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Preventing Fraud and Corruption in Public Procurement in Croatia: issues and future developments Renata Šeperić Petak 5/14/2014, Zagreb.

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Presentation on theme: "Preventing Fraud and Corruption in Public Procurement in Croatia: issues and future developments Renata Šeperić Petak 5/14/2014, Zagreb."— Presentation transcript:

1 Preventing Fraud and Corruption in Public Procurement in Croatia: issues and future developments Renata Šeperić Petak 5/14/2014, Zagreb

2 Summary... The EU Structural and Cohesion Funds contribute substantially to public procurement The violation of the public procurement rules remains one of the main sources of irregularities and fraud in projects co-financed by Structural Funds Enforcement of rules of fair competition and award of contract to the best qualified bidder is still insufficient The knowledge of public procurement rules, acquaintance with relevant procedures as well as awareness of the potential violation risks and know-how in handling with irregularities are indispensable for all experts involved in management and control of EU Funds With European funding involved, all EU funds managing bodies have to monitor and audit the procurement procedures for EU funded projects and to ensure their compliance with the national and European regulation e-Procurement Implementation- significant positive effects in reducing opportunities for corruption and increasing the possibility of transparency

3 Public procurement contracts (using e-Procurement (https://eojn.nn.hr/Oglasnik/)) Year 20122013. January-June BTC - Below threshold contracts OTP – over threshold procurements Source: javnanabava.hr

4 Estimated value Type of contract TotalNumber/Total % Value/Total % Number%Value% BTCworks 4.679,0025,03 6.661.498.13449,0017,7820,03 goods 8.658,0046,31 5.646.482.56541,5332,9016,98 services 5.358,0028,66 1.286.855.9579,4720,363,87 BTC - Total 18.695,00100,00 13.594.836.656100,0071,0440,89 works 662,008,69 4.661.631.47823,722,5214,02 OTPgoods 5.086,0066,73 8.628.911.94043,9019,3325,95 services 1.874,0024,59 6.364.949.93732,387,1219,14 OTP - Total 7.622,00100,00 19.655.493.355100,0028,9659,11 BTC+OTP 26.317,00100,00 33.250.330.011100,00 Year 2012 2013. January-June Estimated value Total Number%Value% BTC 8.071,0081,72 4.642.547.35340,46 OTP 1.806,0018,28 6.832.126.36759,54 BTC+OTP 9.877,00100,00 11.474.673.720100,00 Source: javnanabava.hr

5 EU funds advance good government EU funds can considerably increase corruption risks at least two ways: One of the most important remaining post-accession levers of Brussels for disciplining new member states is EU funds and the threat of withdrawing them which should, in principle, motivate recipient countries to manage funds well The disbursement of EU funds is more heavily regulated, making, in principle, corruption more costly Motivations and constraints of corruption are different for EU Structural and Cohesion Funds because monitoring may be more intense and thorough, and because national accountability mechanisms may work in a different way when funding comes from outside ▫first, by making a large amount of additional public resources available for rent extraction in public procurement; ▫ second, by failing to implement sufficient controls of corruption counter-balancing additional resources for corruption or

6 The common risks regarding implementation of EU Funds: ▫Public sector officials and others are required to fill many different roles (often simultaneously) that might lead to conflict of interests ▫No deep traditions of ministerial co-operation, leading the inter- institutional working groups and building ownership ▫Rather complicated legislation and instructions ▫Weak national strategic framework for the EU SF programming ▫Limited time and human resources to concentrate on prevention of fraud and corruption (instead of controlling and discovering fraud) ▫High labour turnover and thus less institutionalized knowledge ▫Often inadequate communication of public information ▫Typical mistakes / fraud cases in public vs private sector are different ▫Bankruptcy or liquidation of final recipients ▫Failure to maintain proper documentation

7 Pre-tender stagePost-tender stage Corruption risks in this stage of the process are particularly linked to:  the approval of unnecessary, under- or overestimated, low-quality or overly luxurious purchases;  purchases that are not truly needed in the near future;  or goods that would be delivered only once they are no longer required. The entire decision-making process should be documented and transparent, e.g., by organizing consultations with the private sector or by making feasibility studies available. In practice, corruption risks in the procurement cycle are particularly high once the contract has been awarded. Contract specifications or the scope of work are often altered after contract conclusion, and contractors all too often do not perform according to their contractual obligations. Due to an understanding between the contractor and a corrupt public official, deviations from what has been agreed to between the parties, such as poor quality or defective performance, may not result in any negative consequences.

8 Example Prices of standardised units ▫If from prices of products, services or works typically procured with the support of EU Funds, prices per unit can be deducted, and these unit prices differ between procurements of the same authority, between procuring authorities or between regions or Member States, and no other explanation can be found for these price differences, than an explanation might be corruption

9 Recommendations: Civil society procurement monitoring Independent audits and evaluations performed according to EU-wide audit and evaluation standards Optimal transparency in the entire public procurement process e-Procurement platform that contain a model designed for the detection of corruption The administrative data on tenders, bidders, projects and contractors are collected and stored in a structured way, available for controls, investigations and analyses Publishing a number of irregular or unacceptable tenders A structured market analysis and sharing of market intelligence Proper screening of contractors and beneficiaries, especially their ultimate beneficiary owners Corruption risk management that not only focuses on the contractors, but also on subcontractors and others involved in the proper execution of the contract Specialised, well-trained public procurement staff who share their expertise and market intelligence across Member States’ borders Pre-employment screening and periodical in-employment screening of all involved in public procurement: public officials as well as temporary staff and external parties hired to facilitate public procurement Refocusing the monitoring and control mechanisms from procedural adequacy to effective competition and subtle bid rigging

10 Thank you for your attention!


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