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PROCUREMENT REFORMS

PROCUREMENT REFORMS. ALEXANDER A. PADILLA Undersecretary of Health Chairperson, Procurement Coordinating Committee & Central Office Bids & Awards Committee. 1 st National Staff Meeting CY 2007, January 24-25, 2007, Clark Field, Pampanga. Initial Challenges. Policies

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PROCUREMENT REFORMS

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  1. PROCUREMENT REFORMS ALEXANDER A. PADILLA Undersecretary of Health Chairperson, Procurement Coordinating Committee & Central Office Bids & Awards Committee 1st National Staff Meeting CY 2007, January 24-25, 2007, Clark Field, Pampanga

  2. Initial Challenges • Policies • Unresponsive(e.q Some drugs not included in PNDF) • Not clear, varied • Weak enforcement • Ambiguities in accountabilities • Systems and Processes • Absence of SOPs • Very poor planning • Non- adherence to Annual Procurement Plan. • Poor item specifications & TOR formulation • Weaknesses in drug selection and registration • Inconsistent drugs procurement w/ regional morbidities • Unshared data, files & documents • Wide price discrepancies • Inadequate transparency in procurement processes • Lack of monitoring and evaluation system • Weaknesses in the drugs quality assurance and inspection & acceptance • Resources • Inadequate number of skilled/professional staff • Inadequate supply and equipment support • Unavailability of baseline and comparative data (price) • Organizational • Inefficient supply chain structure • Inadequate stakeholders’ participation Graft & Corruption Slow/long Procurement Process High Transaction Cost PROCUREMENT INEFFICIENCIES Inability to Procure Tedious Procurement Process

  3. BASISRepublic Act No. 9184 Government Procurement Reform Act “An Act providing for the Modernization, Standardization and Regulation of the Procurement Activities of the Government and for other Purposes” EFFECTIVITY: JANUARY 26, 2003

  4. Hierarchy of Reform Objectives SOCIAL IMPACT ECONOMIC IMPACT • Better chance to achieve health outcomes • Better access to health services • Improved DOH/gov’t. reputation • Enhanced respect for rule of law • Increased access of local market to DOH contracts • Better conflict prevention or resolution PROCUREMENT IMPACT • Greater VALUE for MONEY • Budgetary SAVINGS • More EFFECTIVE Use of FUNDS • Improved SERVICE DELIVERY • Debt reduction • More COMPETITION, TRANSPARENT & PROFESSIONAL PROCUREMENT • Greater procurement EFFICIENCY • RESPECT for DOH procurement • Less CORRUPTION • Better QUALITY • goods/services Mainstream Procurement Reforms Adapted from: Figure 1.1 “Torchlight,” Harmonizing Donor Practices for Effective Aid Delivery: Volume 3: Strengthening Procurement Practices in Developing Practices , World Bank, OECD Publishing, 2005,

  5. Procurement Reforms THRUSTS • Mainstreaming RA 9184 to various health reform areas, overcome resistance to change and eliminate graft and corruption • Capacity development by • improving systems,tools, practices & procedures • professionally training procurement staff to function to full capacity and to implement standards and regulations • Educating/informing service providers & end-users • enhancing management controls, governance & performance • Benchmarking and monitoring and evaluation • Implementation of ethical practices

  6. Procurement Reforms SPECIFIC Targets • Increase compliance to standard procurement procedures based on RA 9184 • Enhance procurement systems and tools and integrate with IT, systems in logistic, warehousing and financial management • Promote transparency and accountability in procurement transactions • Adoption/application of Agency Procurement Performance Indicator (APPI) to benchmark and monitor performance and identify capacity gaps and subsequent improvements in DOH units • Promotion and socialization of the ethical framework and core values on procurement

  7. Gains and Accomplishments On savings …………………

  8. Estimated savings realized by the Philippines as a result of posting procurement opportunities on the GEPS, 2004 Source; Government Electronic Procurement System in Harmonizing Donor Practices for Effective Aid Delivery: Volume 3: Strengthening Procurement Practices in Developing Practices , World Bank, OECD Publishing, 2005,

  9. Procurement Processed, COBAC, 2006 75%

  10. Realized savings from selected major procurement packages, DOH Central Office, 2006

  11. Procurement Time/Duration • Average procurement time vis-à-vis RA 9184 for goods have been significantly becoming shorter since 2005. • 2005: 3 to 4 months • 2006: 2 to 3 months • Consulting services procurement needs improvement

  12. Availability of Commodities • No major vaccine stock-outs the past 2-3 years (excluding Hepa-B) • Some medicines like anti-TB drugs, ARVs are more accessible • Supplies and materials have become predictably available when requested/ required

  13. On increasing transparency and accountability and ensuring integrity of the procurement process………………. • Participation of civil society • Publication of all invitation to bid, bid results, price monitoring data, CO registered suppliers • Establishment of appeals, protests and blacklisting mechanisms • Establishment of Integrated development Committees • Formulation of the draft ethical framework for the selection, registration and procurement of medicines.

