurement law in Croatia based on the EU Procurement Directives was enacted in 2001, but a revised legal structure for public procurement was put in place with the Public Procurement Act of 2012,[69] and this was superseded by the Public Procurement Act of 2016, effective 1 January 2017.[70] Public-private partnerships (PPPs) are governed by the Act on Public-Private Partnerships.[71] Two key Croatian institutions are the Public Procurement Office and the Public Procurement Supervisory Commission, established in 2001,[72] now (since 2013) the State Commission for Supervision of Public Procurement (DKOM).[69] The State Commission is an independent quasi-judicial body with nine members appointed by the Croatian Parliament for a five-year term and accountable to the Croatian Parliament for its work. The High Administrative Court of the Republic of Croatia has jurisdiction over the State Commission in relation to disputes concerning procedure, but there is no right of appeal against Commission decisions.[73]

Under Croatian law, procurement procedures must be carried out by authorised representatives of the contracting authority, of whom at least one must hold a valid procurement certificate.

Cyprus edit

The Public Procurement Directorate of the Treasury of the Republic of Cyprus is responsible for procurement policy.[74]

Czech Republic edit

Government procurement in the Czech Republic is regulated by Act No. 134/2016 Coll., on Public Contracts, signed by the President of the Republic on 22 April 2016.[75]

In May 2015, Prime Minister Andrej Babiš was accused of alleged financial irregularities, and accusations from members of the public and from the opposition that he had promoted his own companies relation to government procurement opportunities triggered a vote of no confidence against Bohuslav Sobotka's government, called by the opposition parties ODS, TOP 09, and Dawn. The motion was defeated by 47–105.[76]

Denmark edit

Economic operators who are dissatisfied with the conduct of public procurement activity in Denmark may complain to the Klagenævnet for Udbud (Public Procurement Complaints Board).

Estonia edit

The Estonian Ministry of Finance is responsible for public procurement policy, drafting the law, providing supervision and consultancy, and maintains a central Public Procurement Register.[77] The current legislation is the Public Procurement Act of 2017, which came into effect on 1 September 2017,[78] and which operates in conjunction with the Public Information Act of 2000, which regulates the publication of "information concerning public procurements which are being organised or have been organised by the state or local governments".[79] Disputes are handled by the Public Procurements Appeal Committee.

Defence procurement for the Defence Forces, Ministry of Defence, Defence League, Defence Resources Agency and Estonian War Museum is organised by the Estonian Centre for Defence Investment, whose purpose is "to carry out procurement activities through ... professional-quality procurement and to use dedicated funds sparingly and prudently".[80] The Centre for Defence Investment was established by the decree of the Minister of Defence on 9 November 2015 and became operational on 1 January 2017.[81]

Finland edit

In Finland the following legislation applies to government procurement:

  • Act on Public Contracts and Concession Contracts (Act no. 1397 of 2016, effective 1 January 2017)[82]
  • Act on Public Contracts by Contracting Authorities in the Water, Energy, Transport and Postal Services Sectors (Act no. 1398 of 2016, also known as the 'Act on public contracts in special sectors')
  • Act on Public Contracts in the Fields of Defence and Security.[83][84]

A Government Decree on Public Contracts was also in force until 2017.[84]

The Ministry of Employment and the Economy is responsible for the preparation of legislation concerning public procurement. The Finnish Competition and Consumer Authority (FCCA) oversees public procurement: section 139 of the Act on Public Procurement and Concession Contracts mandates the FCCA to supervise compliance with public contracts legislation and to provide 'administrative guidance' or if necessary to issue a caution to a non-compliant public authority.[85] The Market Court operates as a specialist court handling public procurement cases. The Market Court's rulings in public procurement cases can be appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland.[84]

The Act on Electronic Auctions and Dynamic Purchasing Systems of 17 June 2011, which entered into force on 1 October 2011, introduced new procurement procedures, whereby documents relating to procurement would be sent and received exclusively online. This legislation included the use of eAuctions.[86] Electronic procurement is now covered within the 2016 Act on Public Contracts.

Transposition of the 2014 EU public procurement directive into Finnish law was delayed after the deadline (18 April 2016) with the consequence that some aspects of the directive were directly applicable from April 2016 until the new Finnish legislation was in place from 1 January 2017.[87]

Hansel Ltd. is a state-owned central purchasing body established by the Act on a Limited Liability Company Called Hansel Oy, which operates framework agreements and supports central government departments in Finland with public procurement tasks.[88]

France edit

In France, the Department of Legal Affairs (DAJ) of the Ministry for the Economy and Finance (French: Ministère de l'Économie et des Finances) is responsible for establishing regulations regarding public procurement (la commande publique). All currently relevant EU directives have been implemented into national law.[89]

The Union des Groupements d'Achat Public (UGAP), based in Champs-sur-Marne east of Paris,[90] operates as the only general public procurement agency in France.[91]

Article III of Decree 2016-247 of 3 March 2016 provides that the Direction des Achats de l’Etat (DAE: State Purchasing Directorate) has "exclusive competence in matters regarding the strategy for professionalisation of public procurement".[92]

Germany edit

In Germany, the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy (German: Bundesministerium für Wirtschaft und Energie, abbreviated BMWi) is responsible for defining laws and principles regarding public procurement. In 2016 Germany transposed the new EU Directives of 2014 into domestic law. Thereby, processes and contracts in public procurement have become easier and more flexible. The Act against Restraints of Competition – Part IV (German: Gesetz gegen Wettbewerbsbeschränkungen, abbreviated GWB) and the Ordinance on the Award of Public Contracts (German: Verordnung über die Vergabe öffentlicher Aufträge, abbreviated VgV) regulate procurement above EU thresholds. Detailed procedures are specified in further regulations, e.g. the Procurement Regulation for Public Works (German abbreviation: VOB), the Procurement Regulation for Public Supplies and Services (VOL), and the Procurement Regulation for Professional Services (VOF).[93] For many contracts electronic procurement is made possible via an online platform.

For public procurement below the EU thresholds there are different regulations. At the federal level national budgetary law applies while the 16 federal German states and some municipalities have their own public procurement laws and regulations. This decentralized system reflects the political decentralization in Germany. However, sub-national level procurement regulations often take national regulations as examples and also ensure competition, non-discrimination, and transparency.[94]

Germany's federal decree on contracts for workshops for the disabled (10 May 2005) requires German federal contracting authorities to set aside part of their budgets for contracts which can be awarded to workshops for workers with disabilities.[95]: 27 

Greece edit

Law 4412/2016 on public procurement and Law 4413/2016 on concessions are the main instruments of Greek legislation governing public procurement. These two laws of 2016, along with earlier reforms introduced under Law 4281/2014 on public procurement law, have radically simplified the previously complex legal regime, repealing numerous previous laws.[96] The European Commission's profile for Greece in its study of administrative capacity in the EU had described the public procurement system in the country as "singularly complex, ... being dispersed among as many as 400 laws, regulations, and presidential decrees".[97] Public contract notices are published in the Central Electronic Registry for Public Procurement (KIMDIS).[98]

The Public Procurement Monitoring Unit (PPMU), established in 1997, part of the Centre of International and European Economic Law in Thessaloniki, provides Greek contracting authorities with "specialised and prompt legal advisory support on awarding public works and technical services contracts falling within the scope of EU Law on Public Procurement".[97][99]

The procurement impact of Greek laws on construction company registration was challenged by the European Commission in 2014 because the legislation divided companies into bandings with a maximum and minimum budget range. This process meant that companies were not able to bid for work outside their financial banding, even though (for projects of a lower value) they had the economic and financial standing necessary to take on the work.[100]

Hungary edit

The Hungarian Public Procurement Authority was established by Act XL of 1995[101] and the current Public Procurement Act (Act CXLIII of 2015) entered into force on 1 November 2015, implementing the 2014 EU procurement directives.[102] The objectives of the 2015 legislation are:

  • to secure transparency and public control of the effective use of public funds;
  • to establish conditions of fair competition in public procurement;
  • to enhance the access of local small and medium-sized enterprises to procurement procedures; and
  • to promote environmental protection and the social considerations of the State.[102]

Concession award procedures are also covered within the same legislation, and the fundamental principles set out in Act V of 2013 on the Civil Code, the "ultimate instrument relating to the operation of civil persons and economic organizations", also apply to public procurement.[103]

Ireland edit

Government procurement in Ireland is governed by the European Communities (Award of Public Authorities' Contracts) Regulations 2006[104] and the European Communities (Public Authorities' Contracts) (Review Procedures) Regulations 2010.[105] As of 2022, the Minister for Public Expenditure, National Development Plan Delivery and Reform with special responsibility for Public Procurement is Ossian Smyth.

Italy edit

Public procurement in Italy is primarily regulated by the Public Contracts Code (Codice dei contratti pubblici), established under the legislative decree of 12 April 2006,[106] which is administered by the Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport (Italian: Ministero delle infrastrutture e dei trasporti). The code was reformed in 2016 to implement the new EU directives of 2014 into domestic Italian law.[107] In addition to the code, guidelines from the National Anti-Corruption Authority (Italian: Autorità Nazionale AntiCorruzione, abbreviated ANAC) and decrees from various ministries also apply to public procurement. Most public procurement on a national level is administered by the state-owned company Consip S.p.A. and larger regions have their own agencies for public purchasing.

From 1994, article 10(1bis) of Law No 109 on public works stated that multiple undertakings where there was a relationship of control (such as between a company and a subsidiary) could not take part in the same tendering procedure. However, because the "prohibition on simultaneous and competing participation in the same tendering procedure" did not allow undertakings the opportunity to demonstrate that the relationship did not impact on the tendering procedure, the European Court of Justice stated in Assitur Srl v Camera di Commercio, Industria, Artigianato e Agricoltura di Milano (May 2009) that this legislation did not comply with EU law.[108]

The Autorità per la vigilanza sui lavori pubblici (1994–2006) and Autorità per la vigilanza sui contratti pubblici di lavori, servizi e forniture (AVCP) (2006–2014) acted as supervisory authorities overseeing public works procurement, and later covering public procurement more generally. In 2014 this function was transferred to ANAC.[109]

Decree No 34 of the President of the Republic of 25 January 2000 introduced earlier rules establishing a qualification system for persons who carry out public works.[110]

The five regions with special autonomy (Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Sardinia, Sicily, Trentino-Alto Adige and Valle d'Aosta) can also establish regional legislation regarding public procurement.[111]

In case C-3/88, Commission v Italian Republic, the European Court of Justice ruled that arrangements made by the Italian government to restrict contracts for the provision of services to develop data processing systems for Italian public authorities to companies "in which all or a majority of the shares [were] directly or indirectly in public or State ownership", and to include the supply of computing equipment within the services contract, the government had failed to comply with its obligations under Council Directive 77/62/EEC of 21 December 1976 coordinating procedures for the award of public supply contracts, and failed to comply with the principles of freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services in the EEC Treaty.[112]

Latvia edit

Government procurement in Latvia is regulated by the Public Procurement Law, effective 1 March 2017, and the Law on the Procurement of Public Service Providers, which came into effect on 1 April 2017. These laws transpose the EU procurement directives; one additional legal provision is that for supplier selection purposes, real estate tax debts are checked where tenderers are registered or permanently resident in Latvia. Public procurement opportunities are advertised on the Latvian Elektronisko Iepirkumu Sistēma (EIS) website, as well as in the Official Journal of the European Union when above the threshold values.[113]

The Procurement Monitoring Office within the Ministry of Finance oversees public procurement.[114] A deposit for filing a review application with the Procurement Monitoring Office must be paid, calculated as 0.5% of the estimated contract value, but no more than €15,000 for construction work contracts or €840 for supply and public service contracts.[115]

Lithuania edit

Public procurement in the Republic of Lithuania is overseen by the Public Procurement Office (Lithuanian: Viešųjų pirkimų tarnyba), based in Vilnius, under its Director, Diana Vilytė.[116]

Luxembourg edit

In Luxembourg, the main policy body for public procurement is the Public Procurement Directorate within the Public Works Department of the Ministry of Sustainable Development and Infrastructure (MDDI). This department is responsible for the regulatory framework, drafting relevant legislation and monitoring its implementation, and also for representing the Luxembourgish authorities in the field of public procurement. A Tender Commission with members drawn from contracting authorities, chambers of commerce and small business sectors undertakes a consultative role in relation to public procurement.[117]

The EU 2014 Directives on public procurement and utilities procurement were implemented by the Law of 8 April 2018 on public procurement, which was published in the Luxembourg official Gazette (Mémorial: Journal officiel du Grand-Duché de Luxembourg) on 16 April 2018 and entered into force on 20 April 2018.[118] Procurement in the defence and security sector is covered by the Law of 26 December 2012.[119]

Malta edit

The EU Directive on public procurement is transposed into Maltese law by the Public Procurement Regulations, S.L.174.04, 28 October 2016.[120] These regulations also create the Office of the Director of Contracts (Regulation 10), who is responsible generally for the regulation and administration of public procurement procedures in Malta, a General Contracts Committee, whose members are appointed by the Prime Minister (Regulation 64), a Departmental Contracts Committee for each contracting authority, and in each Ministry a Ministerial Procurement Unit (Regulation 79). Under regulation 80 a Public Contracts Review Board is established. The Commercial Sanctions Tribunal (Regulation 95) is appointed to hear and determine issues relating to the black listing of persons unsuitable for the award of a public contract or to act as a sub-contractor to a public sector contractor.[121]

Netherlands edit

The main legislative provisions governing public procurement in the Netherlands are:

  • the Public Procurement Act 2012 as amended on 1 July 2016;
  • the Public Procurement Decree;
  • the Works Procurement Regulations 2016;
  • the Procurement Regulations for the Utilities Sectors 2013;
  • the Proportionality Guide, 2016;
  • the Defence and Security Procurement Act 2013.[122]

Sector-specific procurement regulations are also included in the Passenger Transport Act 2000.[123] The Ministry of Economic Affairs is responsible for procurement policy.[124]

