Feature Stories
- How Bangladesh bridged the gap between amateur and professional in government procurement
- Rated Criteria: Promoting Value in World Bank Procurement
- Public Procurement Transformation in Bangladesh
- Achievement of Value for Money and Enhancement of Efficiency, Economy and Transparency in Procurement - Document Archive System
Archives
- End-to-End Procurement Planning and Maintenance System Integrated with Project MIS
- Application of Construction Milestones in Rural Road Contracts of Nepal
- Gross National Happiness Model for Pursuing Sustainable Public Procurement
- Government procurement is the basis of wide opportunities for enterprise development
- The Challenges of Procurement Training in a Fragile Country: the Afghanistan Experience
- When and How to Open Contracts: Transparency and Engagement through World Bank Projects
- Innovations and Best Practices in Procurement Processes of Disaster Recovery Projects
- World Bank Experts Discuss Global Procurement Trends and Armenia's e-GP system with the National Assembly
- Technology driving transparent and accountable public procurement reform in Bangladesh
- Prototype for Implementation of Framework Agreement via Blockchain
- Construction Project Planning and Management Capacity Building in India: A Wholistic Approach to Boost Infrastructure Development
- Zimbabwe: Public Procurement reform to catalyze greater transparency and development
- 15th Procurement, Integrity, Management and Openness (PRIMO) Forum
- e-Procurement World Map
- Preventing and controlling corruption: A modern approach to Procurement
- 6th South Asia Public Procurement Conference held in Thimphu, Bhutan
- South Asia Procurement Innovation Awards 2018 Announced
- Procurement iNET completes 5 years and new CPPP Fastest 100% Challenge Launched
- Risky Business: Does Debarring Poor Performers Mitigate Future Performance Risk?
- Global Procurement Summit 2019, New Delhi, India
- World Bank India launches Survey for International Civil Works Contractors
- World Bank launches new Complaints Module in Systematic Tracking of Exchanges in Procurement (STEP) System
- New Open Contracting Data Standard for e-Procurement Systems Launched
- Bangladesh's success in public procurement: Sustained reform really pays off
- The five drivers for improving public sector performance: Lessons from the new World Bank Global Report
- South Asia Public Procurement Innovation Awards 2018
- Conversation with Khaled Elarbi, President, High Authority for Public Procurement (HAICOP), Tunisia on the Digitalization of Public Procurement
- Breaking the glass ceiling in Africa: Rwanda E-Government Procurement System
- How government e-marketplace is revolutionizing procurement in India
- Ensuring Value for Money in Infrastructure Projects - The Botswana way
- Blockchain Lessons for Procurement
- Botswana’s Benevolent Move to Enhance its Procurement Profession
- Achieving Better Value for Money Using e-Auction for Procurement of Goods by Public Sector - A Success Case from DPDC
- Guide to Project Management and Contract Management (GPMCM) – New Approach to Improve Efficiency and Effectiveness of Procurement Outcomes
- Regional Winners of SAPIA 2017 participate in 8th International Public Procurement Conference (IPPC 8) Arusha, Tanzania
- The Future of Public Procurement in the Era of Digitalization
- World Bank Operations Procurement Helping Turkey to Procure a US$2 Billion Gas Storage Facility
- Unlocking Energy Efficiency Market in India - Through Innovative Procurement Business Model
- Getting value for money: Creating an automated market place for farmers in Pakistan
- Towards a Single Market for Public Procurement in Caribbean Small States
- Web-Based Online Evaluation Tool (e-Tool) for Procurement of Works by Royal Government of Bhutan
- Strengthening Health Sector Procurement System Offer Hopes for Universal Health Coverage in Nepal
- Morocco makes Strides in Modernizing its Public Procurement System— Operationalization of the Procurement Regulatory Body
- Innovations in Procurement Process and Selection that Lead to Improved Outcomes – Tenderers’ Database Management System
- Looking Back and Forward: The World Bank’s Procurement Framework
- Independent Monitoring and Evaluation of Contracted Health Services Leads to Improved Outcomes in Rural Areas of Afghanistan
- Fifth South Asia Region Public Procurement Conference brings focus on Procurement in Public Service Delivery
- 12 Procurement Innovations from South Asian Countries Celebrated
- Social Media is Improving Procurement in Lao PDR
- ASEAN meeting explores ways of professionalizing public procurement to meet development challenges
- Second International Training Program on the World Bank’s New Procurement Framework
- South Asia Procurement Innovations Award 2017 launched with Bigger and Better Prizes
- How to bid, finding opportunities, what makes a successful bid
- Pushing boundaries in procurement framework implementation
- Experience of Developing PPSD for the Assam Agribusiness and Rural Transformation Project (APART), India
