Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report

Public procurement legislation in Turkey has not kept pace with the sweeping reforms undertaken in the national procurement systems of many other countries during the same period nor with the development of internationally recognized bodies of proc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Country Procurement Assessment (CPAR)
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/3348322/turkey-country-procurement-assessment-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14326
id okr-10986-14326
recordtype oai_dc
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTABILITY
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
ANTI-CORRUPTION
ANTI-CORRUPTION STRATEGY
AUTHORIZATION
BANKING LAW
BRIBERY
BUDGET LAW
BUDGETARY ALLOCATION
BUDGETARY RESOURCES
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
CIVIL LAW
CIVIL SERVANTS
COMPETITIVE BIDDING
CONSTITUTION
COUNCIL OF MINISTERS
CRIMINAL LAW
CUSTOMS
DECENTRALIZATION
DECREE
DECREES
DISCRETION
ENACTMENT
EXECUTION
FISCAL
FISCAL CONTROL
FRAUD
GOVERNMENT LEVEL
INFORMAL PROCEDURES
INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW
LAWS
LEGISLATION
LEGISLATIVE DEVELOPMENT
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
LEGISLATIVE POWER
LEGISLATIVE REFORM
LOCAL ADMINISTRATIONS
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
NATIONS
PRIORITIES
PROCUREMENT LAWS
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC WORKS
RAILWAYS
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
REPRESENTATIVES
SANCTIONS
SOLICITATION
STATE PLANNING
TRANSPARENCY PROCUREMENT LAWS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES
PROCUREMENT PRACTICES
CORRUPTION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
RISK ASSESSMENT
COMMERCIAL LAW
BIDDING PROCEDURES
STANDARD BIDDING DOCUMENTS
PREQUALIFICATION
BID SECURITY
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LAW
LEGISLATIVE REFORM
LIMITED INTERNATIONAL BIDDING
UNCITRAL
PROCUREMENT GUIDELINES
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY
spellingShingle ACCOUNTABILITY
ADMINISTRATIVE LAW
ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS
ANTI-CORRUPTION
ANTI-CORRUPTION STRATEGY
AUTHORIZATION
BANKING LAW
BRIBERY
BUDGET LAW
BUDGETARY ALLOCATION
BUDGETARY RESOURCES
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
CIVIL LAW
CIVIL SERVANTS
COMPETITIVE BIDDING
CONSTITUTION
COUNCIL OF MINISTERS
CRIMINAL LAW
CUSTOMS
DECENTRALIZATION
DECREE
DECREES
DISCRETION
ENACTMENT
EXECUTION
FISCAL
FISCAL CONTROL
FRAUD
GOVERNMENT LEVEL
INFORMAL PROCEDURES
INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION
INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW
LAWS
LEGISLATION
LEGISLATIVE DEVELOPMENT
LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK
LEGISLATIVE POWER
LEGISLATIVE REFORM
LOCAL ADMINISTRATIONS
MINISTRY OF FINANCE
NATIONS
PRIORITIES
PROCUREMENT LAWS
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PUBLIC SECTOR
PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC WORKS
RAILWAYS
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
REPRESENTATIVES
SANCTIONS
SOLICITATION
STATE PLANNING
TRANSPARENCY PROCUREMENT LAWS
LEGAL FRAMEWORK
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
EUROPEAN COMMISSION
PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES
PROCUREMENT PRACTICES
CORRUPTION
PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
RISK ASSESSMENT
COMMERCIAL LAW
BIDDING PROCEDURES
STANDARD BIDDING DOCUMENTS
PREQUALIFICATION
BID SECURITY
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LAW
LEGISLATIVE REFORM
LIMITED INTERNATIONAL BIDDING
UNCITRAL
PROCUREMENT GUIDELINES
POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY
World Bank
Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Turkey
description Public procurement legislation in Turkey has not kept pace with the sweeping reforms undertaken in the national procurement systems of many other countries during the same period nor with the development of internationally recognized bodies of procurement legislation, such as those of United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), the European Union (EU) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). Following Turkey's acceptance, in December 1999, as a candidate country for accession to the EU, the Government has committed itself to achieving approximation and, eventually, alignment with EU law in many areas, including public procurement. To that end, the MOF and MPWS have already begun the process of drafting a new public procurement law, a draft of which has already been promulgated within Government and on which both the World Bank and the European Commission have offered their comments. Clearly, it is essential that this new draft law should not only make up the ground lost in the 17 years since the GPL was last amended but also bring the Turkish law up to date with recognized models of best practice and achieve an appropriate degree of approximation with the EU Directives. However, it is unlikely that approximation, let alone full alignment, can be achieved with a single reform of the law. Rather, it is recommended that the Government should aim to develop a new public procurement law which meets the standards of transparency, accountability and competitiveness set by the UNCITRAL Model Law but which also balances the need to prepare a path towards increasing harmonization with the EU Procurement Directives. This report also recommends that: 1) The Government should make it a top priority to draft a new national public procurement law and submit it to the Turkish Grand National Assembly by October 2001. This new law should meet the standards of transparency, accountability and competitiveness enshrined in the UNCITRAL Model Law. The new draft law should be developed with appropriate input from Turkey's key development partners, primarily the World Bank and the European Union, and should be discussed and agreed with them. The new law should also be underpinned by detailed implementing regulations, to be developed and issued shortly after the enactment of the new law. 2) The scope of the law should cover all public procurement for which budgetary resources (such as the general and annexed budgets) and extra-budgetary resources are used, including the non-commercialized stat economic enterprises. 3) In drafting and enacting the new public procurement law, the Government should ensure an adequate level of consultation with both the public and private sectors. To achieve this, an inter-ministerial Drafting Committee should be entrusted with responsibility for drafting the new public procurement law and should be supported by specialist international procurement law experts. 4) To complement these measures, the Government should put in train a planned and progressive program of legislative reform in order to move Turkey's public procurement legislation, over the medium term, to alignment with the EU Procurement Directives by the time Turkey accedes to the European Union.
