Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byEustace Robertson Modified over 8 years ago
1
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Dr Ama Eyo Lecturer and Public Procurement Specialist Institute for Competition and Procurement Studies, Bangor University, North Wales, United Kingdom a.eyo@bangor.ac.uk E-Government Procurement: Lessons from Implementation in Other Countries
2
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Agenda Setting the scene Imperatives for e-Government procurement Sample case studies Republic of Korea – early adopter Mauritius – recent adopter European Union – comparative positions in two Member States Kenya – first African country to implement e-Procurement to devolved administration Lessons from implementation in other countries Conclusions - implications for Nigeria
3
External pressures Regional, e.g.., EU Member States United Kingdom Portugal International pressures MDBs Kenya Rwanda Uganda Internal pressures Environmental Government policies www.bangor.ac.uk/law Imperatives for Implementation
4
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Case Study – Republic of Korea Recognized world-wide as one of the most developed government e-procurement solutions in the world. Features Centralised national portal with end to end integration for all procurement activities KONEPS Commenced in 2002 ….and still evolving Paid for by the government but developed by private sector Functionalities - e-bidding, e-contracting, online shopping mall and e-ordering, and e-payment Integrates e-Government procurement with other solution
5
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Case Study - Mauritius Commenced implementation in 2014 to improve the level of bid responsiveness from suppliers! Government owned national e-PS became operational in 2015 Contracting authorities manage and maintain contents Deployment in 3 Phases Supplier registration; and floating of tenders; e-PS enabled with other functionalities (bid evaluation, notification of award & complete MIS; and e-PS enabled to provide Framework Agreements and electronic Reverse Auction functions.
6
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Case Study – European Union Features at EU level e-Notification e-Access e-Submission e-Invoicing
7
Portugal EU e-Procurement star Centralised portal for notification Decentralised certified levels for other procurement activities including e- tendering United Kingdom Multi-layered levels of contracting authorities Fragmented e- procurement portals www.bangor.ac.uk/law Portugal v. United Kingdom
8
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Kenya (1) Imperatives Transparency, accountability and control of public funds Deployment e-Government Strategy Paper 2004; Launch of e-PS in 2014 (original date was 2007) Features Combined with Integrated Financial Management Information System (IFMIS);
9
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Kenya (2) Call for postponement due to implementation challenges Lack of supporting infrastructure; E.g., Electricity, internet coverage Recentralisation of procurement; Marginalisation of local contractors in the tendering process; and Malfunctioning of the system.
10
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 1 Governance of e-Procurement implementation Strong government leadership and commitment; Effective Lead e-Procurement Agency; and Dedicated e-Procurement Champions; and Resistance to opposing voices where they failed to offer valuable inputs!
11
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 2 Implementation strategies: Adoption of Business Process engineering; Comprehensive plan, road map and implementation strategy; and Phased deployment
12
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 3 Critical success factors Supportive Legislative framework; Technological drivers; Internet bandwidth, integration, security, supporting ICT infrastructure Infrastructure; Electricity Resource capacity; Readiness of procurement staff and suppliers, Trained staff, suppliers and other stakeholders.
13
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 4 Ensure integration of all relevant systems and involvement of all stakeholders
14
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 5 Consider E-Procurement models and infrastructure Design principles End to end integrated system v. specific functionalities Centralised portal v Decentralised portal Government owned v. Private sector owned/contracting authority licensed Off the shelf v. Develop new e-PS! Hybrids
15
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 6 Consultations
16
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Lesson 7 Supply side issues Special attention to SMEs Help desk and a 24/7 monitoring mechanism to support users and to ensure high availability of the e-PS procurement system
17
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Implications for Nigeria (1) Consider Political leadership and managerial support: Carefully designed implementation strategy; Effective E-Procurement Champions Costs and budgetary support: Financial justification Return on investment Practicability: Any legislative/regulatory reform; Technology upgrade; Infrastructural support; Resource capacity and training!
18
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Implications for Nigeria (2) Consider E-PS design and service models Centralised v. Decentralised design; Ownership Implications of deployment disparities; Address inertia and resistance to change from procurement staff and suppliers; and Utilise participatory supplier enablement and stakeholder engagement activities.
19
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Summary Preparation is key!
20
www.bangor.ac.uk/law Dr Ama Eyo Lecturer and Public Procurement Specialist Institute for Competition and Procurement Studies Bangor University, North Wales, United Kingdom a.eyo@bangor.ac.uk Thank you
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.