TenderNed is the Dutch government's online tendering system, which all Dutch contracting authorities are obliged to use to publish their national and European tenders.[125]

Poland edit

Portugal edit

Public procurement in Portugal is governed by the Código dos Contratos Públicos or Public Contracts Code (PCC), which has been implemented through the following Decretos-Leis (decree-laws) and other legislation:

  • Decree-Law 18/2008 (29 January 2008)
  • Decree-Law 59/2008 (11 September 2008)
  • Decree-Law 223/2009 (11 September 2009)
  • Decree-Law 278/2009 (20 October 2009)
  • Decree-Law 3/2010 (27 April 2010)
  • Decree-Law 131/2010 (14 December 2010)
  • Law 64-B/2011 (30 December 2012)
  • Decree-Law 149/2012 (12 July 2012)
  • Decree-Law 214-G/2015 (2 October 2015)
  • Decree-Law 111-B/2017 (31 August 2017)[126]

Decree-Law No. 104/2011 (6 October 2011) applies to defence contracts.[127]

The Administrative Procedural Code, established under decree-law 4/2015 (7 January 2015) also provides for general procedures on administrative matters and the Procedural Code of the Administrative Courts established by Law no. 15/2002 (22 February 2002), amended by Decree-Law 214-G/2015, stipulates procedures for litigation regarding public contracts and procurement practices.[126]

Slovakia edit

Public procurement in Slovakia is subject to the Law on Public Contracts, which came into effect in September 2015.[128] Contract opportunities are advertised in the Slovak Official Journal for Procurement Notices, as well as in the Official Journal of the European Union when above the threshold values, and a public register of final beneficiaries of companies that win public sector contracts is maintained.[129] The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (Slovak: l’Úrad pre verejné obstarávanie) oversees procurement operations.[130]

Slovenia edit

Public procurement in Slovenia is overseen by the Public Procurement Directorate within the Ministry of Public Administration.[131] The Slovenian Public Procurement Act, the ZJN-3, came into force on 1 April 2016, and covers both public sector and utilities procurement, implementing Directives 2014/24/EU and 2014/25/EU in one piece of legislation.[132]

Spain edit

Spanish law on public sector contracts (Ley 30/2007 de contratos del sector público, known as the "LCSP") was substantially amended by a new Law 2/2011 on Sustainable Economy ("LES") following an infringement procedure undertaken by the European Commission, which found that the LCSP "gave contracting authorities a wide, almost unlimited, power to modify essential terms of public contracts after award, in a manner which was not in line with the principles of equal treatment between bidders, non-discrimination and transparency set out in EU public procurement rules".[133]

The Basque Country government has issued an "instruction" concerned with inclusion of social and environmental criteria in procurement decision-making.[95]: 21  The region's government aims to promote the economic, social and environmental sustainability of the Basque Country through its Green Procurement and Contracting Program 2030.[134]

Sweden edit

The Swedish Competition Authority is responsible for oversight of government procurement in Sweden, having taken over this role from the Board for Public Procurement (Swedish: Nämnden för offentlig upphandling) when it was dissolved in 2007.[135][136]

Fiji edit

The Fiji Procurement Office was established under Section 4 of the Fiji Procurement Regulations 2010[137] and commenced operations on 1 August 2010. The establishment of the Office and the new Fiji Procurement Regulations were a direct result of the re-organisation of the Government Supplies Department by the Fijian government. The main functions of the Fiji Procurement Office are to regulate and administer the procurement of goods, service and works for the government.[138] The Government Tender Board is "constituted with authority to approve all procurement of goods, services and works valued at FJ$50,001 and more". Refer www.fpo.gov.fj for more information[137]

Ghana edit

Public procurement in Ghana is undertaken and overseen by the Public Procurement Authority of Ghana.[139] The Public Procurement Board is the central body for policy formulation on procurement. The existing Public Procurement Act 2003 (Act 663) was amended by the Public Procurement (Amendment) Act 2016 (Act 914), which came into effect on 1 July 2016.[140]

The Minister of State in Charge of Public Procurement is Sarah Adwoa Safo.[141] She has taken a lead role in the fight against corruption in Ghana, identifying corruption as "a high-risk activity in the country".[142]

Gibraltar edit

Government procurement in Gibraltar is managed by the Procurement Office, an independent office of Her Majesty's Government of Gibraltar which reports directly to the Financial Secretary.[143]

In 2012 the European Commission raised a concern regarding the United Kingdom's incomplete transposition of the Defence and Security Public Contracts Regulations 2011 into law.[144] Gibraltar left the EU on 31 January 2020 at the same time as the UK.

Guernsey edit

Public procurement opportunities in Guernsey are advertised on the Channel Islands Procurement Portal, which was launched in April 2008 and is shared with Jersey.[145]

Guyana edit

Public procurement in Guyana is overseen by the Public Procurement Commission,[146] appointed under the Public Procurement Commission Act 2003. Due to lengthy delay in identifying and agreeing commission members, the commission was not appointed until 2016.[147] The PPC is based in the Queenstown area of Georgetown.[148] The National Procurement and Tender Administration of Guyana (NPTA), established under section 16(1) of the Procurement Act 2003, undertakes administrative processes for high value governmental tenders.[149]

Haiti edit

In 2005, the Haitian government formed the National Commission for Public Procurement (French: La Commission Nationale des Marchés Publics, CNMP), based in Port-au-Prince, whose tasks are to ensure that competitive bidding takes place for public contracts and to promulgate effective procurement controls in government administration. The commission was established by the Decree of 3 December 2004.[150] The CNMP publishes lists of awarded public contracts. According to the website GlobalSecurity.org, "despite the CNMP's efforts, major public procurement contracts, notably those involving the state electric company EDH, are routinely awarded in a non-competitive fashion", providing significant opportunities for corruption.[151]

Honduras edit

Government procurement in Honduras is overseen by the National Office of Contracting and Procurement of the State of Honduras (Oficina Normativa de Contratación y Adquisiciones del Estado, ONCAE), based in Tegucigalpa.

Honduras has five laws directing public contracting:

  • Ley de Contratación del Estado (revised December 2016)
  • Ley de Compras Efficientes y Transparentes a través de Medios Electrónicos, Decreto No. 36-2013, 1 July 2014[152]
  • Reglamento de la Ley de Compras Efficientes y Transparentes a través de Medios Electrónicos,[153] whose purpose is to "develop" the law in decree 36-2013
  • Reglamento Ley de Contratación del Estado (revised December 2015)
  • Reforma al Reglamento de la Ley de Contratación del Estado.[154]

Iceland edit

Act No. 84/2007 on Public Procurement (2007) has three objectives:

  • to ensure the equal treatment of companies during public procurement
  • to encourage efficiency in public operations through active competition and
  • to promote innovation and development in the public procurement of goods, labour and services.[155] The law applies to "the Icelandic State, local authorities, their institutions and other public entities" and to "associations formed by one or more of such authorities".[156] An independent Public Procurement Complaints Commission has power to investigate complaints and may declare a contract "ineffective" if its award was not compliant with the legislation.[157]

India edit

The government procurement-related disciplines in India are governed by Public Procurement Order & General Financial Rule. Public Procurement Orders and General Financial Rule are primarily been taken care of by the Public Procurement Section of Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT), Ministry of Commerce and Industry (India) and Department of Expenditure, Ministry of Finance respectively.

In 2017 the Public Procurement Order and General Financial Rule was amended by the government of India to include a Make In India preference.[158][159]

Indonesia edit

Indonesia has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement.[24] The UK's Serious Fraud Office and other regulatory bodies undertook an enquiry into bribery payments intended to secure contracts with the government of Indonesia for the supply of tetraethyl lead, leading to the conviction of four company executives in 2014. The convictions also related to offences concerning Iraq.[160]

Isle of Man edit

The Isle of Man government spends over £200 million each year on goods, works and services per year, promoting competition in procurement under the Council of Ministers' Procurement Policy for Government, published in 2017.[161]

Israel edit

In Israel, the Mandatory Tenders Law of 12 March 1992, 5752–1992 (as amended), governs government procurement procedures. Oversight of the legislation lies with the Ministry of Finance in conjunction with the Knesset Constitution, Law and Justice Committee. The government may, with the approval of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee, direct that a state or a government corporation may not enter into a contract with a particular foreign country or with a particular foreign supplier for reasons of foreign policy.[162]

Jamaica edit

The Government of Jamaica Procurement Guidelines apply to government procurement in Jamaica,[163] and the Public Sector Procurement Policy of November 2010 reflects "the government's ... strategy to further reform the public procurement system that is aligned to international best practices and promote fair competition for government contracts".[164]

Until 1996, Jamaica operated a centralised procurement system coordinated by the Central Supply Division of the Ministry of Finance, and procurement activity was regulated by the Financial Administration (Supplies) Regulations 1963 supplemented by directives from the Ministry of Finance. The Ministry of Finance and the Public Service is now responsible for oversight of procurement policy. A Procurement Policy Implementation Unit was established within the Ministry of Finance in September 1999.[164]

The Office of the Contractor-General (OCG), based in Kingston, was established in 1983 under the Contractor General Act of that year.[165] The Contractor General is appointed by the Governor General. In December 2008, three members of the procurement committee of the Jamaica Urban Transit Company resigned following reports of procurement breaches identified by the Contractor-General, Greg Christie.[166]

The National Contracts Commission (NCC) was established in October 1999.[164] Members of the NCC are also appointed by the Governor-General.[167]

Jersey edit

The States of Jersey's procurement opportunities are advertised on the Channel Islands Procurement Portal, which was launched in April 2008 and is shared with Guernsey.[145]

Kenya edit

Public procurement in Kenya is governed by the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act 2015.

Kosovo edit

The Republic of Kosovo's Public Procurement Regulatory Commission, based in Pristina,[168] is responsible for "the overall development, operation and supervision of the public procurement system in Kosova", subject to regulations imposed by Public Procurement Law of Kosovo No.04/L-042 of 2011.[169] Law No.04/L-042 was approved by the Assembly of Kosovo on 29 August 2011, promulgated by the President of the Republic of Kosovo with decree No.DL-032-2011 on 31 August 2011, and published in the official Gazette of the Republic of Kosovo No.18 on 18 September 2011. The amended Public Procurement Law (2017) gives preference to local bidders when the quality and price are comparable to that of foreign bidders.[170]

Kosovo is not a WTO member and is therefore not a signatory to the Government Procurement Agreement.[170]

The Kosovo Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor's Office issues public calls for tender on its own website.[171]

Kyrgyz Republic edit

Public sector procurement in the Kyrgyz Republic is regulated by the Law "On Public Procurements" dated 3 April 2015, No. 72; the republic refers to the principles of publicity, openness, legality, and impartiality as critical in relation to suppliers (contractors).[172]

Laos edit

Public procurement in the Lao People's Democratic Republic is governed by the Prime Minister's Decree on Procurement of Goods, Works, Maintenance and Services No. 03/PM, dated 9 January 2004, and the Implementing Rules and Regulations on Government Procurement of Goods, Works, Maintenance and Services No. 063/PM, dated 12 March 2004.[173] Amendments were made to some of the articles of the Implementing Rules and the Decree by Update 0861/MOF of 5 May 2009.[174] Procurement activities are overseen by the Procurement Monitoring Office (PrMO) within the Ministry of Finance.[173]

Liberia edit

Government procurement in Liberia is governed by the Public Procurement Act. The Public Procurement and Concessions Commission (PPCC) was established in 2005 to "regulate all forms of Public Procurement and Concessions and provide for institutional structures for public procurement and concessions".[175] The PPCC operates an online Vendors' Register.[176]

Procurement is decentralised, but the Ministry of Finance is required "to take part in the negotiations and signing of contracts over US$250,000" and such contracts must "be attested to by the Ministry of Justice".[175]

Liechtenstein edit

Liechtenstein is a member of the European Economic Area (EEA) and subject to Annex XVI (Procurement) to the EEA Agreement. The Annex provides that its references to ILO Conventions do not apply to Liechtenstein, but equivalent standards on labour conditions are to be applied.[177]

Maldives edit

Government procurement in the Maldives is subject to the Public Finance Law (Law No. 3/2006) and chapter 10 of the Public Finance Regulation. The approval of the National Tender Board is required before contracts in excess of MVR 2.5m can be awarded.[178]

Mali edit

Public procurement in Mali is overseen by the Autorité de Régulation des Marchés Publics et des Délégations de Service Public,[179] based in Bamako.

Mexico edit

Public procurement is included in Article 134 of the Mexican Constitution. Article 134 is implemented by the Law of Public Sector Acquisitions, Leasing and Services ("Acquisition Law") and the Law of Public Works and Related Services ("Public Work Law"). At a local level, each of the 31 states and the Federal District has different public procurement laws.[180]

Moldova edit

The Republic of Moldova ratified the Government Procurement Agreement on 14 June 2016.[181]

Montenegro edit

Montenegro joined the Agreement on Government Procurement in 2015 after approval was granted on 29 October 2014.[182] Exclusions apply in respect of

  • procurement of agricultural products for agricultural support programmes and human food aid programmes
  • procurement of broadcasting material by broadcasters, and contracts for broadcasting time, and
  • some aspects of procurement connected with the provision of drinking water, energy, transport and the postal sector.[183]

Morocco edit

Morocco's National Commission for Public Procurement (CNCP) was established "to oversee public procurement, control public spending and guarantee the principles of transparency and parity in the development and execution of contracts between competitors", with a role also in handling complaints regarding procurement actions.[184]

Mozambique edit

Decree no. 5/2016, Public Procurement Regulations governs public procurement in Mozambique.[185]

New Zealand edit

The New Zealand Government Procurement Branch of the Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment is responsible for the Government Procurement Rules, Government Rules of Sourcing[186] and Principles of Government Procurement.[187] The aim of the Government Rules of Sourcing is to "support good practice for procurement planning, approaching the supplier community and contracting".[186] The 66 rules were initially introduced in 2013. The principles apply to all governmental procurement activity but the rules only apply to projects or purchases exceeding $100,000 or construction projects valued over $10 million.[186]

Purchasers of certain common goods or services are required to use "All-of-Government contracts" (AoG) established by the Government Procurement Branch, overseen by the Procurement Functional Leader and managed by appointed procurement Centres of Expertise. Where a public agency wishes to opt out of the use of an AoG contract it must obtain the approval of approval the Procurement Functional Leader: if the agency and the Procurement Functional Leader fail to agree on an opt-out, the State Services Commissioner will decide.[188]

 
Blavatnik School of Government

New Zealand joined the Agreement on Government Procurement in 2015 after approval was granted on 29 October 2014.[182]

The second International Civil Service Effectiveness Index, published in April 2019 by the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford, ranked New Zealand as the top country for Government Procurement Effectiveness. The procurement indicator was a new addition to this index, not present in the previous 2017 index. The indicator covered both procurement systems and procurement practices. The report authors identified that New Zealand's excellence lay in "the extent of e-procurement functions within its overall procurement system; the role of its central purchasing body; and the extent to which policies are in place to enable small and medium-sized enterprises (SME) to take part in central government procurement".[189]

Nigeria edit

Nigeria is a federal republic comprising 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory.[190] See Rivers State Bureau on Public Procurement as an example of a regulatory body in one of the states.