format Economic & Sector Work :: Country Procurement Assessment (CPAR)
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
title_short Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
title_full Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
title_fullStr Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
title_full_unstemmed Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report
title_sort turkey : country procurement assessment report
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/3348322/turkey-country-procurement-assessment-report
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14326
_version_ 1764427200883326976
spelling okr-10986-143262021-04-23T14:03:15Z Turkey : Country Procurement Assessment Report World Bank ACCOUNTABILITY ADMINISTRATIVE LAW ADMINISTRATIVE REGULATIONS ANTI-CORRUPTION ANTI-CORRUPTION STRATEGY AUTHORIZATION BANKING LAW BRIBERY BUDGET LAW BUDGETARY ALLOCATION BUDGETARY RESOURCES CENTRAL GOVERNMENT CIVIL LAW CIVIL SERVANTS COMPETITIVE BIDDING CONSTITUTION COUNCIL OF MINISTERS CRIMINAL LAW CUSTOMS DECENTRALIZATION DECREE DECREES DISCRETION ENACTMENT EXECUTION FISCAL FISCAL CONTROL FRAUD GOVERNMENT LEVEL INFORMAL PROCEDURES INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION INTERNATIONAL TRADE LAW LAWS LEGISLATION LEGISLATIVE DEVELOPMENT LEGISLATIVE FRAMEWORK LEGISLATIVE POWER LEGISLATIVE REFORM LOCAL ADMINISTRATIONS MINISTRY OF FINANCE NATIONS PRIORITIES PROCUREMENT LAWS PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC MANAGEMENT PUBLIC OFFICIALS PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR MANAGEMENT PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS RAILWAYS REGULATORY FRAMEWORK REPRESENTATIVES SANCTIONS SOLICITATION STATE PLANNING TRANSPARENCY PROCUREMENT LAWS LEGAL FRAMEWORK REGULATORY FRAMEWORK EUROPEAN COMMISSION PROCUREMENT PROCEDURES PROCUREMENT PRACTICES CORRUPTION PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION RISK ASSESSMENT COMMERCIAL LAW BIDDING PROCEDURES STANDARD BIDDING DOCUMENTS PREQUALIFICATION BID SECURITY PUBLIC PROCUREMENT LAW LEGISLATIVE REFORM LIMITED INTERNATIONAL BIDDING UNCITRAL PROCUREMENT GUIDELINES POLITICAL ACCOUNTABILITY Public procurement legislation in Turkey has not kept pace with the sweeping reforms undertaken in the national procurement systems of many other countries during the same period nor with the development of internationally recognized bodies of procurement legislation, such as those of United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), the European Union (EU) and the World Trade Organization (WTO). Following Turkey's acceptance, in December 1999, as a candidate country for accession to the EU, the Government has committed itself to achieving approximation and, eventually, alignment with EU law in many areas, including public procurement. To that end, the MOF and MPWS have already begun the process of drafting a new public procurement law, a draft of which has already been promulgated within Government and on which both the World Bank and the European Commission have offered their comments. Clearly, it is essential that this new draft law should not only make up the ground lost in the 17 years since the GPL was last amended but also bring the Turkish law up to date with recognized models of best practice and achieve an appropriate degree of approximation with the EU Directives. However, it is unlikely that approximation, let alone full alignment, can be achieved with a single reform of the law. Rather, it is recommended that the Government should aim to develop a new public procurement law which meets the standards of transparency, accountability and competitiveness set by the UNCITRAL Model Law but which also balances the need to prepare a path towards increasing harmonization with the EU Procurement Directives. This report also recommends that: 1) The Government should make it a top priority to draft a new national public procurement law and submit it to the Turkish Grand National Assembly by October 2001. This new law should meet the standards of transparency, accountability and competitiveness enshrined in the UNCITRAL Model Law. The new draft law should be developed with appropriate input from Turkey's key development partners, primarily the World Bank and the European Union, and should be discussed and agreed with them. The new law should also be underpinned by detailed implementing regulations, to be developed and issued shortly after the enactment of the new law. 2) The scope of the law should cover all public procurement for which budgetary resources (such as the general and annexed budgets) and extra-budgetary resources are used, including the non-commercialized stat economic enterprises. 3) In drafting and enacting the new public procurement law, the Government should ensure an adequate level of consultation with both the public and private sectors. To achieve this, an inter-ministerial Drafting Committee should be entrusted with responsibility for drafting the new public procurement law and should be supported by specialist international procurement law experts. 4) To complement these measures, the Government should put in train a planned and progressive program of legislative reform in order to move Turkey's public procurement legislation, over the medium term, to alignment with the EU Procurement Directives by the time Turkey accedes to the European Union. 2013-07-01T19:57:55Z 2013-07-01T19:57:55Z 2001-06 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/06/3348322/turkey-country-procurement-assessment-report http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14326 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Country Procurement Assessment (CPAR) Economic & Sector Work Europe and Central Asia Turkey