(practical) hints in designing flexible strategies for centralized public procurement
DESCRIPTION
(Practical) Hints in Designing Flexible Strategies for Centralized Public Procurement. Gian Luigi Albano, PhD Head of Research and Development Consip S.p.A., The Italian Public Procurement Agency e-mail: [email protected]. Tirana – May 24, 2012. 1. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
(Practical) Hints in Designing Flexible Strategies for Centralized
Public Procurement
Tirana – May 24, 2012
Gian Luigi Albano, PhDHead of Research and Development Consip S.p.A., The Italian Public Procurement Agencye-mail: [email protected]
Roadmap
Centralized public procurement through Framework Agreements
1
The pros and the cons of flexible tools: Some hints for implementation
3
2 A conceptual approach to Framework Agreements
4 Let’s-get-started kind of concluding remarks (with a look at the near future)
Introduction - Motivation
• Framework Agreements (FAs) recognized as a potentially effective tool for implementing flexible strategies of centralized public procurement
• FAs allow public agencies to aggregate demand and streamline procurement processes, while keeping some degrees of flexibility.
Today’s talk aims at surveying the main pros and cons of aggregating public
demand;
discussing the importance of “knowing your chickens” before setting up two-stage procedures;
providing some hints on the concrete design of FAs
1
Framework Agreements: General Features (1/2)
General definitionarrangements whereby a procuring entity and provider(s) establish the terms on which purchases may or will be made over a period of time. The procuring entity makes an initial solicitation of offers against set terms and conditions; selects one or more providers on the basis of their offers; places periodic orders as particular requirements arise
EU Procurement Directive (2004/18/EC)
Similar tools in the US: IDIQ Contracts, Multiple Award Schedules, …
FAs for goods and services only, no civil works!
1
Framework Agreements: General Features (2/2)
1
Two basic common features:
aggregation of demand
2-stage procedure
1. FA is concluded with certain number of economic operators (on the basis of a “master contract”)
2. Specific contracts are awarded call-offs
Main “Families” of Framework Agreements (1/2)
• 4 “families” of FAs:
• 2 relevant classes:1. Complete Framework Agreements with 1 supplier
(“Framework Contract”) Competition entirely concentrated at the first stage
2. Incomplete Framework Agreements with n suppliers (“strictu sensu”) Effective competition can (and should!) take place at both stages
1
completeness of the contractnumber
of economicopera
tors
• 1 operator• complete
• 1 operator• incomplete
• n (3) operators• complete
• n (3) operators• incomplete
Main “Families” of Framework Agreements (2/2)
In general, useful in two broad sets of circumstances:• repeated purchases by a single contracting authority• central purchasing body or buyers consortia procuring for
several contracting authorities
1
completeness of the contractnumber
of economicopera
tors
• 1 operator• complete
• 1 operator• incomplete
• n (3) operators• complete
• n (3) operators• incomplete
A simple qualitative analysis of FAs (1/4)2
Focus on Frame Contracts: Pros
Minimization of the process cost (for both buyers and
suppliers):• issuing of purchasing orders in a few minutes• benefit from efficient use of expertise and information
Maximization of competition:• economies of scale (mind the number of lots!)• standardization• Buyers’ higher bargaining power• Potentially strong effects on competing firms’ market share (if few
lots)
A simple qualitative analysis of FAs (2/4)2
Focus on Frame Contracts: Cons
No flexibility• Risk of lock-in by public agencies if overstretched contract length
+ risk of favoring quasi-monopolistic positions (if contract covers a sizeable fraction of public demand)
• standardization may imply “loose tailoring” or no tailoring at all
Risk of adverse selection (please forgive some economic jargon…)
A simple qualitative analysis of FAs (3/4)2
(Multiple award) incomplete Framework Agreements
Main goal: aggregate demand and streamline process + leeway for flexibility
ProsAccommodate for heterogeneous needs/preferences
personalization and customization, delivery conditions, physical location, different bundles of the same commodities, intrinsic characteristics as buying entities (timeliness of payments, managerial skills, purchases taking place at different points in time, suppliers’ inventories…)
