Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities

An efficient public procurement system in a country is essential for effectual public investment and economic growth. However, in developing countries like Bangladesh, public procurement is plagued with various inefficient practices. An ongoing project that started in 2008 aims to reform public proc...

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主要作者: Abdallah, Wahid
格式: Working Paper
语言:en_US
出版: BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD) 2022
主题:
在线阅读:http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15895
id 10361-15895
record_format dspace
spelling 10361-158952022-01-13T21:01:28Z Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities Abdallah, Wahid Bangladesh Economic growth Electronic procurement Government Public procurement An efficient public procurement system in a country is essential for effectual public investment and economic growth. However, in developing countries like Bangladesh, public procurement is plagued with various inefficient practices. An ongoing project that started in 2008 aims to reform public procurement in Bangladesh. By 2011, four Bangladeshi agencies had implemented electronic procurement, representing about 10% of all public procurement. If anyone can easily bid on a government contract from their office or even own home, and if everyone feels that the process will be fair, more companies are likely to bid. More bids for a given project increases competition, leading to lower prices tendered to the government. The research analyzes data from the Local Government Engineering Department (LGED), which implemented e-GP in 2011. LGED first introduced e-GP as a very small pilot in 2012. After great expansion, about 95% of LGED procurement uses e-GP today. This paper attempts to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of this e-GP initiative. The paper found multiple benefits of e-GP. Firstly, since participation is online, any registered user with internet can apply. Also, as bidders can participate from home or office removing the necessity to visit the procuring entity’s office, the collusive elite-bidder groups cannot block non-collusive bidders anymore from participating in the bidding process, resulting in greater competition and thus lower prices for publicly procured goods, works, and services. The benefit of e-GP stems from the removal of artificial market distortions. On the other hand, there will be operational and maintenance costs as well as that of training the public officials who will run it. Hence, this cost estimation will be based on project documents and discussions with relevant officials. 2022-01-13T04:44:40Z 2022-01-13T04:44:40Z 2016 2016 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15895 en_US https://bigd.bracu.ac.bd/publications/electronic-public-procurement-in-bangladesh-bangladesh-priorities/ application/pdf BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD)
institution Brac University
collection Institutional Repository
language en_US
topic Bangladesh
Economic growth
Electronic procurement
Government
Public procurement
spellingShingle Bangladesh
Economic growth
Electronic procurement
Government
Public procurement
Abdallah, Wahid
Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
description An efficient public procurement system in a country is essential for effectual public investment and economic growth. However, in developing countries like Bangladesh, public procurement is plagued with various inefficient practices. An ongoing project that started in 2008 aims to reform public procurement in Bangladesh. By 2011, four Bangladeshi agencies had implemented electronic procurement, representing about 10% of all public procurement. If anyone can easily bid on a government contract from their office or even own home, and if everyone feels that the process will be fair, more companies are likely to bid. More bids for a given project increases competition, leading to lower prices tendered to the government. The research analyzes data from the Local Government Engineering Department (LGED), which implemented e-GP in 2011. LGED first introduced e-GP as a very small pilot in 2012. After great expansion, about 95% of LGED procurement uses e-GP today. This paper attempts to conduct a cost-benefit analysis of this e-GP initiative. The paper found multiple benefits of e-GP. Firstly, since participation is online, any registered user with internet can apply. Also, as bidders can participate from home or office removing the necessity to visit the procuring entity’s office, the collusive elite-bidder groups cannot block non-collusive bidders anymore from participating in the bidding process, resulting in greater competition and thus lower prices for publicly procured goods, works, and services. The benefit of e-GP stems from the removal of artificial market distortions. On the other hand, there will be operational and maintenance costs as well as that of training the public officials who will run it. Hence, this cost estimation will be based on project documents and discussions with relevant officials.
format Working Paper
author Abdallah, Wahid
author_facet Abdallah, Wahid
author_sort Abdallah, Wahid
title Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
title_short Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
title_full Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
title_fullStr Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
title_full_unstemmed Electronic public procurement in Bangladesh: Bangladesh priorities
title_sort electronic public procurement in bangladesh: bangladesh priorities
publisher BRAC Institute of Governance and Development (BIGD)
publishDate 2022
url http://hdl.handle.net/10361/15895
work_keys_str_mv AT abdallahwahid electronicpublicprocurementinbangladeshbangladeshpriorities
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