- An Electronic Approach: Streamlining Georgia's Procurement
- South Asia Heads of Procurement Knowledge Exchange Program to U.S. Government Procurement Systems started
- 13th Procurement, Integrity, Management and Openness (PRIMO) Forum - a Documentary
- Bangladesh to strengthen public procurement with World Bank supported Project
- Establishment of Technology-Based Health Procurement and Supply Chain Management System, and Capacity Development in Tamil Nadu Medical Services Corporation
- Towards a Single Market for Public Procurement in Caribbean Small States
- Redefining Procurement as an Innovative and Collaborative Centre of Excellence for Best-in-Class Sourcing Solution
- India’s PowerGrid Endorsed for Alternative Procurement Arrangements by the World Bank
- Achieving Value for Money in Indonesia’s Geothermal Project
- Citizen Monitoring of Rural Roads Under Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana (PMGSY), India
- Establishment of Grant and Service Contract Management Unit (GCMU) to Manage Contracting Out of Health Services in Afghanistan
- Procurement for Regional Development–Public Policy Initiative in Sri Lanka
- PPAF Community-Driven Development (CDD) Procurement Model, Pakistan
- Making Successful Procurement of IT Systems - An Experience from Vietnam
- Procurement Observatories continue to deliver in India
- Implementation of National e-GP System in Nepal
- Government e-Marketplace (GeM), India
- Africa High Level Public Procurement and Electronic Government Procurement Forums
- Development of Procurement Cadre as Part of Holistic Procurement Reforms in Bhutan
- Modernizing Public Procurement in Zimbabwe, one Step at a Time
- Citizen Engagement During Public Procurement Implementation in Bangladesh
- Winter 2017 Virtual Procurement, Integrity, Management, and Openness (PRIMO) Forum on Sanctions and Debarment Systems
- Close and Personalized Procurement Monitoring, Leading to Procurement Efficiency in Irrigation Sector in Fragile and Challenging Environments of Afghanistan
- Procurement Framework 2016 offers wider choices to ‘Go to Market’ based on PPSD
- Procurement Framework 2016 - Benefits, Status of Roll-out and M&E Arrangements
- PPSD offers Fit for Purpose Procurement Solutions
- Global Procurement Summit
- Fourth South Asia Region Public Procurement Conference
- The World Bank e-Procurement Tools
- South Asia Procurement Innovations Awards, 2016
- Learning Videos launched on STEP, online tracking tool on procurement for World Bank Projects
- Open e-Learning is Building a Cadre of Procurement Experts
- South Asia Region Public Procurement Conference, 2017
- Online Certificate Program in Public Procurement in Arabic Launched in Egypt
- First Procurement Knowledge Exchange Forum among ASEAN Countries
- Nobel Prize in Economics for contribution to Theory of Contract
- The Africa Region Harnesses Integrated e-Government Procurement (e-GP) Systems in Pursuit of Transparency and Integrity
- Procurement Reform for Humanitarian and Development Challenges in Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI)
- Successful Procurement is not just a set of Activities, it is a Strategy
- Afghanistan - Trends and Recent Developments in Governance
- PPSD is an Opportunity for clients and staff for Improved Procurement Management
- Procurement Reform Advances in the MENA Region
- Data Analysis and Collaborative Work in Action for Expedited Disbursements in Africa
- Ensuring Good Governance in Procurement in Sri Lanka
- New Procurement System to Improve Development Impact and Transparency in South Asia
- World Bank, USTDA Formalize Procurement Partnership
- How the New Procurement Framework Will Benefit 45.6 Million People in India
- Procuring the Future
- Reasons to Bid, Finding Business Opportunities
- New World Bank Procurement Framework Promotes Strengthened National Procurement Systems
- The readiness for Procurement Framework 2016
- 6 Things to know about New Procurement Framework
When and How to Open Contracts: Transparency and Engagement through World Bank Projects
Kristina M Aquino, The World Bank & Kathrin Frauscher, Open Contracting Partnership
Procurement is the bellwether of how a government is stewarding its public resources. The ultimate goals of procurement are driving economic value; supporting entrepreneurship; and delivering better goods, works, and services. Without open, fair, and responsive government contracting there can't be sound public financial management and effective service delivery.
The World Bank has long recognized the power of public procurement and is assisting governments around the world to transform antiquated, paper-based systems, into modern electronic procurement systems. Yet often these reforms are solely focused on the use of technology and not on the goals.
For these goals to be achieved, public procurement reforms need to engage citizens from the onset and lead to the publication and use of high-quality, user-friendly, and timely contracting data and information.
