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Overview

This focus area involves government commerce – what governments are buying and selling, leasing or renting, digital transformation centred on the principles of Open Government as well as the EBRD's related collaboration with the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and the United Nations Commission for International Trade Law (UNCITRAL).

Towards smart, sustainable and inclusive digital Government-to-Business (G2B) markets

Public contracts are behind major and expensive public projects (in areas such as infrastructure, education and health care), which deliver essential everyday services to the public and make a vital contribution to national economic development. Governments wield significant purchasing power, and G2B transactions have a weighty impact on the economic performance of domestic markets and the quality of life for citizens, in particular in transition economies where the EBRD operates. At the same time, government contracts remain a number-one corruption risk, and waste and inefficiencies are rife. Many governments do not know where in the globalised world their public funds end up.

A main objective of the EBRD’s Legal Transition Programme (LTP) is to support legal reforms behind digital transformation of government purchasing and selling, to ensure that government commerce laws in the Bank’s regions are modern, fit-to-market and meeting the needs of digital economy.

Policy and regulation

The challenge for governments in regulating public procurement and sale of public assets is to develop legal regimes that prioritise environmental sustainability and balance economic efficiency with the need for a high level of transparency with public contracts. All stakeholders – government departments and other public bodies, the business community and citizens – need to be aware of the fundamental principles of transparency, open market access for business big and small, domestic and international, and fair competition, as these play an important role in ensuring that state budget funds are well spent and public assets are sold to commercial buyers at market prices. Government commerce laws call for regulatory frameworks encouraging high levels of transparency and accountability in public sector. Modern policy recognises that public procurement and public sale laws may become a stimulus for market development and contribute to sustainable transformation of local economies.

The business of government

The fit-to-market and efficiency of public procurement and sale of public assets have a strategic impact on public services, quality of life of citizens and economic development in the EBRD countries of operations. The focus on sustainability in government purchasing and selling, in particular prioritising environmental protection, as well as social and economic development, has a potential to change domestic market practices and with it create new directions for international trade and contribute to environmental conservation efforts.

The EBRD is advocating for laws for public procurement and public sale based on fair competition, without trade barriers but with business-friendly online digital transactions to encourage wide business participation. At the LTP we aim to identify global best practices for improving market access for public procurement and public sales and business-to-government opportunities for domestic and international trade, as well as small and large business.

Technological challenge

Digital transformation of public sector procurement and sale processes is essential for the modern digital economy. In complete end-to-end digital procurement and sale, ICT system business-to-government transactions can be initiated and completed online, with real-time data-driven super transparent monitoring and auditing enabled, and bureaucracy and formalities limited to fundamentals. Designing modern policies and implementing digital reforms in tandem requires a collaborative and frequently multi-disciplinary approach. Tools and methodologies for automated compliance, monitoring and enforcement are key to data-driven policy enforcement and public sector performance monitoring. In addition to increased transparency and transaction efficiency, these offer quick and efficient feedback loops to enable refinement of legislation and regulations, tools and control mechanisms and, as a result, further innovations.

The LTP’s experience has confirmed that digital transformation reforms are more successful when policymakers, lawyers and data scientists work together in legal sandboxes and digital government tools are centred on open data as means for the interoperability of digital government and built upon Open Data standards to promote Open Government and effectively engage market stakeholders including civil society organisations in dialogue with public authorities.

The LTP therefore aims to create a lab zone within technical cooperation projects where legal expertise, innovative economic thinking, data enthusiasm and Open Government values can mix freely, and that works with champion governments in the transition economies on developing and piloting new data-driven and results-based policies.

Legal sandbox pilot projects explore best regulatory options for automation of compliance and policy enforcement for government commerce and prototype digital data solutions to analyse lessons learned from pilot experience in order to develop new regulatory standards for automated compliance enforcement and data-driven policy enforcement and performance monitoring for public procurement and and sale of public assets.

In the spirit of this collaboration, the LTP operates an open-sourced wiki for digital government commerce tools at GitHub (EBRD Digital Transformation), wherein EBRD digital transformation know-how products can be shared publicly and widely; regulatory and digitalisation knowledge developed for specific reform projects can be accessed online and is open for re-use.

Working in Partnerships

EBRD UNCITRAL Public Procurement Initiative. The LTP and the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL) have been working together since 2011 under the EBRD UNCITRAL Public Procurement Initiative to promote modern public procurement legislation, initially in the CIS countries and presently across the EBRD region.

