Slovakia : Country Procurement Assessment Report
This update of the 1995 CPAR is based on the September 1999 PPA and the findings of the Bank CPAR mission to Slovakia in November 1999. The 1999 Public Procurement Act (PPA) is an improvement upon the previous PPAs in some respects, including the...
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Format: | Country Procurement Assessment (CPAR) |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/11/3348267/slovakia-country-procurement-assessment-report http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14538 |
Summary: | This update of the 1995 CPAR is based
on the September 1999 PPA and the findings of the Bank CPAR
mission to Slovakia in November 1999. The 1999 Public
Procurement Act (PPA) is an improvement upon the previous
PPAs in some respects, including the creation of an OPP,
more detailed and clear procurement procedures,
accreditation of procurement professionals, introduction of
the Public Procurement Bulletin and expanded bid protest
resolution procedures. However, it is the Bank's view
that, although the procurement methods in the 1999 PPA
comply with EU Directives, some of these methods lack
transparency and may not result in efficient and competitive
procurement. The PPA provides for four procurement methods:
open tendering, restricted tendering, negotiated tendering
with prior notification; and negotiated tendering without
prior notification. While open tendering includes
transparent procedures which will lead to competitive and
economic procurement, the PPA does not include appropriate
criteria for the use of restricted tendering, such as the
availability of a limited number of suppliers, response to
natural disasters, etc. Similarly, the negotiated
procurement with prior notification method lacks
transparency and gives excessive discretion to the
contracting authority. In order to improve the transparency
of the negotiated procurement with prior notification
method, it is recommended that the conditions for its use
should be brought more into line with those contained in the
European Union Supplies Directive and that, where such
conditions of use are not met, Open or Restricted Tendering
should be employed. The Bank also recommends strongly, as it
did in the past, the inclusion in the PPA of separate
provisions relating to procurement of consultants'
services in future amendments to the PPA. Other
recommendations include improving procurement planning by
providing information about budgetary allocations early in
the budgetary cycle; establishing contracting authorities of
a permanent procurement committee responsible for decision
making and for providing oversight; introducing a formal
code of ethics for government employees to improve their
accountability in procurement; continuous training of the
staff of contracting authorities in procurement; updating of
the procurement guidelines and standard bidding documents;
collecting and disseminating best procurement practices to
contracting authorities; maintaining dialogue with the
private sector to keep suppliers, contractors and
consultants informed of the requirements of the PPA and of
improvements in the procurement system. |
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