North Macedonia edit

North Macedonia has ratified the Government Procurement Agreement and accedes to membership on 30 October 2023.[191]

Pakistan edit

Government procurement in Pakistan is overseen by the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA), an autonomous body based in Islamabad which was established by the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority Ordinance of May 2002. The PPRA is responsible for issuing regulations and procedures for public procurement undertaken by federal level public sector organisations. Its brief is to improve the governance, management, transparency, accountability and quality of Pakistan's public procurement. The PPRA also monitors other public sector agencies' procurement activity.[192] The PPRA Board consists of six ministerial appointments from central government departments, three private members and the Authority's managing director.[193]

Pakistan has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement.[24]

Peru edit

Peruvian public procurement law was formerly set out in the Government Procurement Act (approved by Legislative Decree No. 1017) and the Regulation of the Government Procurement Act (approved by Supreme Decree No. 184-2008-EF), which were replaced by a new Government Procurement Act (Law N° 30225) in 2014.[194][195] Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski resigned on 21 March 2018 following allegations that public works contracts had been corruptly awarded to Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht.[196]

Philippines edit

Public sector procurement in the Philippines is required to follow the Government Procurement Reform Act of 2003.

The Philippines government requested observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement on 6 May 2019 and its request was accepted by the WTO Committee on Government Procurement on 26 June 2019, the Philippines confirming that "its government was ... taking steps to create a transparent, open and fair procurement system, founded on a sound legal framework, which includes initiatives to open procurement to foreign suppliers".[197]

Russia edit

Russian Federal Law N44-ФЗ of 5 April 2013 requires all federal, regional and municipal government customers to publish all information about government tenders, auctions and other purchase procedures on special public government websites.

Rwanda edit

In Rwanda, the public procurement process is managed on a daily basis by an autonomous organ, the Rwanda Public Procurement Authority (RPPA),[198] which operates under the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (MINECOFIN). Public procurement is regulated by the Law N°12/2007 of 27 March 2007 on public procurement[199] which was modified and complemented by the Law N°05/2013 of 13 February 2013.[200] The law is implemented by a Ministerial Order N°001/14/10/TC of 19 February 2014 establishing Regulations on Public Procurement, Standard Bidding Documents and Standard Contracts.[201]

Rwanda has a decentralized public procurement system whereby procuring entities (central government organs, local government entities, government projects, commissions, public institutions, parastatals, agencies or any other government entity charged by the Chief Budget Manager to manage public funds) have the power to conduct directly their public procurement process. The main mission of RPPA is (1) to process the establishment and improvement of public procurement legal framework, (2) provide public procurement legal advisory services, (3) conduct audit and monitoring of public procurement activities carried out by procuring entities (tender award and contract management) and (4) build the capacity of public officials involved in public procurement activities.[202]

The public procurement system in Rwanda is governed by 6 fundamental principles namely (1) transparency, (2) competition,(3) economy, (4) efficiency, (5) fairness and (6) accountability.[203] In the national system, bidders have the right to appeal against public procurement procedures they may think were not conducted appropriately. In that connection, the legal framework provides for the Independent Review Panels at National Level (National Independent Review Panel) and at District Level (Independent Review Panel at District Level).[204] The Independent Review Panels are composed of members from the Private Sector, Civil Society and the Public Sector, and the members from the Public Sector cannot form the majority of members of the Panel. The Independent Review Panel at National Level is under the supervision of the Minister of Finance and Economic Planning whereas the Independent Review Panel at District Level is under the supervision of the District Council.

In order to make the procurement sector a profession in Rwanda, there is an Association of Procurement Professionals which was established by the Law N°011/2016 of 2 May 2016.[205]

Rwanda introduced an e-procurement system in 2016. For more information about Rwanda's e-procurement system please visit www.umucyo.gov.rw; for more information about public procurement in Rwanda in general, please visit www.rppa.gov.rw.

Serbia edit

The current Serbian Law on Public Procurement came into effect on 1 April 2013, replacing the previous legislation enacted in 2008. A particular concern for Serbia's legislators was dealing with corruption in government procurement: the Law requires Serbia's Public Procurement Office, which oversees procurement, to draft a plan for combating corruption in public procurement procedures, and contracting authorities with an estimated annual value of public procurement in excess of one billion dinars (8.9m Euros) to adopt an internal plan for preventing corruption.[206] The Public Procurement Office is based in Belgrade. The role of the Republic Commission for the Protection of Rights in Public Procurement Procedures, established in 2002, is to protect the rights of bidders during procurement exercises.[207]

The Regulation on Mandatory Elements of Tender Documents in Public Procurement Procedures and Way to Prove Fulfilment of Requirements[208] prescribes a model contract as a mandatory element of every set of tender documents, except when a negotiated procedure is being conducted or where a loan is being procured as a financial service.[209]

In 2016, the EU funded a programme of support for "further improvement of Public Procurement system in Serbia", as part of the EU's pre-accession assistance programme.[210] There is no current target date for Serbia to join the EU.[211]

Singapore edit

Singapore's Ministry of Finance is responsible for the Government Procurement policy framework, which governs how government agencies undertake their procurement.[212]

In 2014, the Public Accounts Committee of the Parliament of Singapore criticised the state of government procurement in Singapore, identifying a number of irregularities in procurement procedures including:

  • weak rationales invoked when waiving competitive processes;
  • allowing some bidders to amend their tenders after tenders had closed;
  • not disclosing evaluation criteria to bidders within tender documentation;
  • improper procedures for tender evaluation;
  • lax oversight and monitoring of outsourced projects.[213]

GeBIZ is a Government-to-business (G2B) Public eProcurement business centre where suppliers can conduct electronic commerce with the Singaporean Government. All of the public sector's invitations for quotations and tenders (except for security-sensitive contracts) are posted on GeBIZ.[212] Suppliers can search for government procurement opportunities, retrieve relevant procurement documentations and submit their bids online.

South Africa edit

Section 217 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (Act 108 of 1996) provides the basis for government procurement:

(1) When an organ of state in the national, provincial or local sphere of Government, or any other institution identified in national legislation, contracts for goods or services, it must do so in accordance with a system which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost effective.
(2) Subsection (1) does not prevent the organs of state or institutions referred to in that subsection from implementing a procurement policy providing for –
(a) categories of preference in the allocation of contracts; and
(b) the protection or advancement of persons, or categories of persons, disadvantaged by unfair discrimination.
(3) National legislation must prescribe a framework within which the policy referred to in subsection (2) must be implemented.

In Subsection (3), the previous words "may be implemented" were amended to "must be implemented" by section 6 of the Constitution Seventh Amendment Act of 2001.[214]

The Public Finance Management Act 1999 also refers to the duty of the Accounting Officer of a department to have and to maintain an appropriate procurement and supply system which is "fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost effective".[215]

To help prevent corruption, a Central Tender Board was established in 2014.[216]

Suriname edit

Government procurement in Suriname takes place on the basis of open tenders. Participants in a tendering procedure must hold a valid business license and must be registered with the Suriname Chamber of Commerce and Industry (KKF). Suriname is not a signatory to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement.[217]

Tajikistan edit

Tajikistan is not a signatory to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement, but the US Department of State has noted that the country has made a commitment to initiate accession to the agreement as part of its WTO accession protocol.[218]

Tanzania edit

Public procurement in the United Republic of Tanzania is overseen by the country's Public Procurement Regulatory Authority (PPRA), which was established under the terms of the Public Procurement Act in 2004. The objectives of the PPRA are

to ensure the application of fair, competitive, transparent, non-discriminatory and value for money procurement standards and practices; set standards for the public procurement systems in United Republic of Tanzania; monitor compliance of procuring entities; and build, in collaboration with Public Procurement Policy Division and other relevant professional bodies, procurement capacity in the United Republic.[219]

The Public Procurement Act 2004 has been superseded by the Public Procurement Act 2011.[219]

Ukraine edit

The Ministry of Economic Development and Trade (Ukraine) is an executive authority in charge of coordination of procurement of goods, works and services for public funds.[220] The Law "On public procurement" is one of the core legislative bases of the procurement regulations. It made electronic public procurement procedures and use of e-procurement system Prozorro mandatory for all procuring entities after August 2016.[221]

Ukraine joined the Government Procurement Agreement in March 2016.[222]

United Arab Emirates edit

Federal government procurement within the United Arab Emirates is governed by Cabinet Resolution No. 32 of 2014 on Federal Government Procurement Regulation and Storehouse Management in Federal Government, which applies to all supply, works and services purchasing undertaken by the federal government and the federal ministries and governmental agencies (except the Ministry of Defence), and also to independent federal entities such as the General Authority for Civil Aviation, Emirates Real Estate Corporation, FEWA, ESCA, Insurance Authority, Emirates Post Group Holding, National Transport Authority, Telecommunications Regulatory Authority, UAE University and Zayed University.[223] UAE Federal Decree No. 12 of the Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces (1986) applies to armed forces procurement.[224]

Conditional preferential treatment is afforded under Resolution 32 to corporate suppliers whose capital does not exceed AED 10 million and in which the UAE national shareholding is not less than 51%, and to facilities which are financed by SMEs-supporting funds and governed by federal or local law.[223]

United Kingdom edit

At around £290 billion every year, public sector procurement accounts for around a third of all public expenditure in the UK.[225] EU-based laws continue to apply to government procurement, where procurement is governed by the Public Contracts Regulations 2015, Part 3 of the Small Business, Enterprise and Employment Act 2015,[226] and (in Scotland) the Public Contracts (Scotland) Regulations of 2015 [227] and 2016.[228]

United Nations edit

In 2021, the 41 United Nations organizations between them spent US$29.6 billion on purchasing goods and services. The UN's Office for Project Services supports UN procurement and publishes an annual analysis of the combined UN expenditure and key trends in UN procurement.[229]

United States edit

Government procurement and government contracting by public authorities in the United States accounts for about US$7 trillion annually;[5] the central purchasing agency is the General Services Administration (GSA). Federal procurement is governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation. FedBizOpps operated until 2019 as a source of information on government contracts. This is now SAM.gov.[230] Public announcements of awards allow for several exemptions, including contracts less than $3.5 million.[231] Historically, the procurement data has been criticized for deficiencies leading to a number of reforms.[232] In 2013, eight legacy databases were merged into a single system called "System for Award Management" (SAM), where companies interested in doing business with the federal government may register their interest.[233]

Contracts are not posted online, although two agencies have explored the possibility.[232]

In January 2014, the Office of Inspector General at NASA released a report criticizing the agency's lack of strategic sourcing.[234] Because IT departments were spending autonomously, NASA spent $25.7 million on similar purchases.[235]

The National Institute of Governmental Purchasing and the Federal Acquisition Institute are active in procurement certification and training. A specialized program in procurement law in the United States is located at The George Washington University Law School.

