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Wednesday, July 17, 2024

An evaluation framework for public procurement processes

by Karan Gulati and Anjali Sharma.

Governments require and use goods and services to operate their machinery and deliver schemes and programs to their constituents. However, self-production cannot meet this need for goods and services. As a result, governments rely on public procurement. However, India does not have an optimal public procurement system. Tenders often undergo modifications, the government incurs significant debt due to payment delays, competition is limited, and contract execution is frequently delayed. Procuring entities also tend to favour large private companies by setting eligibility criteria that exclude small and medium-sized enterprises or providing them with private information that offers a competitive advantage.

Given this experience and the limitations of existing literature, integrating international and best practices can facilitate strategic evolution and ensure that the Indian public procurement system is conducive to achieving broader objectives of efficiency and effectiveness in public resource allocation. By methodically aligning with these practices, India can foster a competitive market environment, attract better vendors, and achieve effective and sustainable procurement outcomes. Specifically, such methodological alignment can help establish an evaluation framework with clear benchmarks and indicators that enable the measurement of procurement processes across departments, identify systematic weaknesses, and explore opportunities for reform.

In a new TrustBridge Rule of Law Foundation Working Paper, we propose "An evaluation framework for public procurement processes" that recognises the government's dual role as the state and a market participant throughout the procurement life cycle and can be deployed to evaluate public procurement across sectors and procuring entities. It contributes to India's growing field of evidence-based literature and policy interventions. Based on the UNCITRAL Model Law on Public Procurement, OECD Recommendations of the Council on Public Procurement, the World Bank's Benchmarking of Procurement, FIDIC, ADB, and NEC standard contracts, and relevant literature, the evaluation framework includes the following benchmark:

  • Transparency
  • Integrity
  • Documentation
  • Capacity
  • Timeliness
  • Negotiation
  • Monitoring
  • Dispute resolution

It divides these benchmarks along two axes. The first pertains to the role of the procuring entities, either as (i) the state or (ii) a market participant. The second pertains to procurement stages: (i) pre-award to award, (ii) award to completion, and (iii) completion to payment. For instance, as the state, procuring entities must ensure transparency before awarding a tender. To evaluate transparency, the framework assesses whether procuring entities publish procurement plans, which aids in planning and reduces the need for emergency procurement. It also evaluates whether the entity conducts pre-bid consultations, which are beneficial for identifying suppliers early in the process.

To assess the effectiveness of the framework, we evaluate the procurement processes of the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI), India's largest public procuring entity, with tenders worth over 3,70,000 crore rupees (USD 44.5 billion). Its parent ministry, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, accounts for over half of India's capital expenditure on procurement. This operational experience should have endowed NHAI with expertise that reflects a spectrum of procurement processes and methodologies. Furthermore, the government's focus on infrastructure development, especially in road transport, underscores the NHAI's role as a driver of public procurement by the Indian state. Thus, evaluating NHAI can provide insights into public procurement processes in large-scale procuring entities and the efficacy of our framework.

Through this first-of-its-kind and illustrative evaluation, we identify several areas for improving India's public procurement system, thus optimising the allocation of public resources, curtailing opportunities for rent-seeking, and fortifying public trust. This includes better estimation of project timelines, improving the role of independent monitoring, and conducting performance evaluations. It also highlights that procuring entities need to enhance transparency not just in their operational processes but also in their data collection and reporting practices. These results validate the efficacy of our evaluation framework. Its comprehensive nature, encompassing a range of benchmarks, allows for a detailed evaluation of public procurement processes. Its application to NHAI demonstrates its potential to evaluate and improve procurement processes across procuring entities.

Extending this evaluation framework is essential to building on this foundational work. The task now involves evaluating other large-scale procuring entities. This endeavour is about identifying areas for improvement and understanding the patterns that define public procurement processes. The insights from this work can inform policy-making and catalyse systemic improvements, contributing to enhancing and refining the public procurement system.

References

Anirudh Burman and Pavithra Manivannan, Delays in government contracting: A tale of two metros, Leap Blog, 23 December 2022.

Anjali Sharma and Susan Thomas, The footprint of union government procurement in India, XKDR Working Paper No 10 of 2021.

Charmi Mehta and Diya Uday, How competitive is bidding in infrastructure public procurement? A study of road and water projects in five Indian states, Leap Blog, 29 March 2022.

Karan Gulati and Anjali Sharma, An evaluation framework for public procurement processes, TrustBridge Rule of Law Foundation Working Paper No 4 of 2024.

Prasanta Sahu, Forget stimulus, clear your dues: Rs 7 lakh crore unpaid dues to industry by central govt depts and PSUs, Financial Express, 8 September 2020.

Shubho Roy and Anjali Sharma, What ails public procurement: an analysis of tender modifications in the pre-award process, Leap Blog, 26 November 2020.

Yugank Goyal, How Governments Promote Monopolies: Public Procurement in India, The American Journal of Economics and Sociology, 26 November 2019.


The authors are researchers at the TrustBridge Rule of Law Foundation. We are grateful to Akshay Jaitly, Renuka Sane, Charmi Mehta, and participants at the Joint Field Workshop on Public Procurement for their valuable comments. Views are personal.

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