We work together with UNCITRAL to contribute to development of modern global legal standards for public procurement and public sales, in particular international best-practice-based legal instruments promoting policy innovation for better regulation of government commerce (Model Law on Public Procurement, Model Law on e-Commerce).

Clearly identified regulatory gaps (UNCITRAL diagnostic) help to unlock reforms with clear priorities to build (i) competitive, (ii) well-governed, (iii) transparent public procurement markets with (iv) offering greater value for money and lower corruption risks to (v) a wide group of market operators, including in the SME segment and women-owned businesses.

In particular, we focus on identifying global best practices for improving market access and creating business-to-government opportunities for SMEs and introducing small business friendly legal instruments (electronic reverse auctions, e-catalogues and framework agreements) to increase the capacity and SME participation in public tenders.

EBRD GPA Technical Cooperation Facility. Since 2014, the LTP has assisted multiple countries pursuing accession to the World Trade Organisation’s 1994 Government Procurement Agreement (GPA). The EBRD GPA Technical Cooperation Facility has provided the framework for structured cooperation with the WTO GPA Secretariat and effective collaboration with the governments in the EBRD region that are interested in or committed to accession to the GPA.

EBRD Open Government Lab. The LTP worked closely with Transparency International in Ukraine on implementation of the e-procurement system ProZorro intended to increase transparency and reduce corruption in public procurement. Learning from ProZorro global success, the LTP sought further cooperation with Transparency International and Open Contracting Partnership to explore the emerging open source technology and develop the OCDS open data standard to suit other jurisdictions globally.

Most recently, the LTP integrated its regulatory standard-setting work with UNCITRAL with Open Government advocacy and works together with Transparency International Ukraine and Open Contracting Partnership on a concept of Open Data Digital Procurement, an all-digital, end-to-end procurement system that is able to exchange open data in real time, building on emerging open source technologies and the latest open data standards, decrease operational costs and shorten the implementation time for governments by operating a network with private e-commerce platforms.

Public procurement assessments

Since 2010 the LTP has conducted three regional sector assessments that seek to evaluate the quality of national laws and practice and track the progress of public procurement reforms in the EBRD’s countries of operations.

2010 EBRD Regional Public Procurement Sector Assessment

The first EBRD regional public procurement sector assessment was conducted in 2010. This reviewed national public procurement legislation and national public procurement practice in 28 of our countries of operations. The assessment evaluated the level of development of public procurement laws and identified elements of law and practice that reduce the efficiency of the public contracting process in the EBRD regions. The final results of the assessment were published in a summary assessment report (available in English and Russian) and in country profiles that also take into account the findings of the excercise.

The EBRD SEMED Public Procurement Sector Assessment (2012)

In 2012, the EBRD completed a legal assessment of public procurement laws and local procurement practice in the countries of the southern and eastern Mediterranean (SEMED) region, namely Egypt, Jordan, Morocco, and Tunisia. More information about the SEMED Public Procurement Sector Assessment can be accessed here.

The EBRD Regional Public Procurement Legislation Self-Assessment (2013)

In 2013, the EBRD worked with governments on a review of national public procurement laws. Conducted in the form of a self-assessment excercise by the regulatory authorities, this excercise provided an overview of the progress in the development of public procurement policy in the EBRD region. If you are interested in comparing assessment scores for public procurement laws in the EBRD countries, please contact: ltp@ebrd.com.

Contact us

Eliza Niewiadomska, Senior Counsel

Email:

Niewiade@ebrd.com

Yulia Shapovalova, Counsel

Email:

ShapovaY@ebrd.com

Vitalii Svitovyi, Associate

Email:

SvitovyV@ebrd.com

Related resources

Are you ready for eProcurement? EBRD Guide to Electronic Procurement Reform 2015

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Public Procurement: Is open competition good for SMEs?

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Law and Economics of Framework Agreement (Russian language)

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Handbook for Members of Procurement Review Tribunals; Key Judicial Skills and Competences: English

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Handbook for Members of Procurement Review Tribunals; Key Judicial Skills and Competences: Georgian

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Handbook for Members of Procurement Review Tribunals; Key Judicial Skills and Competences: Russian

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Handbook for Members of Procurement Review Tribunals; Key Judicial Skills and Competences: Moldovan

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Handbook for Members of Procurement Review Tribunals; Key Judicial Skills and Competences: Ukrainian

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Transition report 2010: Public procurement legal frameworks

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Law in transition online 2010: Strengthening public procurement

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Law in transition online 2013:Turning best practice into policy: public procurement reform agenda

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Law in transition Journal 2017: Public Procurement in Ukraine - a system transformed

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