Sustainable Public Procurement—External Forces and Accountability
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Sustainable Public Procurement
2.2. Public Procurement and Accountability
2.3. Stakeholder Pressure
2.4. External Forces on Sustainable Public Procurement
3. Research Method
4. Results
4.1. Organization and Development of Sustainable Procurement
4.2. External Pressures on Sustainable Procurement
4.2.1. Legal Forces
4.2.2. Political Forces
4.2.3. Market Forces
4.2.4. Social and Economic Forces
4.2.5. Societal Forces
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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External Forces | Main Themes |
---|---|
Legal forces |
|
Political forces |
|
Market forces | |
Social and Economic forces | |
Societal forces |
|
Issue | Municipality 1 | Municipality 2 | Municipality 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Structure of the procurement function | Hybrid: process control and advice are centralized; operational procurement is decentralized. | Hybrid: process control and advice are centralized; operational procurement is decentralized. | Hybrid: process control and advice are centralized; operational procurement is decentralized. |
Development of sustainable procurement | Procurement strategy contributes to a climate neutral city. | Sustainable procurement plays an exemplary role. Goal is the optimum in the triple bottom line. | Sustainability is key. Goal of a climate neutral city is translated into sustainable chain-oriented purchasing. |
Tendering procedures | Sustainability criteria for large public tenders (1/3 of the total spend); less sustainability and limited tendering for smaller purchases (remaining 2/3 of the spend). | Limited tendering is used for a large part of the total spend. Inclusion of sustainability criteria depends on decentralized operational procurement. | Sustainability criteria for large public tenders (1/3 of the total spend); less sustainability and limited tendering for smaller purchases (remaining 2/3 of the spend). |
Monitoring and control | The accountants check for legitimacy, the finance department monitors spending. | A feeling of non-commitment stems from the lack of control by the legislature. | Internal accountants monitor the legitimacy of procurement projects. |
Issue | Municipality 1 | Municipality 2 | Municipality 3 |
---|---|---|---|
Legal forces | Use of sustainability guidelines (PIANOo). However, no legal enforcement due to a lack of penalties. | Compliance with laws and regulations, adaptation of legal sustainable requirements in entire organization | Handling legislation and PIANOo guidelines; EMVI and covenants are non-binding and may restrict the desired extra steps |
Political forces | Aldermen define the reach of city’s ambition in the governance agreement; city council acts if there are (negative) external signals. | City council trusts aldermen to execute procurement policies according to the governance agreement and reacts to external signals. | The political orientation of the alderman and the city council strongly impact sustainability goals. Development and execution of policies are strictly separated. |
Market forces | Branch organizations and companies monitor tenders and sometimes request other specifications. No pressure is felt if the legal obligations are met. | A local business collective runs a ‘soft lobby’ which results in more attention for the local economy. | Branch organization’s lobbies have influence; market consulting enhances influence but reduces the pressure on sustainability. |
Social and economic forces | The rankings published by NGOs raise issues in local media and meetings of the city council. | NGO reports raise questions that are discussed in meetings of the city council. However, policies are not adjusted as long as legal obligations are met. | Subject oriented NGOs are very active, they are invited for consultation by the local government. Most commonly consensus is achieved. |
Societal forces | Citizens are being consulted on sustainability issues. Local initiatives are welcomed. No attention for sustainable procurement in particular. | Local interest groups exert pressure on sustainability. There is pressure on sustainability in general, not on sustainable procurement in particular. | Neighborhood councils are actively involved in sustainable initiatives. There is pressure on sustainability in general, not on sustainable procurement in particular. |
Most powerful external force | Most pressure from legislation and PIANOo guidelines, as well as the political orientation of the aldermen and city council. | Most pressure from legislation and PIANOo guidelines. Focus on local economy. Influence from local interest groups. | Most pressure from legislation and PIANOo guidelines, as well as the political orientation of the aldermen and city council. |
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Vluggen, R.; Gelderman, C.J.; Semeijn, J.; van Pelt, M. Sustainable Public Procurement—External Forces and Accountability. Sustainability 2019, 11, 5696. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205696
Vluggen R, Gelderman CJ, Semeijn J, van Pelt M. Sustainable Public Procurement—External Forces and Accountability. Sustainability. 2019; 11(20):5696. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205696
Chicago/Turabian StyleVluggen, Rob, Cees J. Gelderman, Janjaap Semeijn, and Marc van Pelt. 2019. "Sustainable Public Procurement—External Forces and Accountability" Sustainability 11, no. 20: 5696. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205696
APA StyleVluggen, R., Gelderman, C. J., Semeijn, J., & van Pelt, M. (2019). Sustainable Public Procurement—External Forces and Accountability. Sustainability, 11(20), 5696. https://doi.org/10.3390/su11205696