Public procurement: A public policy tool for resources management

Hoon Lee

Abstract

The United Nations assesses that defilement, pay off, robbery, and duty avoidance cost creating
nations about $1.26 trillion every year. That is double the total national output of all of Asia. These are
calming numbers undoubtedly. No one precisely knows exactly how much, yet a genuinely substantial
part of the misfortune will be from failures in broad public procurement.

Keywords

Public procurement, public policy, challenges, resources management

Full Text:

PDF

References

Edler, J., & Georghiou, L. (2007). Public procurement and innovation—Resurrecting the demand side. Research policy, 36(7), 949-963.

Edquist, C., & Hommen, L. (2000). Public technology procurement and innovation (Vol. 16). Springer Science & Business Media.

Edquist, C., & Hommen, L. (2000). Public technology procurement and innovation theory. In Public technology procurement and innovation (pp. 5-70). Springer US.

Trionfetti, F. (2000). Discriminatory public procurement and international trade. The World Economy, 23(1), 57-76.

Vaidya, K., Sajeev, A. S. M., & Callender, G. (2006). Critical factors that influence e-procurement implementation success in the public sector.Journal of public procurement, 6(1/2), 70.

Brammer, S., & Walker, H. (2011). Sustainable procurement in the public sector: an international comparative study. International Journal of Operations & Production Management, 31(4), 452-476.


Be a part of worldclass research: Publish with us