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At 2 am on Saturday morning, the day after the 10th Conference of the States Parties to the UN Convention against Corruption (UNCAC) was meant to end in Atlanta, exhausted negotiators finally adopted a resolution on “ Promoting transparency and integrity in publicprocurement in support of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development ”.
Publicprocurement should be all about people. We want to enable one billion people to live in more equitable, prosperous and sustainable communities by 2030 by improving US$2 trillion in publicprocurement spending. Our world runs on public contracts. It’s a means to an end, not an end in itself.
Government accountability, climate resilience and supporting inclusive economies remain top priorities for leaders around the globe, and stronger publicprocurement will play a critical role in delivering on them. February: The UKs new publicprocurement regime goes live.
Together with the global community, we were able to close out 2023 with a big advocacy win, with the UN’s first ever resolution on publicprocurement passed in December. In 2024, we look towards implementation of the resolution and participation at the International Anti-Corruption Conference (IACC) in Lithuania this summer.
Publicprocurement can shape our world. On 15-16 June, together with the governments of Albania, Italy and the Netherlands, we held a conference on Open and Sustainable Procurement in Europe for about 100 procurement leaders from 25 European countries. There were many, many more great examples to share.
I was invited to provide an entry on ‘publicprocurement’ for the forthcoming Elgar Encyclopedia of European Law co-edited by Andrea Biondi and Oana Stefan. things going on in procurement. PublicProcurement I. Below is my draft entry with perhaps an eclectic choice of content.
A critical finding and recommendation of the World Bank report is to strengthen the transparency and efficiency of public spending and procurement, including through open data and digital procurement reforms. But I disagree. None of this money is ever really “lost” — someone always knows exactly where it is.
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