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Workshop on Implementing Electronic Government Procurement (e-GP) Delhi, India – May 18, 2006 The Role of e-GP in Improving Public Procurement Performance Knut Leipold The World Bank May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 1 Voice of the Pros • “E-Procurement can protect life!” • “You loose some USD 450,000 every day!” • “It allows for increased competition and less fraud.” May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 2 Voice of the Cons • “Look at this! Not only that we have to use this E-Procurement system, we even have to pay USD 12,000 for it this year!” • “We prefer the offline procurement process.” • “We don’t like the e-Procurement system as it increases our workload.” May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 3 Objectives • Opportunities & Challenges of • e for GP e is a tool to improve GP • Encourage to use May 18, 2006 e for GP Workshop on Implementing e-GP 4 Agenda May 18, 2006 1. Opportunities 2. Challenges 3. Lessons Learned Workshop on Implementing e-GP 5 Agenda May 18, 2006 1. Opportunities 2. Challenges 3. Lessons Learned Workshop on Implementing e-GP 6 Benefits of e-GP • Transparency • Efficiency • Economic Development May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 7 Transparency • Information on public procurement function • Information on procurement transactions • Compliance • Reduced corruption • Audit trails & institutional memory • Improved quality of public procurement reporting, monitoring, and management May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 8 Efficiency Price decrease • Increased price transparency • Increased competition (!) • Aggregated demand • Lower transaction costs for suppliers • e-Reverse Auctions Reduced transaction costs • staff, material, workflow • online vs. offline publication Time is money! May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 9 Economic Development Public Procurement • Government = single largest purchaser in a national economy • Value of public procurement: 10-15% of GDP • Redistribution of taxpayers’ money GDP • Private business activation • Infrastructure development • Capacity building May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 10 Beneficiaries of e-GP • Transparency Government • Efficiency • Economic Development Taxpayers May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 11 What is the Problem? Objectives of GP: Benefits of e-GP: • Open & fair competition • Open & fair competition • Efficiency • Transparency • Improved quality • Efficiency • Transparency • Improved quality E-GP does not replace GP. It is a tool that can improve and reform GP. The challenge is successful e-GP implementation, as it addresses far more than just HW & SW. May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 12 Agenda May 18, 2006 1. Opportunities 2. Challenges 3. Lessons Learned Workshop on Implementing e-GP 13 e-GP Implementation Understanding Understanding Techno-Technology logy Standards Standards May 18, 2006 ManageManagement ment e-GP Infrastructure Infra- Policy Policy LegisLegislation lation Buyer & Supplier Activation structure Workshop on Implementing e-GP Buyer & Supplier Activation 14 Successful e-GP Adoption Understanding Management Policy • Think Big, Start Small • Learn from Others • Assess the Current Situation Technology e-GP Legislation • Develop a Strategy • Implement the Strategy Standards May 18, 2006 Infrastructure Buyer & Supplier Activation Workshop on Implementing e-GP 15 Agenda May 18, 2006 1. Opportunities 2. Challenges 3. Lessons Learned Workshop on Implementing e-GP 16 Lessons Learned: Dos (I) • Have a vision and strategy • Get a Champion on high political level • Get stakeholder buy-in • Develop appropriate legal framework • Establish a Lead Agency • Run an awareness raising campaign • Build capacity May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 17 Lessons Learned: Dos (II) • Review procurement regulation and processes • Follow international standards • Phased implementation • Select a sustainable business model • Integration (link with other systems) • Strengthen international dialogue May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 18 Lessons Learned: Don’ts • There is no reason to wait! • E-GP is far more than technology! • E-GP does not solve all public procurement issues! • Decentralized public procurement does not require decentralized e-GP systems • Don’t mix digital with electronic signature! • Don’t forget the private sector! • Don’t set unnecessary barriers to the use of e-GP! May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 19 For More Information www.mdb-egp.org May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 20 Thank You! [email protected] May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 21 Back-up slides May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 22 Time Savings Activity Paper-based Web-based 500 A4 pages mailed to 9 suppliers 4.500 pages 1.4 Mb disk space Preparation of tender 12 hours 0.5 hour Data capturing – 10 fields per record at avg. 5 characters per field at 0.5 second per character for 2.000 items and 9 suppliers 125 hours 1 hour Evaluation and what-if scenarios on 18.000 records 40 hours 1 hour Contract preparation and other documents 8 hours 0.5 hour Total 185 hours 3 hours Source: Intenda Ltd., Pretoria, South Africa, 2003 May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 23 Fighting Corruption with e-GP (I) Reducing fraud and corruption in public procurement: • online disclosure of procurement notices • online disclosure of awarded contracts • open and fair competition • increased compliance with procurement policy • less opportunity for corruptive, collusive, fraudulent, and coercive practices Potential for fraud and corruption: • inappropriate application of technology • e-Corruption May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 24 Fighting Corruption with e-GP (II) E-Procurement can reduce opportunity of fraud and corruption in the context of government procurement if • driven by political will • implemented appropriately. High level of transparency can be achieved at low costs and no need of major changes of the existing legal framework. May 18, 2006 Workshop on Implementing e-GP 25