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Ethics; Integrity; Fraud & Penalties in Public Procurement Prepared by Haron Moti

Ethics; Integrity; Fraud & Penalties in Public Procurement Prepared by Haron Moti. SESSION OBJECTIVES By the end of the session, the participant should be able to understand: T he terms ethics & integrity Manifestation of lack of integrity

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Ethics; Integrity; Fraud & Penalties in Public Procurement Prepared by Haron Moti

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  1. Ethics; Integrity; Fraud & Penalties in Public Procurement Prepared by HaronMoti

  2. SESSION OBJECTIVES By the end of the session, the participant should be able to understand: • The terms ethics & integrity • Manifestation of lack of integrity • The ways of enhancing integrity in public procurement • Provisions of the procurement law on unethical conduct • The adverse effect to the public sectors of unethical practices related to public procurement • How to map out corruption risks in the procurement cycle • Measures of eradicating unethical practices in the public sector • Rights & Obligations of the suppliers • Offences & general penalty

  3. ETHICS – MEANING • Ethics means values, practices and customs that guide the behavior of an individual • Ethics is a matter of behaving within the stated standards of the group to which one belongs. It is a code of conduct acceptable by the group • Conduct is the conscious or purposeful action directed to an end

  4. What Is Integrity? Integrity can be defined as the use of funds, resources, assets and authority, according to the intended official purposes and in line with public interest • Integrity in public procurement is a powerful tool for effective service delivery and as such it increases trust in state institutions • Government activities are viewed as most vulnerable to waste, fraud and corruption

  5. Absence of integrity is manifested through: • Corruption including bribery, ‘kickbacks’, nepotism and misuse of public office for personal interest • Product substitution in the delivery which results in lower quality materials • Conflict of interest • Collusion • Abuse and manipulation of information • Discriminatory treatment in the public procurement process • The waste and abuse of organizational resources

  6. Provisions in the Act that relate to unethical conduct • Section 30: Splitting or inflating procurement • Section 38: Inappropriate influence on evaluation and Unsolicited communications, unauthorized persons • Section 40: No person, agent or employee shall be involved in any corrupt practice in any procurement proceedings • Section 41: No fraudulent practice • Section 42: No collusion (propose a price higher than would have been acceptable, refrain from submitting, withdraw or change a tender, etc.) • Sections 43: No conflict of Interest • Sections 44: Confidentiality in procurement proceedings • Sections 135, 136 & 137: Offences

  7. Effects Of Unethical Practices • Disregard for standards and virtues of integrity • Moral decay • Loss of goodwill from the public • Slows down economic development • Withdrawals of international (Donors) support • Loss of public/stakeholders’ confidence in public procurement • May lead to escalation of corruption risks in procurement

  8. Corruption risks: Need identification & sourcing • Overstated physical requirements • Exaggerated price projections • Procurement initiated to favor previous suppliers/contractors • Specifications designed to favor a particular provider or vague specification • Inappropriate use of a tender method other than open tendering • Restricted advertising or insufficient notice • Advance release of bid documentation or relevant information to a particular supplier • Failure to provide security for bids documents received

  9. 2. Corruption risks: Suppliers and contractors • Bid Suppression: some competitors agree to refrain from bidding or withdraw a previously submitted bid • Divide the pie: Competitors agree in advance the winning bid • Complementary bidding: Bidders agree to submit bids that are either too high to be accepted or contain special terms that will not be acceptable to the buyer • Bid rotation schemes: Bidders collude to take turns being the lowest bidder

  10. 3. Corruption risks: Evaluation & awarding • Substitution of evaluation criteria • Delays in evaluation • Bid evaluation committee members not having the “technical expertise necessary” to properly evaluate bids • Substitution of evaluation members during evaluation process • Entertainment of vendor intermediaries during the procurement process

  11. Corruption risks: Evaluation & awarding (continued) • Placing orders for same goods to different suppliers- order splitting • Placing orders above tendered prices and quantities • Unjustifiably high number of contracts awarded to particular suppliers. • Award of tenders to suppliers/ contractors with pending jobs and poor completion history • Retrospective approvals e.g. ratifications

  12. 3. Corruption risks: Contract Implementation • Accept/receive less quantity or quality or type other than what was ordered • Partial delivery • Diversion of goods for personal use or resale/“sister projects” • Unjustified variation of the orders • Delay in acceptance of goods

  13. 4. Corruption risks: Payments • Payment before delivery • Payment for goods, services or works not received • Selective payment of suppliers • Full payment for partial delivery • Delayed payment • Excessive number of signatures required to approve progress of payments

  14. 5. Corruption Risks – Disposal • Disposal of items not worth disposing • Non disposal of disposable items • Disposal to favoured buyer • Disposal to staff without involving competition • Disposing item at lower than its real value • Releasing item before full payment is received

  15. Corruption prevention • Placement of procurement function at a strategic level • Evaluation/appraisal of suppliers’ and contractors’ performance • Putting procurement governance instruments in place • involvement of users in the process • Move towards e-procurement

