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ID089493
Title ProperExtent of single sourcing in defence procurement and its relevance as a corruption risk
Other Title Informationa first look
LanguageENG
AuthorPyman, Mark ;  Wilson, Regina ;  Scott, Dominic
Publication2009.
Summary / Abstract (Note)Single-source, or non-competitive, defence procurement is a widespread phenomenon that is prevalent both in developing countries and in advanced arms exporting countries. The usual competitive bidding process - which assists in both value-for-money evaluation and in lowering corruption risk - is used much less often than expected in defence procurement. Whilst there can be good reasons for single sourcing, the opportunities and inducements for corruption are significantly escalated. Further, some countries that claim to employ single-source only in rare instances are found to have high percentages of non-competitive defence procurement. This is of particular concern as defence is perceived to be one of the more corruption-prone international business sectors, as identified in the 2002 Bribe Payers Index (Transparency International, 2002), with procurement presenting a significant source of corruption risk. The work presented here gives data on the percentage of defence single source procurement in a number of countries. Some countries were transparent and open about this data, even where it showed them in an unfavourable light. Most were not, citing sensitivity reasons or even that the data did not exist as reasons for refusal.
`In' analytical NoteDefence and Peace Economics Vol. 20, No. 3; Jun 2009: p.215 - 232
Journal SourceDefence and Peace Economics Vol. 20, No. 3; Jun 2009: p.215 - 232
Key WordsDefence Procurement ;  Corruption Risk ;  Developing Countries ;  International Business


 
 
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