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by BadInformatics 1894 days ago
I'm skeptical it's even good at that intended purpose. Perhaps one could argue it prevents blatant, direct corruption, but it does little to control for large company influence and other forms of soft power.

The biggest companies in this space maintain an active revolving door, which ensures that procurement policy is moulded (either consciously or unconsciously) to their process and needs over time. Even more insidiously, they've convinced governments to gut their own IT workforce, removing the people most qualified to critically analyze software vendors. This appeals to your average bureaucrat because it appears to strike a good balance between effort and risk minimization (e.g. why bother managing multiple smaller vendors or timelines?), while in practice it does exactly the opposite.

2 comments

Yeah, I'm not sure if it prevents corruption at all. In my country public tenders are just another word for corruption.

A real example: police force wanted to get say 1000 new squad cars. One of the points in the tender was that the car's trunk has to be exactly that many litres (say 307L, don't remember the exact number). So of course, only one model of all the cars from all manufacturers had that value, and of course the only dealer who submitted for that tender won it. So it was blatantly obvious that the process was rotten from the start. But it was legal. And they (government)did it many times. And pretty much they are doing it for the last 20 years or so. So corruption is not something which you can solve easily, you need a lot of checks and balances to make it work.

You're right in that it absolutely requires either a watchdog agency to ensure tenders are written in a neutral way before being issued, and/or a court system where losing bidders are able to successfully sue as soon as they're issued, on the grounds of the tender not being neutral.

In one country where I previously lived, there was also an "escape clause" where if there was emergency time pressure, you could circumvent the process -- so guess what? The government would "invent delays" in writing up the specifications until the last possible minute, then award the contract without a public tender because there was no time left for the tender process!

So yes, the process absolutely has to be designed with some form of oversight and without loopholes, in order to achieve the aim of preventing corruption.

It's to avoid the very specific form of corruption via kickbacks, essentially -- and if you look at the history of how politicians used to spend money in the US, you'll see that it is actually quite effective at this, and that it was once a gigantic problem -- and continues to be in some countries today.

You're right that it does nothing about other forms of influence like the revolving door.

And like I said, it comes at a tremendous cost of efficiency and quality. It's not trying to strike a balance between corruption and efficiency/quality, it's trying to explicitly minimize corruption at the expense of efficiency/quality.