Description
Public procurement is central to good public financial management and public resources allocation. It´s importance is derived from its role as the vehicle by which typically over 40% of the budget implementation is managed and which can be as high as 70%. It is the means by which a country´s policy objectives are implemented. The effectiveness and efficiency of public procurement in implementing policy through the purchase of the right outputs and their delivery is affected by a number of factors including clear and unambiguous laws and regulations, effective institutional arrangements including the use of administrative complaints boards, effective controls, a professional cadre, document and records management, transparency and accountability. It is also affected by how well the market functions; the linkages with budget preparation and budget release management managed through the application of procurement plans.
The principal approach to bringing into balance competition, effective procurement control, administrative burden, cost, appropriate authorization and procedural delay is through the appropriate use of procurement methods. The default method is the open tender method; all other methods requiring justification. The professional development workshop will provide participants with an overview of the legal and regulatory framework; decentralised public procurement institutional arrangements; the development and uses of procurement plans; clear concepts and a simple tool to classify and apply specific procurement methods; inventory and warehouse management. It will review different types of contracts and how they are applied. These will include lump sum contract unit price contracts, framework contracts, percentage based contracts, and cost reimbursable contracts. The course covers the assessment of public procurement using the OECD National Procurement Assessment Tool.
It will also provide participants with an overview of contract administration and pay attention to the application of contract variations. The workshop delineates the linkages between public procurement and other public finance management functions. In particular, it will build on the internal controls and the external audit functions. Further areas covered in the course include the assessment of public procurement, public disposal, opportunities for corruption, design competitions and public private partnerships.
This professional development workshop brings to participants an understanding of what the requirements are for achieving a high performance sound public procurement system. The course will permit government officials responsible for public procurement to better appreciate how other parts of public finance management performance impact upon the performance of public finance management, and in turn how public procurement impacts upon public finance management performance. It shall help the participants develop a framework to analyse how procurement is done in their country, what are the relevant issues hindering its efficiency and effectiveness and how to support a procurement reform effort.
Fundamental to idilmat’s approach, is the use of simple tools and analytical frameworks for assessing the quality of public procurement and the risks. Case studies and group work exercises are employed to allow participants to gain a practical handle on how to use their newly acquired knowledge for effective oversight. This in turn shall enable participants understand the centrality of procurement in Public Finance Management and how a systemic approach to reforming procurement can help curb corrupt practices. The professional workshop will cover the linkages to contract selection and management. Audit tools for controlling and assessing performance will be presented and tested.