Vatican City edit

Purchasing is overseen by the Secretariat for the Economy, which is responsible for setting purchasing policies and procedures, while responsibility for expenditure is devolved to individual dicasteries and administrations.[236] Rules on "transparency, control and competition in the procedures for awarding public contracts of the Holy See and Vatican City State" were published on 19 May 2020 and amended on 16 January 2024.[237]

World Bank Group edit

The World Bank functions like a cooperative owned by its 189 member countries.[238] Its own procurement activities are handled at a corporate level,[239] and its Procurement Framework, approved in July 2015 and operational since July 2016, applies to projects and programmes which are supported with World Bank funds. The Procurement Framework has four key principles:

  • Needs and risks of a project are analyzed through a Project Procurement Strategy for Development (PPSD). This analysis enables the borrower to have a strategy on how best to engage with bidders. The analysis ensures that procurement processes are fit for purpose, allow choice, and are appropriate to the size, value, and risk of the project.
  • Value for Money is a core procurement principle in all procurements financed by the World Bank. This means the focus is on bids that provide the best overall value for money, taking into account quality, cost, and other factors as needed, rather than a focus on the lowest evaluated compliant bid.
  • The approach to resolving procurement-related complaints has the capacity to promptly respond to any concerns during the procurement process. There is a standstill period -a pause between identifying who should win the contract and actually awarding them the contract- so that other bidders can voice any concerns before a contract is actually legally formed and awarded.
  • The World Bank is more involved in contract management of procurements with high value and high risk to ensure the best possible outcomes and that problems are resolved quickly.[240]

Zambia edit

Public procurement in Zambia is governed by the Public Procurement Act No. 12 of 2008 and the Public Procurement Regulations of 2011. Prior to 2008, public procurement was governed by the Zambia National Tender Board Act, Act No. 30 of 1982.[241] The CEO of the Zambia National Tender Board is appointed by the President.[242]

Zimbabwe edit

The Government of Zimbabwe established a public procurement law in 1999.[243]

The 2013-2018 Zim-ASSET Strategy (Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Socio-Economic Transformation) referred to plans to "overhaul the State Procurement Board" with "immediate effect" (2013).[244] The Zim-ASSET Strategy aimed to achieve "sustainable development and social equity anchored on indigenization, empowerment and employment creation" for the benefit of "indigenous Zimbabweans and not foreign investors", objectives which have been linked with those of ZANU's Mgagao Declaration of 1976.[245]

The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Act, 2017 repealed the Procurement Act of 1999 and abolished the State Procurement Board.[246] On 9 January 2018, President Emmerson Mnangagwa appointed an eight-member Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe which replaced the Board.[247] The legislation incorporates a "domestic preference" section empowering procuring entities to "give preference to bids from Zimbabwean or local suppliers and manufacturers", and provides for a Special Procurement Oversight Committee to be established to oversee "certain especially sensitive or especially valuable contracts".[246]

Nyasha Chizu, CEO of the Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe, played a key role as technical advisor on public procurement reform.[248]

See also edit

References edit

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Further reading edit

  • Decio Coviello & Stefano Gagliarducci (2017). Tenure in Office and Public Procurement. American Economic Journal: Economic Policy 9, no. 3: 59–105.
  • Decio Coviello & Andrea Guglielmo & Giancarlo Spagnolo (2018). The Effect of Discretion on Procurement Performance. Management Science 64, no. 2: 715–38.
  • Francesco Decarolis (2014). Awarding Price, Contract Performance, and Bids Screening: Evidence from Procurement Auctions. American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 6, no. 1: 108–32.
  • Francesco Decarolis & Giuliana Palumbo (2015). Renegotiation of Public Contracts: An Empirical Analysis. Economics Letters 132, no. C: 77–81.
  • Francesco Decarolis & Leonardo M. Giuffrida & Elisabetta Iossa & Vincenzo Mollisi & and Giancarlo Spagnolo (2019). Bureaucratic Competence and Procurement Outcomes. NBER Working Paper No. 24201. Cambridge, MA: National Bureau of Economic Research.
  • Oliver Hart & John Moore (1988). Incomplete Contracts and Renegotiation. Econometrica 56, no. 4: 755–85.
  • Oliver Hart, Andrei Shleifer and Robert W. Vishny (1997). The Proper Scope of Government: Theory and an Application to Prisons. Quarterly Journal of Economics 112, no. 4: 1127–61.
  • Bosio, E. and Djankov, S., How Large is Public Procurement?, World Bank Blogs, published 5 February 2022

