Hindustan Times (Noida)

Changes in public procuremen­t policy on anvil

- Neeraj Chauhan letters@hindustant­imes.com

CVC UNDERLINED THE NEED FOR A PARADIGM SHIFT AND SYSTEMIC CHANGES IN VIEW OF THE MASSIVE VOLUME OF PUBLIC PROCUREMEN­TS

NEW DELHI: The Centre is working on comprehens­ive guidelines to reform public procuremen­t in the country and avoid problems such as time and cost overruns, compromise with quality and irregulari­ties, people familiar with the developmen­t said.

The exercise was started on the recommenda­tion of the government’s anti-corruption watchdog Central Vigilance Commission (CVC), which underlined the need for a paradigm shift and systemic changes in view of the massive volume of public procuremen­ts in India.

A 20-member core committee comprising senior officers and engineers drawn from central government organisati­ons first identified the problems with public procuremen­t. Subsequent­ly, a larger group comprising heads of public sector enterprise­s, banks, railways, defence, also shared its views on the changes required in public procuremen­t policy.

“The matter has been further discussed with the Prime Minister’s Office (PMO), Niti Aayog, Comptrolle­r and Auditor General (CAG) and the state government­s, following which guide lines addressing the critical concerns in public procuremen­t are currently under considerat­ion of the government, which in turn will act as a facilitato­r for change,” said a government official, requesting anonymity.

Government officials stress that the exercise is crucial because of the size of public procuremen­t in India. To be sure, there are no definitive estimates of the total size of India’s public procuremen­t; most estimates put India’s public procuremen­t at anything between 20 to 30% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP).

The hard push to carry out systematic changes in the public procuremen­t policy has been taken after an analysis by CVC, one of the many conducted over the last decade, identified multiple concerns and challenges at various stages of procuremen­t – tendering and contractin­g, estimation of rates, contract management, legal aspects in contractin­g, etc. The CVC analysis found instances of mis-tendering, cartelizat­ion, collusive bidding, bureaucrat­ic hassles, dominance by firms through predatory pricing etc. From the vigilance point of view too, it was important to modify the procuremen­t policy so that there is no mismanagem­ent and irregulari­ties, explained a second officer, who requested anonymity.

“The idea behind this exercise is to streamline the whole procuremen­t process and have a detailed document to deal with the subject as there were small gaps,” said former Central Vigilance Commission­er Sanjay Kothari, who piloted the policy overhaul till he completed his tenure in June this year.

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