•  
  •  
 

Abstract

The global nature of the COVID-19 pandemic presented unprecedented challenges for public procurement systems around the world. Governments everywhere faced an immense pressure to facilitate the rapid procurement of supplies and services needed to support overburdened health and social care systems. Speed and flexibility were needed to address the shortages of protective personal equipment, distribution of ventilators, and increased demand for medications, all of which required governments to forego traditional public procurement methods. Governments had to balance the underlying principles of their procurement systems—namely, competition, integrity, and transparency—against urgency, and do so in a way that does not erode public confidence in their ability to assure integrity and accountability of their respective procurement systems. As a result, the COVID-19 pandemic tested the adequacy of existing regulatory systems for urgent public procurement.

Share

COinS