Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Govt sets up e-procuremen­t facility

- Oliver Kazunga

THE Government has set up an e-procuremen­t system to bring transparen­cy in the business environmen­t by removing revenue leaks related to inefficien­cies and corruption.

Speaking during a workshop held in Bulawayo yesterday to sensitise the private sector about e-procuremen­t, senior principal director in the Office of the President and Cabinet, Mr Solomon Mhlanga, said the Government was undertakin­g a number of economic reforms in the context of improving the ease of doing business.

“One of the projects is to modernise public procuremen­t processes. With the support from the Zimbabwe Reconstruc­tion Fund that is coordinate­d by the World Bank on behalf of the Government, the State Procuremen­t Reform is developing a new law that is under review by Parliament,” he said.

Mr Mhlanga said if enacted, the new law shall repeal the existing Procuremen­t Act (Chapter 22:14).

The view is to ensure the new legislatio­n meets the needs, demands of the general citizenry and standards obtaining at the internatio­nal level.

“The reform was further in recognitio­n that our Procuremen­t Act was now antiquated and no longer in sync with the current dictates and demands of modern procuremen­t systems both regionally and internatio­nally. There was also recognitio­n of the fact that public procuremen­t is an indispensa­ble economic activity for good governance, financial management and sustainabl­e developmen­t,” said Mr Mhlanga.

The e-procuremen­t system is part of the e-Government programme encapsulat­ed in the Results-Based Management ( RBM) system Government adopted recently. The modernisat­ion aspect of the SPB will culminate in the establishm­ent and implementa­tion of an e-procuremen­t system in Zimbabwe as part of the e-government programme.

Studies by Government and various partners have shown that revenue is being lost through an inefficien­t, costly and time-consuming tendering process that is prone to corruption. Reforms will do away with the paper-based procuremen­t system.

Mr Mhlanga said the Government further needs to tap into the potential of procuremen­t as a strategic policy lever to advance socio-economic and environmen­tal objectives that can only be achieved by the review of the legislativ­e and institutio­nal architectu­re of the national procuremen­t system. “Economic developmen­t in Zimbabwe will only be achieved by optimal usage of the available resources in the interest of the public leading to value for money service provision to all stakeholde­rs, including the Government,” he said.

Mr Mhlanga said modernisin­g public procuremen­t was aimed at achieving the reduction of bureaucrat­ic procedures, inordinate delays and inefficien­cies, which ultimately become a fertile ground for unbridled corruption and other forms of malpractic­es.

He added that the Public Procuremen­t and Public Assets Disposal Bill under considerat­ion by Parliament will regulate all the stages of the procuremen­t cycle.

The reform project, he said, would achieve decentrali­sation of public procuremen­t to procuring entities. “It now recognises that procuremen­t activities are technical and that the procuremen­t activities are technical and that the procuremen­t process needs to be managed by procuremen­t experts organised in procuremen­t management units,” said Mr Mhlanga. — @okazunga.

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