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Govt boosts online purchasing
Beijing—The volume of
purchases made online by State ministries and commissions is expected to
grow significantly from the end of this month, with the further
development of a Web-based bidding system, a senior official has said.
Ma Jihong, Party secretary of the procurement center of the Central
People’s Government of China, said on Thursday: “On completion of the
online invitation and bidding system, we will gradually publicize
categories of the items available.
“The new system will help to lower procurement costs and improve
efficiency,” Ma told a seminar ahead of the fifth anniversary of the
implementation of the Government Procurement Law. She said the bidding
system will also provide more openness and transparency.
The government implemented its procurement law in January 2003. Since
then, the value of State purchases has risen from 700 million yuan ($95
million) to 10.7 billion yuan this year.
Also, according to official figures, in the five years since the law’s
enactment, more than 5 billion yuan of central government funds have
been saved.
As of last Wednesday, the value of government procurement conducted via
the center’s website, www.zycg.gov.cn, was 5.3 billion yuan, almost half
of the total spend for the year.
The site contains information on more than 6,000 individual buyers,
16,000 suppliers and about 150,000 products and services.
By providing detailed records of all transactions, including information
on buyers, suppliers, contract checking and acceptance, the site, which
receives some 20,000 visits per day, has “forcefully” promoted the
transparency of government procurement procedures, Ma said.
To date, the center has made collective purchases for State organs at
all levels.
While experts have generally praised the adoption of e-commerce
applications for government procurement, Liu Junhai, president of the
commercial law research institute of Renmin University of China, said
“better purchasing credibility” still needed to be established.
“The procurement system has contributed significantly to saving
government funds, reducing commercial graft and protecting the rights of
suppliers,” Liu told China Daily.
However, the system is not flawless, he said.
Collective purchases usually take longer to complete and in some cases,
the product quality and after-sales service are not as good as they
should be, he said.
Liu called for the introduction of more detailed regulations on
government purchases, as parts of the current law are unclear and
difficult to implement.
Liu Jie, vice-manager of Beijing-based Haoying Furniture Co Ltd, has
also called for more clarity on the preferential policies the law says
it gives to environmentally friendly firms, medium- and small-sized
companies and businesses based in western areas.—Xinhua |