government, procurement, tendering, public, service, civil, service, examination, public, procurement, procurement, goods, services, works, behalf, public, authority, such, government, agency, amounting, percent, global, 2018, government, procurement, accounts. For tendering in the public service see Civil service examination Government procurement or public procurement is the procurement of goods services and works on behalf of a public authority such as a government agency Amounting to 12 percent of global GDP in 2018 1 government procurement accounts for a substantial part of the global economy To prevent fraud waste corruption or local protectionism the laws of most countries regulate government procurement to some extent Laws usually require the procuring authority to issue public tenders if the value of the procurement exceeds a certain threshold Government procurement is also the subject of the Agreement on Government Procurement GPA a plurilateral international treaty under the auspices of the WTO Contents 1 Overview 1 1 Need for government procurement 1 2 Scope 1 3 Potential problems 2 Strategic purchasing in public procurement 2 1 Public e procurement 2 2 Public procurement and innovation 2 3 Centralized purchasing in public procurement 2 4 Thresholds 2 5 Framework agreements 3 Regulation by jurisdiction 3 1 Albania 3 2 Algeria 3 3 American Samoa 3 4 Angola 3 5 Argentina 3 6 Australia 3 7 Bahrain 3 8 Bangladesh 3 9 Belize 3 10 Brazil 3 11 Burkina Faso 3 12 Canada 3 13 China 3 14 Costa Rica 3 15 East Timor 3 16 Equatorial Guinea 3 17 Eritrea 3 18 Ethiopia 3 19 European Union 3 19 1 Austria 3 19 2 Belgium 3 19 3 Bulgaria 3 19 4 Croatia 3 19 5 Cyprus 3 19 6 Czech Republic 3 19 7 Denmark 3 19 8 Estonia 3 19 9 Finland 3 19 10 France 3 19 11 Germany 3 19 12 Greece 3 19 13 Hungary 3 19 14 Ireland 3 19 15 Italy 3 19 16 Latvia 3 19 17 Lithuania 3 19 18 Luxembourg 3 19 19 Malta 3 19 20 Netherlands 3 19 21 Poland 3 19 22 Portugal 3 19 23 Slovakia 3 19 24 Slovenia 3 19 25 Spain 3 19 26 Sweden 3 20 Fiji 3 21 Ghana 3 22 Gibraltar 3 23 Guernsey 3 24 Guyana 3 25 Haiti 3 26 Honduras 3 27 Iceland 3 28 India 3 29 Indonesia 3 30 Isle of Man 3 31 Israel 3 32 Jamaica 3 33 Jersey 3 34 Kenya 3 35 Kosovo 3 36 Kyrgyz Republic 3 37 Laos 3 38 Liberia 3 39 Liechtenstein 3 40 Maldives 3 41 Mali 3 42 Mexico 3 43 Moldova 3 44 Montenegro 3 45 Morocco 3 46 Mozambique 3 47 New Zealand 3 48 Nigeria 3 49 North Macedonia 3 50 Pakistan 3 51 Peru 3 52 Philippines 3 53 Russia 3 54 Rwanda 3 55 Serbia 3 56 Singapore 3 57 South Africa 3 58 Suriname 3 59 Tajikistan 3 60 Tanzania 3 61 Ukraine 3 62 United Arab Emirates 3 63 United Kingdom 3 64 United Nations 3 65 United States 3 66 Vatican City 3 67 World Bank Group 3 68 Zambia 3 69 Zimbabwe 4 See also 5 References 6 Further readingOverview editNeed for government procurement edit Government procurement is necessary because governments cannot produce all the inputs for the goods they provide themselves Governments usually provide public goods e g national defense or public infrastructure Public goods are non rival and non excludable which means that one individual s consumption does not diminish the quantity or quality of the commodity available to others and individuals cannot be prevented from freely consuming the commodity or free riding Consequently private markets cannot provide public goods Instead the government provides those goods and finances them by raising taxes from all citizens 2 In addition to public goods governments often also provide merit goods such as education or health care Merit goods are private goods which are rival and excludable and are therefore provided by private markets Nevertheless governments also provide merit goods because of reasons of equity and fairness and because they have positive externalities for society as a whole 3 In order to provide public and merit goods the government has to buy input factors from private companies e g police cars school buildings uniforms etc This process is called government or public procurement Scope edit Government procurement regulations normally cover all public works services and supply contracts entered into by a public authority However there may be exceptions These most notably cover military acquisitions which account for large parts of government expenditure and low value procurement 4 The GPA and EU procurement law allow for exceptions where public tendering would violate a country s essential security interests Additionally certain politically or economically sensitive sectors such as public health energy supply or public transport may also be treated differently 5 Government procurement is linked to economic growth competition enhancement policy achievement and innovation promotion 6 Potential problems edit Government procurement involves a high risk of corruption collusion and unwanted favoritism 6 An important role in this has the great size of financial turnover and the complexity of many procurement processes in which businesses interact very closely with politicians and civil servants Often the personal interests of the public officials are not the same as the interests of the public The vulnerability of public buyers to private subversion has led every country to restrict the discretion of procuring entities in what they buy and pay But while the regulation of the private sector empowers public officials and enables them to extract bribes in exchange for regulatory relief the regulation of government constrains public officials Public procurement regulations reduce the discretion of buyers typically with the intent of reducing corruption 7 Strategic purchasing in public procurement editOne of the consequences of the financial crisis of 2007 2008 was an attempt to reduce public spending in order to control public debt This trend has affected government procurement for its significant share in public spending 8 Therefore various purchasing strategies have been implemented to increase quality and to decrease cost of government procurement These strategies include public e procurement centralized purchasing or framework agreements 8 Public e procurement edit Main article Public eProcurement Public e procurement stands for replacing various phases of public procurement with electronic means Purpose of using e tools is reducing administrative costs by automation E procurement can also mitigate some barriers to entry for smaller suppliers consequent increase of competition can reduce price of procurement 9 Public procurement and innovation edit The large buying power of the public sector has led to the consideration of using public procurement as a stimulus to foster innovation The activities of public procurement and innovation intersect in three specific areas public procurement for innovation public procurement of innovation and innovative public procurement 10 First multiple studies have established that public procurement for innovation is a viable and efficient tool to stimulate innovation as a demand side tool in the innovation policy mix 11 Second public procurement may also be used to innovate the public sector itself public procurement of innovation through the inclusion of innovativeness as a procurement goal often as a secondary criterion 12 Third novel procurement approaches such as eProcurement or Public Private Partnerships may be introduced to innovate public procurement processes and entities 13 14 Centralized purchasing in public procurement edit Centralized purchasing means awarding procurement contracts on behalf of one or more procuring entities This method has been used to gain various benefits emerging from demand aggregation Centralized procurement can be done by ordinary contracting authorities or established central purchasing body Centralized procurement is regulated by local legislation For instance directives 2004 17 EC and 2004 18 EC are dealing with this issue in the EU Commonly mentioned benefits of procurement centralization are as follows Final unit price decrease Higher procurement value coming from demand aggregation can increase buyers bargaining power and decrease final price Moreover higher value can attract more companies to bid in the tender increased competition might lead to better price as well 15 Transaction costs reduction Key objective of centralized procurement is preventing duplication of some procedures Contracting units can reduce their transaction costs in cooperating with other entities This aspect is often considered as most relevant argument for procurement centralization 16 Knowledge sharing Cooperation in purchasing can also result in sharing best procurement practices Some central procurement bodies also perform research activities 15 However other centralization aspects are often criticized Discussed drawbacks are often connected to the decentralization theorem stated by American economist Wallace E Oates in 1972 The theorem claims that a decentralized system is more efficient because of the information asymmetry between local and central government 17 Procurement centralization might also negatively impact supply side Higher procured values might require higher capacity of supplying company and it might create barrier to entry for small or medium companies Consequently it might lead to monopolizing public procurement market Critics also mention that only some goods can be purchased centrally Goods that are heterogeneous or they have many characteristics are not suitable for this strategy 16 Thresholds edit Under many jurisdictions there are certain thresholds in value which oblige procurers to publish tender details and information on contracts awarded and expenditure incurred and to follow specific procurement procedures Greater transparency and regulatory compliance are incurred at higher levels of expenditure 16 For example the GPA applies to the letting of any procurement contract with a value that reaches or exceeds the amounts thresholds set in the Agreement 18 Framework agreements edit Main article Framework agreement A framework agreement is another method for aggregation of demand It is a type of two stage bid tendering procedure that establishes incomplete contracts awards with one or more suppliers for given period of time 17 The discussed advantage is an administrative costs reduction again as tender procedure do not have to be duplicated for agreed period of time 8 On the other hand the term Winner s curse is associated with framework agreement as there is a price uncertainty in time 17 All of these three procurement strategies are not mutually exclusive So framework agreements can be processed centrally through e procurement 17 Regulation by jurisdiction editAlbania edit Albania s Public Procurement Agency Agjencia e Prokurimit Publik is a central body with legal and public personality reporting to the Prime Minister and financed by the State Budget 19 Its activity is based on Law No 9643 2006 On public procurement as amended Law No 125 2013 On concessions and public private partnership as amended which repealed the previous law On concessions Law No 9663 dated 18 December 2006 20 and Law No 9874 2008 On public auction as amended The main duties and competencies of the Public Procurement Agency are preparation of project proposals for public procurement regulations public auctions and those in the field of concessions public private partnerships preparation of Standard Tender Documents and issuing the necessary instructions in order to assist the contracting authorities undertaking these procedures verification of the implementation of public procurement concessions and public auction procedures after the phase of contract signature and in case of infringements of the legal and sublegal provisions penalizes with fines or proposes administrative measures monitoring the progress of the public procurement system and the implementation of measures and activities in order to achieve and maintain a completely transparent and efficient system of concessions public private partnerships preparation and publication of the Public Notices Bulletin exclusion of economic operators from participation in public procurement concessions or public auctions for a period of 1 to 3 years promotion and organisation of training for central and local government officials involved in public procurement activities 21 The Public Procurement Commission PPC in English KPP in Albanian is a quasi judicial state body with responsibility for providing legal protection in relation to public procurement 22 The US Department of Commerce reports that businesses occasionally complain about problems in the technical and financial criteria of contracts resulting in biased and distorted competition and that improper implementation of Albania s public procurement procedures has also been noted as a problem 23 Albania has observer status with regard to the Government Procurement Agreement and is negotiating accession 24 Algeria edit Presidential Decree No 10 236 of 7 October 2010 supplemented and amended by Presidential Decree No 12 23 of 18 January 2012 regulates public procurement in Algeria 25 American Samoa edit The Office of Procurement based in Tafuna is the central authority on procurement for the American Samoa Government ASG being responsible for the procurement of all construction goods and services including the management control warehousing and sale of stores inventory commodities contained in its warehouse 26 Angola edit Public procurement in Angola is governed by Law No 20 10 of 7 September 2010 the Public Procurement Law and Law No 2 2011 on Public Private Partnerships in Angola The Public Procurement Law repealed Law No 7 96 of 16 February 1996 and Decree No 40 05 of 8 June 2005 Public expenditure the provision of services the leasing and acquisition of goods and public works contracts regulated through the Public Procurement Law 27 Argentina edit Argentina has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement 24 Australia edit Main article Government procurement in Australia The Australian government s procurement activity is governed by the Commonwealth Procurement Rules and overseen by the Department of Finance 28 The rules were revised on 1 January 2018 29 States and territories also have their own procurement policies and legislation Bahrain edit The Tender Board of the Kingdom of Bahrain based in Manama regulates procurement and undertakes procurement activity for the kingdom s public bodies 30 The Board was established in 2003 under the directives of His Majesty King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa 31 Bahrain has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement 24 Bangladesh edit The Cabinet Committee on Public Purchase Bengali সরক র ক রয স ক র ন ত মন ত র সভ কম ট is the Bangladesh government s highest decision making body regarding public procurement 32 The Swiss Challenge system is utilised in Bangladesh to procure infrastructure development through public private partnerships 33 Belize edit Belize is a member of CARICOM Government procurement is subject to the Contractor General Act No 6 of 1993 which received the Governor General s assent on 5 January 1994 The Act provided for the establishment of the Office of the Contractor General 34 The Contractor General is an independent non political appointment made by the Governor General acting on the recommendations of both Houses of the National Assembly 35 Brazil edit Government procurement in Brazil is regulated by a number of different laws with different procedures depending on the importance and the value of the procurement The most important law about government procurement which contains basic rules of public procurements and administrative contracts was the Law nº 8 666 21 June 1993 which contained rules for public tenders and for restricted tenders This law was succeeded by the law Lei 14 133 21 1st April 2021 There are different rules regulating procurement of public services as Law nº 8 987 13 February 1995 Concession and Permission of Public Services Law nº 12 462 4 August 2011 Differentiated Procurement RDC in Portuguese and Law nº 10 520 17 July 2002 which deals with a reverse auction clarification needed In the internet field e procurement there are executive orders Decretos which regulate public procurement such as Decree nº 5 450 31 May 2005 and Decree nº 7 982 23 January 2013 the latter regulates procedures for specific situations of sharing acquisitions of goods or under portioned delivering 36 Burkina Faso edit Burkina Faso s Autorite de Regulation de la Commande Publique ARCOP 37 established in July 2008 is the regulatory oversight body which ensures fairness in government procurement processes Its role is to monitor the execution of all government contracts and it may impose sanctions initiate lawsuits and publish the names of fraudulent or delinquent businesses 38 Decree N 2003 269 PRES PM MEF of May 2003 on the general regulations governing public procurement instituted a new public contracts code which extended the scope of public contracting and provided for improvements in transparency in procurement procedures 39 Appeals from bidders regarding the contract award process are heard by a Standing Committee on the Amicable Settlement of Disputes CRAL 39 The US Department of State has noted that Burkina Faso did not as of 2018 update operate a forced localization policy and did not impose any offset requirements i e stipulations which require that foreign suppliers invest in local production or service facilities in order to be awarded a contract 38 Canada edit Public procurement in Canada is regulated on various governmental levels federal provincial municipal Most federal procurement is organized by the Public Services and Procurement Canada PSPC agency and is governed by their Code of Conduct of Procurement in combination with principles laid out in the Federal Accountability Act and in the Financial Administration Act Public procurement is guided by the principles of fairness transparency openness and non discrimination and complies with all international agreements that Canada is a member of WTO Government Procurement Agreement GPA NAFTA CETA and various bilateral FTAs Foreign suppliers from member nations to these agreements can bid on Canadian government procurements and are treated the same as domestic suppliers 40 The principal statutory provisions regulating government procurement are Department of Public Works and Government Services Act 1996 Financial Administration Act 1985 and the Government Contracts Regulations 41 Defence Production Act 1985 consolidated version published 2011 42 Federal Accountability Act 2006 43 In general bids must be solicited by the procuring department unless estimated expenditure does not exceed 25 000 or 100 000 where the contract is for the acquisition of architectural engineering and other services required in respect of the planning design preparation or supervision of the construction repair renovation or restoration of a work 44 For contracts above 25 000 tenders are published on the transparent Government Electronic Tendering Service GETS A non competitive procurement process is only used in certain special circumstances One such area of exception are security related procurements In that case the Defence Production Act applies which allows using a special process and favouring domestic suppliers in acquiring defence supplies and conducting defence 45 China edit During the period from 1949 to 1978 Chinese public bodies acquired the goods and services they required in accordance with administratively directed transactions whereas since the economic reforms of 1978 central planning has started to give way to market forces Researchers Ping Wang and Xinglin Zhang suggest that for comparative law purposes it only makes sense to speak of government procurement or public procurement after the implementation of the 1978 reforms 46 The Government Procurement Law of the People s Republic of China adopted at the 28th Meeting of the Standing Committee of the Ninth National People s Congress on 29 June 2002 is the primary legislation in China 47 The Implementing Regulations of the Government Procurement Law which supplement and clarify the Law came into effect on 1 March 2015 48 Regulations on military procurement are formulated separately by the Central Military Commission Article 86 47 The finance departments within each section of government are responsible for the supervision of departmental public procurement Article 13 47 China has observer status with regard to the Government Procurement Agreement and is negotiating accession 24 Costa Rica edit On 28 September 2023 Ronald Saborio Costa Rica s Ambassador to the WTO submitted an application on the country s behalf to join the Government Procurement Agreement 49 East Timor edit The Ministry of Finance in East Timor or Timor Leste is responsible for the oversight of government procurement 50 The Government uses the Timor Leste eProcurement Portal for purchasing 51 Equatorial Guinea edit In Equatorial Guinea the procurement system introduced when the country became independent from Spain in 1968 has been described by the World Bank as obsolete In 2022 the World Bank proposed a draft law on public procurement and contracts which is intended to address some of the recognised weaknesses in the country s procedures and regulations 52 Eritrea edit The Government of the State of Eritrea received financing in 