Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities

Efficient spending of public money is a crucial requirement of public procurement. This requirement is even more important in the case of public works contracts since construction projects are usually very costly. Accordingly, public authorities should manage the procurement process in an efficient...

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Main Authors: Hanak Tomas, Korytarova Jana
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: De Gruyter 2019-06-01
Series:Open Engineering
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2019-0019
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spelling doaj-bf5fa78ca96d4c7e9bc5cb1ee18c3c1e2021-09-05T20:44:50ZengDe GruyterOpen Engineering2391-54392019-06-019115115810.1515/eng-2019-0019eng-2019-0019Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalitiesHanak Tomas0Korytarova Jana1Brno University of Technology Brno, BrnoCzech RepublicBrno University of Technology Brno, BrnoCzech RepublicEfficient spending of public money is a crucial requirement of public procurement. This requirement is even more important in the case of public works contracts since construction projects are usually very costly. Accordingly, public authorities should manage the procurement process in an efficient way. The aim of this paper is to analyse municipal procurement practices focusing on small-scale public contracts for construction works. The Czech Republic is the study area for this analysis. Data concerning procurement practices were collected through a questionnaire survey and on the basis of available internal municipal directives that govern the procurement process. The results show that a majority of municipalities use internal directives and specify financial categories for small-scale public contracts. It has also been found that the majority of municipalities contract external consulting companies for specific contracts or subsidised public contracts. Directives usually concern the issue of responsibility and the approval procedure related to the public contract. Based on the research findings, general recommendations for awarding public contracts have been formulated. These findings can potentially contribute to the dissemination of best practices among contracting authorities in the Czech Republic.https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2019-0019public contracts for construction worksmunicipalitysmall-scale public contractsinternal directives
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hanak Tomas
Korytarova Jana
spellingShingle Hanak Tomas
Korytarova Jana
Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
Open Engineering
public contracts for construction works
municipality
small-scale public contracts
internal directives
author_facet Hanak Tomas
Korytarova Jana
author_sort Hanak Tomas
title Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
title_short Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
title_full Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
title_fullStr Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
title_full_unstemmed Procurement management in construction: study of Czech municipalities
title_sort procurement management in construction: study of czech municipalities
publisher De Gruyter
series Open Engineering
issn 2391-5439
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Efficient spending of public money is a crucial requirement of public procurement. This requirement is even more important in the case of public works contracts since construction projects are usually very costly. Accordingly, public authorities should manage the procurement process in an efficient way. The aim of this paper is to analyse municipal procurement practices focusing on small-scale public contracts for construction works. The Czech Republic is the study area for this analysis. Data concerning procurement practices were collected through a questionnaire survey and on the basis of available internal municipal directives that govern the procurement process. The results show that a majority of municipalities use internal directives and specify financial categories for small-scale public contracts. It has also been found that the majority of municipalities contract external consulting companies for specific contracts or subsidised public contracts. Directives usually concern the issue of responsibility and the approval procedure related to the public contract. Based on the research findings, general recommendations for awarding public contracts have been formulated. These findings can potentially contribute to the dissemination of best practices among contracting authorities in the Czech Republic.
topic public contracts for construction works
municipality
small-scale public contracts
internal directives
url https://doi.org/10.1515/eng-2019-0019
work_keys_str_mv AT hanaktomas procurementmanagementinconstructionstudyofczechmunicipalities
AT korytarovajana procurementmanagementinconstructionstudyofczechmunicipalities
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