Suppliers’ selection targeting single specific contracts allocative efficiency
A simple qualitative analysis of FAs (4/4)2
(Multiple award) incomplete Framework Agreements
Cons
Require reopening of competition higher process costOverall, reduced competition potentially higher purchase pricesReduced number of competitors interacting repeatedly risk of
collusionSome suppliers’ strategic behaviour can distort expected
competition
Need for careful and accurate design
An overarching picture for decision making
2
Choosing the appropriate class of FA
Multiple suppliersIncomplete
Supply side
Demandside
Heterogeneous demand
Concentrated
Standardized
Fragmented
Specialized
Homogeneous demand
Multiple suppliersComplete
1 supplierIncomplete
Framework AgreementsSimple contractsSimple contractsSimple contractsSimple contracts
Framework Contracts1 supplierComplete
High effort for POs
Low effort for POs Flexibility
Centralization
3
Basic trade-offadministrative efficiency higher competition
higher process cost savings lower quality/price ratio
vs
Main drivers
flexibility
contract tailoringefficient allocation
demand side
market side
demand heterogeneity
market structuresuppliers heterogeneity
Nuts and Bolts of FAs (1/3)
Nuts and Bolts of FAs (2/3)3
Balancing competition in the two selection stages: main drivers1. Degree of completeness of the “master” contract
Establish at the first stage (virtually) all dimensions/clauses which are likely to be common across all SCs to be awarded during the FA
If CAs wish to buy the same homogenous good, but require different delivery conditions and SLAs, then:• Let suppliers compete on the good price at the first stage
(conditional on some minimal quality standards); and• Let selected suppliers compete on delivery conditions and
SLAs to award specific contracts at the call-off stage
Nuts and Bolts of FAs (3/3)3
2. Number of economic operators (n) part of the agreement
The lower the number suppliers selected to enter the agreement…• …the higher the competition for entering the agreement• … the lower the flexibility (if firms are somewhat specialized)
n should increase with:- the expected number of SCs- the degree of heterogeneity of
the SCsIdeally, one should select those suppliers having a good chance of serving at least one SC!
Balancing competition in the two selection stages: main drivers
When should we worry about FAs? (1/2) 3
• Highly incomplete “master” contract• Loose selection of economic operators at the first
stage• No competition to award specific contracts• “Life-long” FA
If the conditions below are simultaneously satisfied:
Closed “suppliers list” Risk of corruption (firms may compete in bribes) Inability to properly assess different public
agencies’ performance in terms of achieved value for money
Example 1
When should we worry about FAs? (2/2) 3
• Lay down all conditions in the “master” contract• Opt for a loose selection of economic operators at the first
stage• Award specific contracts not on the basis of the first-stage
ranking
When looking for multi-brand supplies, CAs may
Fake competitive process Brand-driven and not performance-driven choice Potentially high variance in quality-price
conditions
Example 2
4 Main messages• Each contracting authority may pretend “the size of its
suit” being different from any other’s some degree of contract standardization, at least at early stages of a centralization process, ought to be imposed
• Knowledge of both sides (the chickens!) of the market is as indispensable to the design of FAs as water to life!
• Simple design pays off “essential” FAs + few dimensions of differentiation
• Participation criteria at the first stage ought to be set so as to favor the participation of SMEs
4 New developments round the corner
The new Directive in 2014 inspired, among other things, by: Increasingly important of role of Central Purchasing
Bodies (Enhanced) Flexibility of procurement procedures
Will “essential” framework agreements eventually see the light?
complete but amendable master
contract
Main Reference
Albano, G.L. and Sparro, M., (2010), “Flexible Strategies for Centralized Public Procurement,” Review of Economics and Institutions, 1 (2), Article 4. doi: 10.5202/rei.v1i2.4.
Downloadable from http://www.rei.unipg.it/rei/article/view/17