At the recent World Bank's conference "Foundations and Frontiers of Open, Participatory, and Accountable Government" it was discussed how to open up public contracting to make it more transparent, accountable and therefore more effective.
Open Contracting in World Bank Projects
Open contracting is the practice of (1) publishing and using open, accessible and timely contracting data to drive performance and (2) engaging citizens, businesses, and government to identify and fix problems. It has been integrated into 11 World Bank projects, such as operations in Bangladesh, Nigeria, and Afghanistan. Globally, open contracting is being implemented by over 40 government agencies with huge demand coming from the Latin America and Europe and Central Asia regions. In fact, open contracting is so popular that 61 of the 79 countries that signed up to the Open Government Partnership have had at least one open contracting-focused commitment in their national action plan.
Countries that are implementing open contracting have seen impressive results. For instance, Ukraine has saved billions of dollars, lowered prices for chemotherapy drugs, and increased public trust through its procurement reforms. The City of Bogota improved the quality of 35000 school meals while lowering prices by 10%. A 2017 World Bank study surveying 88 countries found that the places with both a high degree of transparency and effective oversight mechanisms in procurement reported the lowest incidence (and smaller) kickbacks.
One of the things TTLs and governments leading the open contracting procurement reform often ask is: Do we need to disclose everything? The quick answer is: No. The Open Contracting Data Standard (OCDS) provides a recommendation of how to treat procurement data so that disclosure is more meaningful and useful, but the litmus test for proactive disclosure is simple: If in doubt, go back to how the use case or desired outcome from the reform is being served.
Integrating Open Contracting in Three Steps
How can World Bank TTLs working on public financial management (PFM), procurement or sector projects integrate open contracting into their projects? Here are some ideas:
- Identify goals and desired outcomes of the contracting reform by engaging key stakeholders and asking them about their needs. When government center their reforms around that, they can ensure that procurement laws, data systems and contracting processes are structured to realize those goals. For instance:
- oIn the Kyrgyz Republic, the reform team surveyed small and medium-sized businesses to understand what barriers they were facing to bid on public contracts.
- In Uganda, there is a multi-stakeholder working group that collaborates with the procurement agency on its reform agenda.
- Ukraine has a public business intelligence tool with KPIs (Key Performance Indicators) such as savings, number of bidders, and competitive vs. non-competitive procedures.
- Use the Open Contracting Data Standard (OCDS) to collect, publish and use procurement data. Public procurement is probably one of the most valuable datasets in government as it reveals trends and information in how public money is spent and gets converted into roads, schools, and medicines. Some examples:
- Zambia introduced several standardized monitoring reports when it introduced OCDS as part of its new electronic procurement system.
- In Paraguay, a visualization platform includes an interactive map of tenders and distribution of contracts by volume per procuring entity. Students monitored how royalties from a hydroelectric dam were allocated to schools in their region. In 2017, 80% of the most needy schools received funding, compared to less than 20% in 2015.
- Integrate citizen feedback mechanisms. UK and Zambia prove that new IT systems and publication of open contracting data alone may not be sufficient to achieve impact. Involving stakeholders and integrating feedback are essential to achieve results:
- In Colombia, the procurement law (law 850 of 2003) allows citizens' oversight organizations to supervise public management, especially in relation to awarding and implementing public contracts.
- In Honduras, the local CoST multi-stakeholder group carried out an assurance process (which highlights the accuracy and completeness of infrastructure data) on a sample of General Roads Directorate projects. It revealed that 60% of projects were based on outdated designs. This led to excessive cost overruns, ranging from 157% to 197%, and time delays of 18 to 60 months. The government has since introduced new policies that require all projects to provide up-to-date designs before construction can start.
- In Chile, civil society organizations and government agencies are working together in a public-private working group to monitor corruption and red flags in procurement.
- In Ukraine, the reform team launched DoZorro, a tool for identifying corruption risks, where citizens can submit feedback and report violations across the procurement cycle. More than 133,000 citizens have visited the platform and recorded 14,000 feedback reports, since its launch in November 2016. So far, around 50% of these cases have been resolved, including over 1,200 cases where vendors were changed as a result of feedback. The platform is also strengthening accountability. 22 criminal charges and 79 sanctions have been issued.
To summarize, open contracting is not just about increasing the volume of procurement data that is made public. It is crucial to ensure that citizens are engaged in the process and can derive results from contracting - including companies and civil society groups from reform goal formulation through implementation and monitoring. We are here to help you make your PFM and procurement projects more open and effective. Reach out to Kristina Aquino at kaquino@worldbank.org (Governance GP Solutions and Innovations in Procurement team) or Kathrin Frauscher at kfrauscher@open-contracting.org (Open Contracting Partnership).