2020 from the African Development Bank to support a Public Financial Management and Statistics Capacity Building Project The government has stated that it intends to use part of this funding to appoint a consultant to draft a Public Procurement Law and related documents 53 Ethiopia edit Government procurement in Ethiopia is governed by the Ethiopian Federal Government Procurement and Property Administration Proclamation No 649 2009 54 which replaced the proclamation on Procedures of Public Procurement and Establishing its Supervisory Agency Proclamation No 430 2005 The Public Procurement and Property Administration Agency advises the federal government on all public procurement and property administration policies principles and implementation and provides technical assistance to the regional governments and city administrations 54 European Union edit Main article Government procurement in the European Union Government procurement in the European Union accounts for more than EUR 2 2 trillion or 14 of the EU GDP 55 It has been regulated and harmonized by community law since the 1970s in order to guarantee transparency and non discrimination of EU companies in government procurement in all member states EU laws apply only to tenders that exceed certain thresholds in value These thresholds vary depending on the area the contract is for and if the procurement is done by a central government or by other public authorities e g municipal government National laws are applied for tenders below these threshold values 56 Relevant EU Directives regarding government procurement currently in force are Directive 2009 81 Directive 2014 24 and Directive 2014 25 Title VII of the EU s Financial Regulation adopted in 2018 governs the procedures to be followed in acquiring goods and services for the EU s own needs 57 There are five different procedures for public procurement 56 Open procedure any company is allowed to submit a tender Restricted procedure only companies that have been preselected are allowed to submit a tender Negotiated procedure there are direct negotiations with at least three companies Competitive dialogue if it is not possible to define technical specifications at the beginning a competitive dialogue with at least three companies is started after which tenders can be submitted This procedure is applied for complex procurements Electronic auctions companies that pass a pre evaluation process can bid in electronic auctions for public contracts The EU Directive 2014 24 foresees two award criteria namely the lowest price criterion or economically most advantageous offer criterion In terms of contractual forms the relationship between contracting authority and economic operator can be regulated by a public supply contract framework agreement or dynamic purchasing system 58 The European Commission is working on further improving efficiency and transparency in government procurement in the EU with its current public procurement strategy 59 Austria edit Government procurement in Austria is regulated by the Federal Procurement Act 2017 60 The Austrian Federal Procurement Office Bundesvergabeamt is a permanent body authorised to hear procurement compliance cases where the federal government of Austria is the contracting authority The Federal Procurement Office is an example of decision making body with both first instance and last instance final court of appeal powers 61 Para 30 The Federal Procurement Office has the power to declare that a violation of procurement law has taken place but it cannot award damages this role lies with the Austrian civil courts 61 Para 36 After the Austrian State Printing House Osterreichische Staatsdruckerei GmbH was privatised Austria maintained a legal obligation for federal authorities to award contracts for security printing for documents such as passports and driving licences to the State Printing House without a competitive procurement process The European Commission challenged this practice as not compliant with the public procurement directives and issued a reasoned opinion to Austria in 2014 As of December 2015 update the Austrian government had taken no action to address this matter and the Commission referred Austria to the European Court of Justice 62 Belgium edit Belgian legislation on public procurement is set out in the Act of 17 June 2016 implementing the 2014 EU procurement directives 63 The Laws of 17 June 2016 on public procurement and on concession contracts and the Law of 16 February 2017 on remedies failed to meet the EU s transposition deadline 18 April 2016 Royal Decrees issued on 18 April 2017 for general public procurement 18 June 2017 for procurement in the water energy transport and postal services sectors 22 June 2017 containing new rules on the performance of public works contracts and concession contracts for public works and 25 June 2017 for the award and performance of concession contracts have augmented the earlier laws 64 Article 51 of the Royal Decree of 18 April 2017 includes a revolving door mechanism which targets the situation where a person previously working for a contracting authority is now being employed by an economic operator involved in a public procurement procedure established by that contracting authority In this type of situation the person would be presumed to have a conflict of interest for a two year period following the termination of his her employment with the contracting authority 64 Bulgaria edit Government procurement in Bulgaria is a critical area in corruption risk Public procurement contracts have been awarded to a handful of companies amid widespread irregularities procedure violations and tailor made selection or award criteria 65 The Bulgarian public procurement portal reported in September 2016 that since the beginning of 2016 a total of 15 105 contracts were signed on the basis of public procurement orders 66 At the beginning of 2015 the Bulgarian government announced a 130 kilometer extension to the barbed wire border fence along its border with Turkey in order to completely secure the land border Prime Minister Boyko Borisov described the extension as absolutely necessary in order to prevent persons from illegally entering the European Union member state 67 The Bulgarian Parliament authorised amendments to procurement legislation to allow continued construction of the fence without launching a public procurement procedure because of the need to safeguard national security 68 Croatia edit The first public procurement law in Croatia based on the EU Procurement Directives was enacted in 2001 but a revised legal structure for public procurement was put in place with the Public Procurement Act of 2012 69 and this was superseded by the Public Procurement Act of 2016 effective 1 January 2017 70 Public private partnerships PPPs are governed by the Act on Public Private Partnerships 71 Two key Croatian institutions are the Public Procurement Office and the Public Procurement Supervisory Commission established in 2001 72 now since 2013 the State Commission for Supervision of Public Procurement DKOM 69 The State Commission is an independent quasi judicial body with nine members appointed by the Croatian Parliament for a five year term and accountable to the Croatian Parliament for its work The High Administrative Court of the Republic of Croatia has jurisdiction over the State Commission in relation to disputes concerning procedure but there is no right of appeal against Commission decisions 73 Under Croatian law procurement procedures must be carried out by authorised representatives of the contracting authority of whom at least one must hold a valid procurement certificate Cyprus edit The Public Procurement Directorate of the Treasury of the Republic of Cyprus is responsible for procurement policy 74 Czech Republic edit Government procurement in the Czech Republic is regulated by Act No 134 2016 Coll on Public Contracts signed by the President of the Republic on 22 April 2016 75 In May 2015 Prime Minister Andrej Babis was accused of alleged financial irregularities and accusations from members of the public and from the opposition that he had promoted his own companies relation to government procurement opportunities triggered a vote of no confidence against Bohuslav Sobotka s government called by the opposition parties ODS TOP 09 and Dawn The motion was defeated by 47 105 76 Denmark edit Economic operators who are dissatisfied with the conduct of public procurement activity in Denmark may complain to the Klagenaevnet for Udbud Public Procurement Complaints Board Estonia edit The Estonian Ministry of Finance is responsible for public procurement policy drafting the law providing supervision and consultancy and maintains a central Public Procurement Register 77 The current legislation is the Public Procurement Act of 2017 which came into effect on 1 September 2017 78 and which operates in conjunction with the Public Information Act of 2000 which regulates the publication of information concerning public procurements which are being organised or have been organised by the state or local governments 79 Disputes are handled by the Public Procurements Appeal Committee Defence procurement for the Defence Forces Ministry of Defence Defence League Defence Resources Agency and Estonian War Museum is organised by the Estonian Centre for Defence Investment whose purpose is to carry out procurement activities through professional quality procurement and to use dedicated funds sparingly and prudently 80 The Centre for Defence Investment was established by the decree of the Minister of Defence on 9 November 2015 and became operational on 1 January 2017 81 Finland edit In Finland the following legislation applies to government procurement Act on Public Contracts and Concession Contracts Act no 1397 of 2016 effective 1 January 2017 82 Act on Public Contracts by Contracting Authorities in the Water Energy Transport and Postal Services Sectors Act no 1398 of 2016 also known as the Act on public contracts in special sectors Act on Public Contracts in the Fields of Defence and Security 83 84 A Government Decree on Public Contracts was also in force until 2017 84 The Ministry of Employment and the Economy is responsible for the preparation of legislation concerning public procurement The Finnish Competition and Consumer Authority FCCA oversees public procurement section 139 of the Act on Public Procurement and Concession Contracts mandates the FCCA to supervise compliance with public contracts legislation and to provide administrative guidance or if necessary to issue a caution to a non compliant public authority 85 The Market Court operates as a specialist court handling public procurement cases The Market Court s rulings in public procurement cases can be appealed to the Supreme Administrative Court of Finland 84 The Act on Electronic Auctions and Dynamic Purchasing Systems of 17 June 2011 which entered into force on 1 October 2011 introduced new procurement procedures whereby documents relating to procurement would be sent and received exclusively online This legislation included the use of eAuctions 86 Electronic procurement is now covered within the 2016 Act on Public Contracts Transposition of the 2014 EU public procurement directive into Finnish law was delayed after the deadline 18 April 2016 with the consequence that some aspects of the directive were directly applicable from April 2016 until the new Finnish legislation was in place from 1 January 2017 87 Hansel Ltd is a state owned central purchasing body established by the Act on a Limited Liability Company Called Hansel Oy which operates framework agreements and supports central government departments in Finland with public procurement tasks 88 France edit In France the Department of Legal Affairs DAJ of the Ministry for the Economy and Finance French Ministere de l Economie et des Finances is responsible for establishing regulations regarding public procurement la commande publique All currently relevant EU directives have been implemented into national law 89 The Union des Groupements d Achat Public UGAP based in Champs sur Marne east of Paris 90 operates as the only general public procurement agency in France 91 Article III of Decree 2016 247 of 3 March 2016 provides that the Direction des Achats de l Etat DAE State Purchasing Directorate has exclusive competence in matters regarding the strategy for professionalisation of public procurement 92 Germany edit In Germany the Federal Ministry for Economic Affairs and Energy German Bundesministerium fur Wirtschaft und Energie abbreviated BMWi is responsible for defining laws and principles regarding public procurement In 2016 Germany transposed the new EU Directives of 2014 into domestic law Thereby processes and contracts in public procurement have become easier and more flexible The Act against Restraints of Competition Part IV German Gesetz gegen Wettbewerbsbeschrankungen abbreviated GWB and the Ordinance on the Award of Public Contracts German Verordnung uber die Vergabe offentlicher Auftrage abbreviated VgV regulate procurement above EU thresholds Detailed procedures are specified in further regulations e g the Procurement Regulation for Public Works German abbreviation VOB the Procurement Regulation for Public Supplies and Services VOL and the Procurement Regulation for Professional Services VOF 93 For many contracts electronic procurement is made possible via an online platform For public procurement below the EU thresholds there are different regulations At the federal level national budgetary law applies while the 16 federal German states and some municipalities have their own public procurement laws and regulations This decentralized system reflects the political decentralization in Germany However sub national level procurement regulations often take national regulations as examples and also ensure competition non discrimination and transparency 94 Germany s federal decree on contracts for workshops for the disabled 10 May 2005 requires German federal contracting authorities to set aside part of their budgets for contracts which can be awarded to workshops for workers with disabilities 95 27 Greece edit Law 4412 2016 on public procurement and Law 4413 2016 on concessions are the main instruments of Greek legislation governing public procurement These two laws of 2016 along with earlier reforms introduced under Law 4281 2014 on public procurement law have radically simplified the previously complex legal regime repealing numerous previous laws 96 The European Commission s profile for Greece in its study of administrative capacity in the EU had described the public procurement system in the country as singularly complex being dispersed among as many as 400 laws regulations and presidential decrees 97 Public contract notices are published in the Central Electronic Registry for Public Procurement KIMDIS 98 The Public Procurement Monitoring Unit PPMU established in 1997 part of the Centre of International and European Economic Law in Thessaloniki provides Greek contracting authorities with specialised and prompt legal advisory support on awarding public works and technical services contracts falling within the scope of EU Law on Public Procurement 97 99 The procurement impact of Greek laws on construction company registration was challenged by the European Commission in 2014 because the legislation divided companies into bandings with a maximum and minimum budget range This process meant that companies were not able to bid for work outside their financial banding even though for projects of a lower value they had the economic and financial standing necessary to take on the work 100 Hungary edit The Hungarian Public Procurement Authority was established by Act XL of 1995 101 and the current Public Procurement Act Act CXLIII of 2015 entered into force on 1 November 2015 implementing the 2014 EU procurement directives 102 The objectives of the 2015 legislation are to secure transparency and public control of the effective use of public funds to establish conditions of fair competition in public procurement to enhance the access of local small and medium sized enterprises to procurement procedures and to promote environmental protection and the social considerations of the State 102 Concession award procedures are also covered within the same legislation and the fundamental principles set out in Act V of 2013 on the Civil Code the ultimate instrument relating to the operation of civil persons and economic organizations also apply to public procurement 103 Ireland edit Government procurement in Ireland is governed by the European Communities Award of Public Authorities Contracts Regulations 2006 104 and the European Communities Public Authorities Contracts Review Procedures Regulations 2010 105 As of 2022 update the Minister for Public Expenditure National Development Plan Delivery and Reform with special responsibility for Public Procurement is Ossian Smyth Italy edit Public procurement in Italy is primarily regulated by the Public Contracts Code Codice dei contratti pubblici established under the legislative decree of 12 April 2006 106 which is administered by the Ministry of Infrastructure and Transport Italian Ministero delle infrastrutture e dei trasporti The code was reformed in 2016 to implement the new EU directives of 2014 into domestic Italian law 107 In addition to the code guidelines from the National Anti Corruption Authority Italian Autorita Nazionale AntiCorruzione abbreviated ANAC and decrees from various ministries also apply to public procurement Most public procurement on a national level is administered by the state owned company Consip S p A and larger regions have their own agencies for public purchasing From 1994 article 10 1bis of Law No 109 on public works stated that multiple undertakings where there was a relationship of control such as between a company and a subsidiary could not take part in the same tendering procedure However because the prohibition on simultaneous and competing participation in the same tendering procedure did not allow undertakings the opportunity to demonstrate that the relationship did not impact on the tendering procedure the European Court of Justice stated in Assitur Srl v Camera di Commercio Industria Artigianato e Agricoltura di Milano May 2009 that this legislation did not comply with EU law 108 The Autorita per la vigilanza sui lavori pubblici 1994 2006 and Autorita per la vigilanza sui contratti pubblici di lavori servizi e forniture AVCP 2006 2014 acted as supervisory authorities overseeing public works procurement and later covering public procurement more generally In 2014 this function was transferred to ANAC 109 Decree No 34 of the President of the Republic of 25 January 2000 introduced earlier rules establishing a qualification system for persons who carry out public works 110 The five regions with special autonomy Friuli Venezia Giulia Sardinia Sicily Trentino Alto Adige and Valle d Aosta can also establish regional legislation regarding public procurement 111 In case C 3 88 Commission v Italian Republic the European Court of Justice ruled that arrangements made by the Italian government to restrict contracts for the provision of services to develop data processing systems for Italian public authorities to companies in which all or a majority of the shares were directly or indirectly in public or State ownership and to include the supply of computing equipment within the services contract the government had failed to comply with its obligations under Council Directive 77 62 EEC of 21 December 1976 coordinating procedures for the award of public supply contracts and failed to comply with the principles of freedom of establishment and freedom to provide services in the EEC Treaty 112 Latvia edit Government procurement in Latvia is regulated by the Public Procurement Law effective 1 March 2017 and the Law on the Procurement of Public Service Providers which came into effect on 1 April 2017 These laws transpose the EU procurement directives one additional legal provision is that for supplier selection purposes real estate tax debts are checked where tenderers are registered or permanently resident in Latvia Public procurement opportunities are advertised on the Latvian Elektronisko Iepirkumu Sistema EIS website as well as in the Official Journal of the European Union when above the threshold values 113 The Procurement Monitoring Office within the Ministry of Finance oversees public procurement 114 A deposit for filing a review application with the Procurement Monitoring Office must be paid calculated as 0 5 of the estimated contract value but no more than 15 000 for construction work contracts or 840 for supply and public service contracts 115 Lithuania edit Public procurement in the Republic of Lithuania is overseen by the Public Procurement Office Lithuanian Viesuju pirkimu tarnyba based in Vilnius under its Director Diana Vilyte 116 Luxembourg edit In Luxembourg the main policy body for public procurement is the Public Procurement Directorate within the Public Works Department of the Ministry of Sustainable Development and Infrastructure MDDI This department is responsible for the regulatory framework drafting relevant legislation and monitoring its implementation and also for representing the Luxembourgish authorities in the field of public procurement A Tender Commission with members drawn from contracting