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Cover page Contents Back Issues |
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May - June 2000 | |
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Make every citizen an auditor
A veteran of public procurement argues that the public needs access to the government’s books |
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Claro: Decentralize purchasing, but centralize information |
Jorge Claro de la Maza, recently retired chief of the IDB’s Procurement Policy and Coordination Office, has played a
central role in both modernizing the Bank’s internal procurement procedures and designing programs to assist procurement
reform in Latin American and Caribbean governments. IDBAmérica: Procurement used to be an obscure subject. Why is it so much in the news these days?
Because corruption in general is the subject of discussion in the world today. Open a newspaper and you’ll almost always find
an accusation of corruption in government. And where does corruption happen in most cases? It happens within fiscal affairs,
customs or government procurement. IDBAmérica: Why is public procurement so prone to abuse? First, because procurement is not treated as a
public policy issue. It is perceived merely as a purchasing process, and therefore it is not given priority as a policy issue, as a
problem of governance. In most industrialized countries procurement is very high on the policy agenda, but in most Latin
American and Caribbean countries it is not. Few countries have a senior government official with overall responsibility for
procurement, and the people assigned to manage procurement have very little training or professional prestige. Most of them
have just learned on the job. IDBAmérica: Can’t you compensate for these weaknesses by giving auditors and controllers more authority? Auditors are an essential element, but the problem is that in most cases the control mechanisms are put into operation
ex-post. In most countries you audit what has happened, so basically you have a dead patient and you’re trying to determine
how he died and who’s responsible for the death. There is very little concurrent audit, although that is beginning to change.
IDBAmérica: Many people think this kind of corruption happens because too much discretion is given to the central government. Can procurement be improved by decentralizing it to lower levels of government? It depends on what you are decentralizing. Most countries decentralize political power and money. They don’t decentralize
procedures and controls. So the question is, are we decentralizing opportunities for corruption and mismanagement? The challenge for us is to empower people to do things right. There’s no point in decentralizing purchasing capacity to a municipality if you don’t empower that municipality with the money, the human resources, and the training that’s required to do it properly. Otherwise, you’re going to end up sending in your auditor and he’ll probably find that the decentralization process only resulted in their paying higher prices for your products. IDBAmérica:: How can information technology improve the way procurement is done? I’ll give you a
simple example. If your government was to create a procurement database that was connected directly to its integrated financial
management system, and you were the minister in charge of public works, then you’d be able to decentralize all procurement
within your ministry. Your only requirement could be that whoever buys something would have to submit a request to the
database. Only then would the money be disbursed. They would also have to give information on every contract signed. Any
contract that is, say, 2 or 3 percent above the average price for a particular good or service would be detected by the system, and
whoever signed it would have to explain why they’re paying the surcharge.
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