  14. On increasing transparency and accountability and preserving integrity of the procurement process……………… • Civil Society Forum on Transparency, Anti-Corruption and Citizen’s Participation on August, 2006 • COBAC recognized for its 100% compliance in posting in GEPS (Government Electronic Procurement System) of bidding opportunities and bidding results • DOH recognized by GPPB & Civil Society as the agency that is most committed in correcting procurement mistakes/lapses

  15. On increasing transparency and accountability and preserving integrity of the procurement process……………… • Increasing requests for posting of bidding opportunities in DOH website of CHDs and hospitals without websites • Formulation of the Delegation of authority- AO 2006-0034 for the central office, CHDs and hospitals • Defined responsible personnel & officials for each procurement step

  16. On increasing transparency and accountability and ensuring integrity of the procurement process………………. • Establishment of appeals, protests & blacklisting of mechanisms

  17. HEAD OF PROCURING ENTITY SOH/CHD Director/MCC/HC Resident Ombudsman Integrity Development Committee 94 Bids and Awards Committees (BAC) EXTERNAL CONTROL/ OBSERVER INTERNAL CONTROL/ OBSERVER Subject Experts • NAMFREL • Transparency and Accountability Network • Procurement Watch • COFILCO • Other NGOs/ Private Sector • DOH Internal Audit • COA Field Office Technical Working Groups Legal Office DOH Procurement Organizational Set-Up

  18. Capability Development • Training TARGETS: • End-users/PMOs/AOs • BAC, Secretariat, TWG Members, & Partners • Rolled-out training on RA 9184 and use of Philippine Bidding Documents • At least 300 participants or 31% of 1,500 target from 94 BACs • Substantial CHD/hospitals’ initiated training • Identified and oriented NAMFREL volunteers on red flags of corruption in procurement

  19. Reforms in system, tools & procedures • Mandated use of standard Philippine Bidding documents (edition II) • Adoption of standard procurement forms • Customized and tested at central office the DOH procurement manuals for goods and consulting services

  20. Reforms in tools, systems & procedures • Clearing houses for item specifications & TOR for services • Creation of TWG Pool at the central office • Establishment of Simplified Suppliers’ Registration System • BFAD prioritization of DOH procured drugs and medicines testing • BFAD continuous strengthening of drug registration • Enhancement of feedback mechanism to end-users • Establishment of central office Depot for all common office supplies

  21. Reforms tools,systems, and procedures

  22. On reward to performing personnel involved in procurement……………. • No cases filed against COBAC/TWG except 1 which is already dismissed • Legal assistance and even liability insurance is already a right which is not the same with regard co-government employees

  23. Reforms tools, systems and procedures

  24. BENCHMARKING, MONITORING & EVALUATION • Use of Agency Procurement Performance Indicator (APPI) • Tool to monitor and evaluate actual implementation at the agency/micro level of RA 9184 • To benchmark and monitor progress on procurement reforms • Indicator for F1 Monitoring & Evaluation

  25. BENCHMARKING, MONITORING & EVALUATION • APPI – derivative of Baseline Indicator System (BIS) • BIS - macro indicator used for assessment and comparison of national public procurement systems • Applied in the Philippines • Total score of 67.89% in 2004 • 68% score translated to level of achievement = ALL baseline indicators substantially met • Basis to recalibrate the Phil. public procurement strategy

  26. APPI tells you whether an agency has …. • A strategy for achieving an effective procurement program & whether this strategy is in line with the national procurement reform policy • An organizational structure and employee capacity to support the strategy in line with the national procurement reform policy • Internal procurement processes that supports the strategy in line with the national procurement reform policy and is in accord with its organizational set-up • Whether the agency is able to undertake its procurement in an effective manner

  27. APPI Pillars

  28. BENCHMARKING, MONITORING & EVALUATION • 2005: APPI piloted at central office: • Self Assessment = 82% } Substantially • Consultant = 81% } Achieved • GPPB = 79% } • Basis for improving system • 2006 Score = 94.6% - Fully Achieved • 2006: tested in a NCR hospital using 2005 data: • Score = 24.1 % = Partially Achieved Level • Oriented 15 supply officers from CHDs and hospitals to help COBAC deploy system

  29. Ethical Framework for the Pharmaceutical Sector –Registration, Selection and Procurement • Global initiative initiated by WHO, 2004 • Assessment of vulnerability to corruption & tool of accountability in registration, selection & procurement of pharmaceuticals • Unified Core values: justice, transparency, efficiency,integrity & code of conduct

  30. Application of the Ethical Infrastructure for a Good Procurement System • Draft ethical framework and core values done with the selected hospital & CHDs and pharmaceutical industry • Draft Code of Conduct on Procurement initiated by the Office of Ombudsman

  31. CURRENT CHALLENGES Mainstreaming reforms, overcoming resistance to change Narrowing the gaps and variations in procurement practices among DOH units Adherence to the principle of transparency, efficiency, equity, economy, fairness & respect Integration with logistics & financial management Sustaining reforms

  32. CURRENT THRUSTS • Continuous capability building/training • Finalization and adoption of DOH customized procurement manuals • Development of procurement guidelines for drugs and medicines & other health products and services • Continuous promotion of transparency & accountability using GEPS and partnership with civil society • Automation/computerization of procurement systems and integration with logistics management and e-NGAs MAINSTREAMING & CAPACITY BUILDING

  33. CURRENT THRUSTS • Benchmarking, Monitoring & Evaluation • 5. Adoption/application of APPI as a benchmarking and monitoring tool and basis for further improving procurement systems and practices among CHDs and hospitals • Ethical Framework on procurement • 6. Finalization of the ethical framework & customization of the Code of Conduct for procurement • 7. Promotion, socialization, & cascading ethical framework, core values at agency level

  34. You could have save another life, If you had bought just one more! -----Anonymous ThanK YoU & GooD AfternooN!

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