authorities chambers of commerce and small business sectors undertakes a consultative role in relation to public procurement 117 The EU 2014 Directives on public procurement and utilities procurement were implemented by the Law of 8 April 2018 on public procurement which was published in the Luxembourg official Gazette Memorial Journal officiel du Grand Duche de Luxembourg on 16 April 2018 and entered into force on 20 April 2018 118 Procurement in the defence and security sector is covered by the Law of 26 December 2012 119 Malta edit The EU Directive on public procurement is transposed into Maltese law by the Public Procurement Regulations S L 174 04 28 October 2016 120 These regulations also create the Office of the Director of Contracts Regulation 10 who is responsible generally for the regulation and administration of public procurement procedures in Malta a General Contracts Committee whose members are appointed by the Prime Minister Regulation 64 a Departmental Contracts Committee for each contracting authority and in each Ministry a Ministerial Procurement Unit Regulation 79 Under regulation 80 a Public Contracts Review Board is established The Commercial Sanctions Tribunal Regulation 95 is appointed to hear and determine issues relating to the black listing of persons unsuitable for the award of a public contract or to act as a sub contractor to a public sector contractor 121 Netherlands edit The main legislative provisions governing public procurement in the Netherlands are the Public Procurement Act 2012 as amended on 1 July 2016 the Public Procurement Decree the Works Procurement Regulations 2016 the Procurement Regulations for the Utilities Sectors 2013 the Proportionality Guide 2016 the Defence and Security Procurement Act 2013 122 Sector specific procurement regulations are also included in the Passenger Transport Act 2000 123 The Ministry of Economic Affairs is responsible for procurement policy 124 TenderNed is the Dutch government s online tendering system which all Dutch contracting authorities are obliged to use to publish their national and European tenders 125 Poland edit Main article Public procurement law Poland Portugal edit Public procurement in Portugal is governed by the Codigo dos Contratos Publicos or Public Contracts Code PCC which has been implemented through the following Decretos Leis decree laws and other legislation Decree Law 18 2008 29 January 2008 Decree Law 59 2008 11 September 2008 Decree Law 223 2009 11 September 2009 Decree Law 278 2009 20 October 2009 Decree Law 3 2010 27 April 2010 Decree Law 131 2010 14 December 2010 Law 64 B 2011 30 December 2012 Decree Law 149 2012 12 July 2012 Decree Law 214 G 2015 2 October 2015 Decree Law 111 B 2017 31 August 2017 126 Decree Law No 104 2011 6 October 2011 applies to defence contracts 127 The Administrative Procedural Code established under decree law 4 2015 7 January 2015 also provides for general procedures on administrative matters and the Procedural Code of the Administrative Courts established by Law no 15 2002 22 February 2002 amended by Decree Law 214 G 2015 stipulates procedures for litigation regarding public contracts and procurement practices 126 Slovakia edit Public procurement in Slovakia is subject to the Law on Public Contracts which came into effect in September 2015 128 Contract opportunities are advertised in the Slovak Official Journal for Procurement Notices as well as in the Official Journal of the European Union when above the threshold values and a public register of final beneficiaries of companies that win public sector contracts is maintained 129 The Public Procurement Regulatory Authority Slovak l Urad pre verejne obstaravanie oversees procurement operations 130 Slovenia edit Public procurement in Slovenia is overseen by the Public Procurement Directorate within the Ministry of Public Administration 131 The Slovenian Public Procurement Act the ZJN 3 came into force on 1 April 2016 and covers both public sector and utilities procurement implementing Directives 2014 24 EU and 2014 25 EU in one piece of legislation 132 Spain edit Spanish law on public sector contracts Ley 30 2007 de contratos del sector publico known as the LCSP was substantially amended by a new Law 2 2011 on Sustainable Economy LES following an infringement procedure undertaken by the European Commission which found that the LCSP gave contracting authorities a wide almost unlimited power to modify essential terms of public contracts after award in a manner which was not in line with the principles of equal treatment between bidders non discrimination and transparency set out in EU public procurement rules 133 The Basque Country government has issued an instruction concerned with inclusion of social and environmental criteria in procurement decision making 95 21 The region s government aims to promote the economic social and environmental sustainability of the Basque Country through its Green Procurement and Contracting Program 2030 134 Sweden edit The Swedish Competition Authority is responsible for oversight of government procurement in Sweden having taken over this role from the Board for Public Procurement Swedish Namnden for offentlig upphandling when it was dissolved in 2007 135 136 Fiji edit The Fiji Procurement Office was established under Section 4 of the Fiji Procurement Regulations 2010 137 and commenced operations on 1 August 2010 The establishment of the Office and the new Fiji Procurement Regulations were a direct result of the re organisation of the Government Supplies Department by the Fijian government The main functions of the Fiji Procurement Office are to regulate and administer the procurement of goods service and works for the government 138 The Government Tender Board is constituted with authority to approve all procurement of goods services and works valued at FJ 50 001 and more Refer www fpo gov fj for more information 137 Ghana edit See also Corruption in Ghana Public procurement in Ghana is undertaken and overseen by the Public Procurement Authority of Ghana 139 The Public Procurement Board is the central body for policy formulation on procurement The existing Public Procurement Act 2003 Act 663 was amended by the Public Procurement Amendment Act 2016 Act 914 which came into effect on 1 July 2016 140 The Minister of State in Charge of Public Procurement is Sarah Adwoa Safo 141 She has taken a lead role in the fight against corruption in Ghana identifying corruption as a high risk activity in the country 142 Gibraltar edit Government procurement in Gibraltar is managed by the Procurement Office an independent office of Her Majesty s Government of Gibraltar which reports directly to the Financial Secretary 143 In 2012 the European Commission raised a concern regarding the United Kingdom s incomplete transposition of the Defence and Security Public Contracts Regulations 2011 into law 144 Gibraltar left the EU on 31 January 2020 at the same time as the UK Guernsey edit Public procurement opportunities in Guernsey are advertised on the Channel Islands Procurement Portal which was launched in April 2008 and is shared with Jersey 145 Guyana edit Public procurement in Guyana is overseen by the Public Procurement Commission 146 appointed under the Public Procurement Commission Act 2003 Due to lengthy delay in identifying and agreeing commission members the commission was not appointed until 2016 147 The PPC is based in the Queenstown area of Georgetown 148 The National Procurement and Tender Administration of Guyana NPTA established under section 16 1 of the Procurement Act 2003 undertakes administrative processes for high value governmental tenders 149 Haiti edit In 2005 the Haitian government formed the National Commission for Public Procurement French La Commission Nationale des Marches Publics CNMP based in Port au Prince whose tasks are to ensure that competitive bidding takes place for public contracts and to promulgate effective procurement controls in government administration The commission was established by the Decree of 3 December 2004 150 The CNMP publishes lists of awarded public contracts According to the website GlobalSecurity org despite the CNMP s efforts major public procurement contracts notably those involving the state electric company EDH are routinely awarded in a non competitive fashion providing significant opportunities for corruption 151 Honduras edit Government procurement in Honduras is overseen by the National Office of Contracting and Procurement of the State of Honduras Oficina Normativa de Contratacion y Adquisiciones del Estado ONCAE based in Tegucigalpa Honduras has five laws directing public contracting Ley de Contratacion del Estado revised December 2016 Ley de Compras Efficientes y Transparentes a traves de Medios Electronicos Decreto No 36 2013 1 July 2014 152 Reglamento de la Ley de Compras Efficientes y Transparentes a traves de Medios Electronicos 153 whose purpose is to develop the law in decree 36 2013 Reglamento Ley de Contratacion del Estado revised December 2015 Reforma al Reglamento de la Ley de Contratacion del Estado 154 Iceland edit Act No 84 2007 on Public Procurement 2007 has three objectives to ensure the equal treatment of companies during public procurement to encourage efficiency in public operations through active competition and to promote innovation and development in the public procurement of goods labour and services 155 The law applies to the Icelandic State local authorities their institutions and other public entities and to associations formed by one or more of such authorities 156 An independent Public Procurement Complaints Commission has power to investigate complaints and may declare a contract ineffective if its award was not compliant with the legislation 157 India edit See also Government e Marketplace and Corruption in India Tendering processes and awarding contracts The government procurement related disciplines in India are governed by Public Procurement Order amp General Financial Rule Public Procurement Orders and General Financial Rule are primarily been taken care of by the Public Procurement Section of Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade DPIIT Ministry of Commerce and Industry India and Department of Expenditure Ministry of Finance respectively In 2017 the Public Procurement Order and General Financial Rule was amended by the government of India to include a Make In India preference 158 159 Indonesia edit Indonesia has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement 24 The UK s Serious Fraud Office and other regulatory bodies undertook an enquiry into bribery payments intended to secure contracts with the government of Indonesia for the supply of tetraethyl lead leading to the conviction of four company executives in 2014 The convictions also related to offences concerning Iraq 160 Isle of Man edit The Isle of Man government spends over 200 million each year on goods works and services per year promoting competition in procurement under the Council of Ministers Procurement Policy for Government published in 2017 161 Israel edit In Israel the Mandatory Tenders Law of 12 March 1992 5752 1992 as amended governs government procurement procedures Oversight of the legislation lies with the Ministry of Finance in conjunction with the Knesset Constitution Law and Justice Committee The government may with the approval of the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee direct that a state or a government corporation may not enter into a contract with a particular foreign country or with a particular foreign supplier for reasons of foreign policy 162 Jamaica edit The Government of Jamaica Procurement Guidelines apply to government procurement in Jamaica 163 and the Public Sector Procurement Policy of November 2010 reflects the government s strategy to further reform the public procurement system that is aligned to international best practices and promote fair competition for government contracts 164 Until 1996 Jamaica operated a centralised procurement system coordinated by the Central Supply Division of the Ministry of Finance and procurement activity was regulated by the Financial Administration Supplies Regulations 1963 supplemented by directives from the Ministry of Finance The Ministry of Finance and the Public Service is now responsible for oversight of procurement policy A Procurement Policy Implementation Unit was established within the Ministry of Finance in September 1999 164 The Office of the Contractor General OCG based in Kingston was established in 1983 under the Contractor General Act of that year 165 The Contractor General is appointed by the Governor General In December 2008 three members of the procurement committee of the Jamaica Urban Transit Company resigned following reports of procurement breaches identified by the Contractor General Greg Christie 166 The National Contracts Commission NCC was established in October 1999 164 Members of the NCC are also appointed by the Governor General 167 Jersey edit The States of Jersey s procurement opportunities are advertised on the Channel Islands Procurement Portal which was launched in April 2008 and is shared with Guernsey 145 Kenya edit Main article Public procurement in Kenya Public procurement in Kenya is governed by the Public Procurement and Asset Disposal Act 2015 Kosovo edit The Republic of Kosovo s Public Procurement Regulatory Commission based in Pristina 168 is responsible for the overall development operation and supervision of the public procurement system in Kosova subject to regulations imposed by Public Procurement Law of Kosovo No 04 L 042 of 2011 169 Law No 04 L 042 was approved by the Assembly of Kosovo on 29 August 2011 promulgated by the President of the Republic of Kosovo with decree No DL 032 2011 on 31 August 2011 and published in the official Gazette of the Republic of Kosovo No 18 on 18 September 2011 The amended Public Procurement Law 2017 gives preference to local bidders when the quality and price are comparable to that of foreign bidders 170 Kosovo is not a WTO member and is therefore not a signatory to the Government Procurement Agreement 170 The Kosovo Specialist Chambers and Specialist Prosecutor s Office issues public calls for tender on its own website 171 Kyrgyz Republic edit Public sector procurement in the Kyrgyz Republic is regulated by the Law On Public Procurements dated 3 April 2015 No 72 the republic refers to the principles of publicity openness legality and impartiality as critical in relation to suppliers contractors 172 Laos edit Public procurement in the Lao People s Democratic Republic is governed by the Prime Minister s Decree on Procurement of Goods Works Maintenance and Services No 03 PM dated 9 January 2004 and the Implementing Rules and Regulations on Government Procurement of Goods Works Maintenance and Services No 063 PM dated 12 March 2004 173 Amendments were made to some of the articles of the Implementing Rules and the Decree by Update 0861 MOF of 5 May 2009 174 Procurement activities are overseen by the Procurement Monitoring Office PrMO within the Ministry of Finance 173 Liberia edit Government procurement in Liberia is governed by the Public Procurement Act The Public Procurement and Concessions Commission PPCC was established in 2005 to regulate all forms of Public Procurement and Concessions and provide for institutional structures for public procurement and concessions 175 The PPCC operates an online Vendors Register 176 Procurement is decentralised but the Ministry of Finance is required to take part in the negotiations and signing of contracts over US 250 000 and such contracts must be attested to by the Ministry of Justice 175 Liechtenstein edit Liechtenstein is a member of the European Economic Area EEA and subject to Annex XVI Procurement to the EEA Agreement The Annex provides that its references to ILO Conventions do not apply to Liechtenstein but equivalent standards on labour conditions are to be applied 177 Maldives edit Government procurement in the Maldives is subject to the Public Finance Law Law No 3 2006 and chapter 10 of the Public Finance Regulation The approval of the National Tender Board is required before contracts in excess of MVR 2 5m can be awarded 178 Mali edit Public procurement in Mali is overseen by the Autorite de Regulation des Marches Publics et des Delegations de Service Public 179 based in Bamako Mexico edit Public procurement is included in Article 134 of the Mexican Constitution Article 134 is implemented by the Law of Public Sector Acquisitions Leasing and Services Acquisition Law and the Law of Public Works and Related Services Public Work Law At a local level each of the 31 states and the Federal District has different public procurement laws 180 Moldova edit The Republic of Moldova ratified the Government Procurement Agreement on 14 June 2016 181 Montenegro edit Montenegro joined the Agreement on Government Procurement in 2015 after approval was granted on 29 October 2014 182 Exclusions apply in respect of procurement of agricultural products for agricultural support programmes and human food aid programmes procurement of broadcasting material by broadcasters and contracts for broadcasting time and some aspects of procurement connected with the provision of drinking water energy transport and the postal sector 183 Morocco edit Morocco s National Commission for Public Procurement CNCP was established to oversee public procurement control public spending and guarantee the principles of transparency and parity in the development and execution of contracts between competitors with a role also in handling complaints regarding procurement actions 184 Mozambique edit Decree no 5 2016 Public Procurement Regulations governs public procurement in Mozambique 185 New Zealand edit The New Zealand Government Procurement Branch of the Ministry of Business Innovation and Employment is responsible for the Government Procurement Rules Government Rules of Sourcing 186 and Principles of Government Procurement 187 The aim of the Government Rules of Sourcing is to support good practice for procurement planning approaching the supplier community and contracting 186 The 66 rules were initially introduced in 2013 The principles apply to all governmental procurement activity but the rules only apply to projects or purchases exceeding 100 000 or construction projects valued over 10 million 186 Purchasers of certain common goods or services are required to use All of Government contracts AoG established by the Government Procurement Branch overseen by the Procurement Functional Leader and managed by appointed procurement Centres of Expertise Where a public agency wishes to opt out of the use of an AoG contract it must obtain the approval of approval the Procurement Functional Leader if the agency and the Procurement Functional Leader fail to agree on an opt out the State Services Commissioner will decide 188 nbsp Blavatnik School of Government New Zealand joined the Agreement on Government Procurement in 2015 after approval was granted on 29 October 2014 182 The second International Civil Service Effectiveness Index published in April 2019 by the Blavatnik School of Government at the University of Oxford ranked New Zealand as the top country for Government Procurement Effectiveness The procurement indicator was a new addition to this index not present in the previous 2017 index The indicator covered both procurement systems and procurement practices The report authors identified that New Zealand s excellence lay in the extent of e procurement functions within its overall procurement system the role of its central purchasing body and the extent to which policies are in place to enable small and medium sized enterprises SME to take part in central government procurement 189 Nigeria edit Nigeria is a federal republic comprising 36 states and the Federal Capital Territory 190 See Rivers State Bureau on Public Procurement as an example of a regulatory body in one of the states North Macedonia edit North Macedonia has ratified the Government Procurement Agreement and accedes to membership on 30 October 2023 191 Pakistan edit Government procurement in Pakistan is overseen by the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority PPRA an autonomous body based in Islamabad which was established by the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority Ordinance of May 2002 The PPRA is responsible for issuing regulations and procedures for public procurement undertaken by federal level public sector organisations Its brief is to improve the governance management transparency accountability and quality of Pakistan s public procurement The PPRA also monitors other public sector agencies procurement activity 192 The PPRA Board consists of six ministerial appointments from central government departments three private members and the Authority s managing director 193 Pakistan has observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement 24 Peru edit Peruvian public procurement law was formerly set out in the Government Procurement Act approved by Legislative Decree No 1017 and the Regulation of the Government Procurement Act approved by Supreme Decree No 184 2008 EF which were replaced by a new Government Procurement Act Law N 30225 in 2014 194 195 Peruvian President Pedro Pablo Kuczynski resigned on 21 March 2018 following allegations that public works contracts had been corruptly awarded to Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht 196 Philippines edit Public sector procurement in the Philippines is required to follow the Government Procurement Reform Act of 2003 The Philippines government requested observer status with respect to the Government Procurement Agreement on 6 May 2019 and its request was accepted by the WTO Committee on Government Procurement on 26 June 2019 the Philippines confirming that its government was taking steps to create a transparent open and fair procurement system founded on a sound legal framework which includes initiatives to open procurement to foreign suppliers 197 Russia edit Main article Government procurement in Russia Russian Federal Law N44 FZ of 5 April 2013 requires all federal regional and municipal government customers to publish all information about government tenders auctions and other purchase procedures on special public government websites Rwanda edit In Rwanda the public procurement process is managed on a daily basis by an autonomous organ the Rwanda Public Procurement Authority RPPA 198 which operates under the Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning MINECOFIN Public procurement is regulated by the Law N 12 2007 of 27 March 2007 on public procurement 199 which was modified and complemented by the Law N 05 2013 of 13 February 2013 200 The law is implemented by a Ministerial Order N 001 14 10 TC of 19 February 2014 establishing Regulations on Public Procurement Standard Bidding Documents and Standard Contracts 201 Rwanda has a decentralized public procurement system whereby procuring entities central government organs local government entities government projects commissions public institutions parastatals agencies or any other government entity charged by the Chief Budget Manager to manage public funds have the power to conduct directly their public procurement process The main mission of RPPA is 1 to process the establishment and improvement of public procurement legal framework 2 provide public procurement legal advisory services 3 conduct audit and monitoring of public procurement activities carried out by procuring entities tender award and contract management and 4 build the capacity of public officials involved in public procurement activities 202 The public procurement system in Rwanda is governed by 6 fundamental principles namely 1 transparency 2 competition 3 economy 4 efficiency 5 fairness and 6 accountability 203 In the national system bidders have the right to appeal against public procurement procedures they may think were not conducted appropriately In that connection the legal framework provides for the Independent Review Panels at National Level National Independent Review Panel and at District Level Independent Review Panel at District Level 204 The Independent Review Panels are composed of members from the Private Sector Civil Society and the Public Sector and the members from the Public Sector cannot form the majority of members of the Panel The Independent Review Panel at National Level is under the supervision of the Minister of Finance and Economic Planning whereas the Independent Review Panel at District Level is under the supervision of the District Council In order to make the procurement sector a profession in Rwanda there is an Association of Procurement Professionals which was established by the Law N 011 2016 of 2 May 2016 205 Rwanda introduced an e procurement system in 2016 For more information about Rwanda s e procurement system please visit www umucyo gov rw for more information about public procurement in Rwanda in general please visit www rppa gov rw Serbia edit The current Serbian Law on Public Procurement came into effect on 1 April 2013 replacing the previous legislation enacted in 2008 A particular concern for Serbia s legislators was dealing with corruption in government procurement the Law requires Serbia s Public Procurement Office which oversees procurement to draft a plan for combating corruption in public procurement procedures and contracting authorities with an estimated annual value of public procurement in excess of one billion dinars 8 9m Euros to adopt an internal plan for preventing corruption 206 The Public Procurement Office is based in Belgrade The role of the Republic Commission for the Protection of Rights in Public Procurement Procedures established in 2002 is to protect the rights of bidders during procurement exercises 207 The Regulation on Mandatory Elements of Tender Documents in Public Procurement Procedures and Way to Prove Fulfilment of Requirements 208 prescribes a model contract as a mandatory element of every set of tender documents except when a negotiated procedure is being conducted or where a loan is being procured as a financial service 209 In 2016 the EU funded a programme of support for further improvement of Public Procurement system in Serbia as part of the EU s pre accession assistance programme 210 There is no current target date for Serbia to join the EU 211 Singapore edit See also GeBIZ Singapore s Ministry of Finance is responsible for the Government Procurement policy framework which governs how government agencies undertake their procurement 212 In 2014 the Public Accounts Committee of the Parliament of Singapore criticised the state of government procurement in Singapore identifying a number of irregularities in procurement procedures including weak rationales invoked when waiving competitive processes allowing some bidders to amend their tenders after tenders had closed not disclosing evaluation criteria to bidders within tender documentation improper procedures for tender evaluation lax oversight and monitoring of outsourced projects 213 GeBIZ is a Government to business G2B Public eProcurement business centre where suppliers can conduct electronic commerce with the Singaporean Government All of the public sector s invitations for quotations and tenders except for security sensitive contracts are posted on GeBIZ 212 Suppliers can search for government procurement opportunities retrieve relevant procurement documentations and submit their bids online South Africa edit Section 217 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa 1996 Act 108 of 1996 provides the basis for government procurement 1 When an organ of state in the national provincial or local sphere of Government or any other institution identified in national legislation contracts for goods or services it must do so in accordance with a system which is fair equitable transparent competitive and cost effective 2 Subsection 1 does not prevent the organs of state or institutions referred to in that subsection from implementing a procurement policy providing for a categories of preference in the allocation of contracts and b the protection or advancement of persons or categories of persons disadvantaged by unfair discrimination dd 3 National legislation must prescribe a framework within which the policy referred to in subsection 2 must be implemented In Subsection 3 the previous words may be implemented were amended to must be implemented by section 6 of the Constitution Seventh Amendment Act of 2001 214 The Public Finance Management Act 1999 also refers to the duty of the Accounting Officer of a department to have and to maintain an appropriate procurement and supply system which is fair equitable transparent competitive and cost effective 215 To help prevent corruption a Central Tender Board was established in 2014 216 Suriname edit Government procurement in Suriname takes place on the basis of open tenders Participants in a tendering procedure must hold a valid business license and must be registered with the Suriname Chamber of Commerce and Industry KKF Suriname is not a signatory to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement 217 Tajikistan edit Tajikistan is not a signatory to the WTO Government Procurement Agreement but the US Department of State has noted that the country has made a commitment to initiate accession to the agreement as part of its WTO accession protocol 218 Tanzania editPublic procurement in the United Republic of Tanzania is overseen by the country s Public Procurement Regulatory Authority PPRA which was established under the terms of the Public Procurement Act in 2004 The objectives of the PPRA areto ensure the application of fair competitive transparent non discriminatory and value for money procurement standards and practices set standards for the public procurement systems in United Republic of Tanzania monitor compliance of procuring entities and build in collaboration with Public Procurement Policy Division and other relevant professional bodies procurement capacity in the United Republic 219 The Public Procurement Act 2004 has been superseded by the Public Procurement Act 2011 219 Ukraine edit The Ministry of Economic Development and Trade Ukraine is an executive authority in charge of coordination of procurement of goods works and services for public funds 220 The Law On public procurement is one of the core legislative bases of the procurement regulations It made electronic public procurement procedures and use of e procurement system Prozorro mandatory for all procuring entities after August 2016 221 Ukraine joined the Government Procurement Agreement in March 2016 222 United Arab Emirates edit Federal government procurement within the United Arab Emirates is governed by Cabinet Resolution No 32 of 2014 on Federal Government Procurement Regulation and Storehouse Management in Federal Government which applies to all supply works and services purchasing undertaken by the federal government and the federal ministries and governmental agencies except the Ministry of Defence and also to independent federal entities such as the General Authority for Civil Aviation Emirates Real Estate Corporation FEWA ESCA Insurance Authority Emirates Post Group Holding National Transport Authority Telecommunications Regulatory Authority UAE University and Zayed University 223 UAE Federal Decree No 12 of the Deputy Supreme Commander of the Armed Forces 1986 applies to armed forces procurement 224 Conditional preferential treatment is afforded under Resolution 32 to corporate suppliers whose capital does not exceed AED 10 million and in which the UAE national shareholding is not less than 51 and to facilities which are financed by SMEs supporting funds and governed by federal or local law 223 United Kingdom edit Main article Government procurement in the United Kingdom At around 290 billion every year public sector procurement accounts for around a third of all public expenditure in the UK 225 EU based laws continue to apply to government procurement where procurement is governed by the Public Contracts Regulations 2015 Part 3 of the Small Business Enterprise and Employment Act 2015 226 and in Scotland the Public Contracts Scotland Regulations of 2015 227 and 2016 228 United Nations edit In 2021 the 41 United Nations organizations between them spent US 29 6 billion on purchasing goods and services The UN s Office for Project Services supports UN procurement and publishes an annual analysis of the combined UN expenditure and key trends in UN procurement 229 United States edit Main article Government procurement in the United States Government procurement and government contracting by public authorities in the United States accounts for about US 7 trillion annually 5 the central purchasing agency is the General Services Administration GSA Federal procurement is governed by the Federal Acquisition Regulation FedBizOpps operated until 2019 as a source of information on government contracts This is now SAM gov 230 Public announcements of awards allow for several exemptions including contracts less than 3 5 million 231 Historically the procurement data has been criticized for deficiencies leading to a number of reforms 232 In 2013 eight legacy databases were merged into a single system called System for Award Management SAM where companies interested in doing business with the federal government may register their interest 233 Contracts are not posted online although two agencies have explored the possibility 232 In January 2014 the Office of Inspector General at NASA released a report criticizing the agency s lack of strategic sourcing 234 Because IT departments were spending autonomously NASA spent 25 7 million on similar purchases 235 The National Institute of Governmental Purchasing and the Federal Acquisition Institute are active in procurement certification and training A specialized program in procurement law in the United States is located at The George Washington University Law School Vatican City edit Purchasing is overseen by the Secretariat for the Economy which is responsible for setting purchasing policies and procedures while responsibility for expenditure is devolved to individual dicasteries and administrations 236 Rules on transparency control and competition in the procedures for awarding public contracts of the Holy See and Vatican City State were published on 19 May 2020 and amended on 16 January 2024 237 World Bank Group edit The World Bank functions like a cooperative owned by its 189 member countries 238 Its own procurement activities are handled at a corporate level 239 and its Procurement Framework approved in July 2015 and operational since July 2016 applies to projects and programmes which are supported with World Bank funds The Procurement Framework has four key principles Needs and risks of a project are analyzed through a Project Procurement Strategy for Development PPSD This analysis enables the borrower to have a strategy on how best to engage with bidders The analysis ensures that procurement processes are fit for purpose allow choice and are appropriate to the size value and risk of the project Value for Money is a core procurement principle in all procurements financed by the World Bank This means the focus is on bids that provide the best overall value for money taking into account quality cost and other factors as needed rather than a focus on the lowest evaluated compliant bid The approach to resolving procurement related complaints has the capacity to promptly respond to any concerns during the procurement process There is a standstill period a pause between identifying who should win the contract and actually awarding them the contract so that other bidders can voice any concerns before a contract is actually legally formed and awarded The World Bank is more involved in contract management of procurements with high value and high risk to ensure the best possible outcomes and that problems are resolved quickly 240 Zambia edit Public procurement in Zambia is governed by the Public Procurement Act No 12 of 2008 and the Public Procurement Regulations of 2011 Prior to 2008 public procurement was governed by the Zambia National Tender Board Act Act No 30 of 1982 241 The CEO of the Zambia National Tender Board is appointed by the President 242 Zimbabwe edit The Government of Zimbabwe established a public procurement law in 1999 243 The 2013 2018 Zim ASSET Strategy Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Socio Economic Transformation referred to plans to overhaul the State Procurement Board with immediate effect 2013 244 The Zim ASSET Strategy aimed to achieve sustainable development and social equity anchored on indigenization empowerment and employment creation for the benefit of indigenous Zimbabweans and not foreign investors objectives which have been linked with those of ZANU s Mgagao Declaration of 1976 245 The Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Act 2017 repealed the Procurement Act of 1999 and abolished the State Procurement Board 246 On 9 January 2018 President Emmerson Mnangagwa appointed an eight member Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe which replaced the Board 247 The legislation incorporates a domestic preference section empowering procuring entities to give preference to bids from Zimbabwean or local suppliers and manufacturers and provides for a Special Procurement Oversight Committee to be established to oversee certain especially sensitive or especially valuable contracts 246 Nyasha Chizu CEO of the Procurement Regulatory Authority of Zimbabwe played a key role as technical advisor on public procurement reform 248 See also editGovernment spending Best value procurement Contract awarding Forward Commitment Procurement Open Contracting Data Standard Public eProcurement Standstill period Public private partnership Business to governmentReferences edit How large is public procurement blogs worldbank org 5 February 2020 Retrieved 8 October 2020 Mankiw Nicholas Gregory 2011 Economics Taylor Mark P 1958 2nd ed Andover Cengage Learning pp 223 226 ISBN 9781844808700 OCLC 712588185 Stiglitz Joseph 2000 Economics of the Public Sector 3rd ed New York W W Norton pp 86 88 ISBN 0393966518 OCLC 39485400 Scottish Government Procurement Journey Route 1 accessed 25 December 2023 a b Priess Hans Joachim Harvey Diana Friton Pascal 2012 Global Overview Priess 3 7 a b Pliatsidis Andreas Christos 12 February 2024 Analyzing concentration in the Greek public procurement market a network theory approach Journal of Industrial and Business Economics doi 10 1007 s40812 023 00291 z ISSN 1972 4977 Bosio et al 2020 a b c Study on SMEs access to public procurement markets and aggregation of demand in the EU Wagt Maarten 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Statement Action Note PPN 05 21 published 3 June 2021 accessed 21 June 2021 Small Business Enterprise and Employment Act 2015 Part 3 Public Contracts Scotland Regulations 2015 Public Contracts Scotland Regulations 2016 United Nations Office for Project Services UN Procurement Reaches New Heights as Health Procurement Soars accessed 7 August 2023 Boyd A FedBizOpps Will Be Gone Before the End of the Year NextGov FCW published 14 August 2019 accessed 20 December 2023 Update on FedBizOpps data Sunlight Foundation a b Halchin LE 2013 Transforming Government Acquisition Systems Overview and Selected Issues Congressional Research Service General Services Administration System for Award Management Martin Paul NASA s Strategic Sourcing Program PDF NASA Office of Audits Retrieved 5 March 2014 Busch Jason 4 March 2014 NASA or Need Another Sourcing Act IT Security Spending Horror Stories Spend Matters Retrieved 5 March 2014 Holy See Press Office New Economic Framework for the Holy See published 9 July 2014 accessed 2 June 2018 Holy See Press Office Apostolic Letter issued Motu Proprio of the Supreme Pontiff Francis modifying the Motu Proprio On transparency control and competition in the procedures for awarding public contracts of the Holy See and Vatican City State of 19 May 2020 and the related Rules and Jurisdictional Protection 16 01 2024 accessed 23 January 2024 World Bank Organization accessed 11 September 2023 World Bank Group Corporate Procurement accessed 11 September 2023 World Bank Group Procurement for Projects and Programs accessed 11 September 2023 reproduced in accordance with the World Bank s Terms and Conditions of Using Our Site The World Bank Group authorizes the use of this material subject to the terms and conditions on its website at https www worldbank org en about legal terms and conditions Public Procurement System in Zambia accessed 11 January 2017 Zambia National Tender Board Act 1982 Section 14 accessed 21 December 2020 World Bank Zimbabwe Begins Public Procurement Modernization 13 May 2015 accessed 19 September 2016 Government of Zimbabwe Zimbabwe Agenda for Sustainable Socio Economic Transformation Zim Asset Towards an Empowered Society and a Growing Economy October 2013 December 2018 published 2013 accessed 20 December 2020 Gomo M Zim ASSET Flashback to Mgagao Declaration The Patriot published 9 January 2014 accessed 20 December 2020 a b Zimbabwe Legal Information Institute Public Procurement and Disposal of Public Assets Act Chapter 22 23 Republic of Ghana Public Procurement Authority Electronic Vol 9 Issue 1 Bulletin Jan Feb 2018 accessed 22 February 2018 Pindula Nyasha Chizu accessed 20 December 2020Further reading editDecio Coviello amp Stefano Gagliarducci 2017 Tenure in Office and Public Procurement American Economic Journal Economic Policy 9 no 3 59 105 Decio Coviello amp Andrea Guglielmo amp Giancarlo Spagnolo 2018 The Effect of Discretion on Procurement Performance Management Science 64 no 2 715 38 Francesco Decarolis 2014 Awarding Price Contract Performance and Bids Screening Evidence from Procurement Auctions American Economic Journal Applied Economics 6 no 1 108 32 Francesco Decarolis amp Giuliana Palumbo 2015 Renegotiation of Public Contracts An Empirical Analysis Economics Letters 132 no C 77 81 Francesco Decarolis amp Leonardo M Giuffrida amp Elisabetta Iossa amp Vincenzo Mollisi amp and Giancarlo Spagnolo 2019 Bureaucratic Competence and Procurement Outcomes NBER Working Paper No 24201 Cambridge MA National Bureau of Economic Research Oliver Hart amp John Moore 1988 Incomplete Contracts and Renegotiation Econometrica 56 no 4 755 85 Oliver Hart Andrei Shleifer and Robert W Vishny 1997 The Proper Scope of Government Theory and an Application to Prisons Quarterly Journal of Economics 112 no 4 1127 61 Bosio E and Djankov S How Large is Public Procurement World Bank Blogs published 5 February 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Government procurement amp oldid 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