  16. Corruption prevention (continued) • Involvement of users in preparation of Procurement Plan, Specifications, BOQs and ToRs • Consolidating contracts for similar goods • Pre-determined evaluation criteria and award • Involvement of technically competent evaluation committee members • Involvement of experts and observers during the tender award • Conduct due diligence • Establish clear payment procedures • Involvement of independent experts and monitors

  17. MEASURES TO ENHANCE ETHICS & INTEGRITY Good governance principles that may enhance integrity in public procurement include elements of transparency, good management, prevention of misconduct, as well as accountability and control Maintaining high standards of integrity in all business relationships both inside and outside the organization in which they are working Considering the interest of the organization first and seeking to carry out its policies Fostering the highest possible standards of professional competence amongst those for whom they are responsible Optimizing the use of resources for which they are responsible to provide the maximum benefit to their employing organization. This can be achieved by buying without prejudice and seeking to obtain maximum value of each shilling spent September 25, 2014 17

  18. MEASURES TO ENHANCE ETHICS & INTEGRITY (continued) Complying both to the letter and spirit of law of the country and contractual obligations Rejecting all forms of commercial bribery Being aware of ethical standards and good practice in all sectors of the economy and how ethics are relevant to the growth of business. Formulation of a transparent and clear procurement policy addressing ethical considerations and commitments Formulation of clear supplier selection principles with regards to social, ethical and environmental criteria September 25, 2014 18

  19. MEASURES TO ENHANCE ETHICS & INTEGRITY (continued) • Regularly enforcing and monitoring standards regarding gifts and entertainment • Being sure that ethical commitments are being lived up to – for example, considering ethical audits of your supply chains and including ethical practice in staff performance reviews • Recognizing the right of suppliers to make profit too • Enforcement of legislations such as: • Suppliers Practitioners Management Act, 2007; • Public Officers Ethics Act, 2003; • Economic Crimes Act, 2003; • PPDA, 2005 & PPDR, 2006

  20. Guidelines in ethical and professional conduct • Declaration of Interest: Any personal interest, which may interfere or might reasonably be deemed by others to interfere with official’s impartially in any matter relevant to his or her studies, should be declared. • Confidentiality and accuracy of information: All information received in the course of duty should not be disclosed to unauthorized persons and should never be used for personal gain. Information that one gives in the course of duty should be true and fair and never designed to mislead.

  21. Guidelines in ethical and professional conduct (contined) • Competition: Any arrangement, which might in the long term prevent the effective operation of fair competition, should be avoided • Business gifts: Should be handled as stipulated in the Public Officers’ Act- An entity may have its own policy on how gifts should be treated/handled

  22. Rights of the suppliers • To participate in public procurement fairly and get non discriminatory treatment in the tendering process-S.31(6) & 39(1) of the Act, 2005 • Right to attend tender opening session if a candidate • Right to be awarded tender if one meets requirements/lowest evaluated • To seek clarifications and get response from PE, addendum, notice of extension of tender validity-61(2), notice of termination of procuring proceedings-S.39 (2) • To get reasons why his/her bid was not successful, upon request-Reg. 66(2) of Regulations, of 2006

  23. Rights of the suppliers (continued) • To seek administrative review on PE’s decisions-ARB Review S.93(1) & Reg 73 of Regulations, 2006 which is additional to other legal remedy the person may have. S 99 • To be represented by an advocate or person of your choice in review under ARB-Reg.76 • Seek Judicial Review-S 100 • To modify or withdraw bid before deadline for submission • To get a copy of tender opening register upon request-S.60(6)

  24. Rights of the suppliers (continued) • To be notified of the tender outcome-section 67 of the Act • To be paid promptly or in accordance with the terms and conditions of the contract and be paid interest on over due payments if provided(S.48) • To get records for the procurement after the contract has been awarded or the procuring proceedings have been terminated upon request-S. 45(3)

  25. Obligations of the suppliers • To obtain and submit bid documents in the manner prescribed in the tender notice, tender documents-closing/opening, venue of submission, language, form and amount of bid security if required etc. • To adhere and follow bidding instructions e.g. proper filling of documents • To demonstrate that they are qualified for the tender awarded - S.31 • To supply the right quantity and quality and deliver at the right time • To maintain confidentiality • To perform the obligations of the contracts • To offer indemnity • To avoid corruption, inappropriate influences (e.g. on evaluations) , collusive and fraudulent practices-S.38, 40, 41, 42.

  26. Offences:  Obstruction Lying or misleading Delay in opening of tenders or evaluation or award of contracts Exerting unduly influence or pressure on any member of a tender committee, an employee or agent of a PE to take a particular action which favours or tend to favour a particular bidder opening bids prior to appointed time 26

  27. General Penalty: Fine not exceeding KSh 4 million or imprisonment for a term not exceeding 10 years or both for an individual  If corporate body, fine not exceeding Kshs.10 million.  Public officer shall be disqualified from public office.  Private individual shall be debarred  Protection from personal liability:   - Code of ethics All procurement and disposal to be carried in accordance with the code of ethics specified by PPOA - Minister to issue regulations to implement the Act 27

  28. ThankYou and God Bless

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