Abstract:
United Nations was established in 1945 with its Headquarters in San Francisco, California
United States. There are more than 40 UN agencies operating around the world, focusing
on different mandates such as poverty eradication, improved healthcare, provision of
shelter, food and nutrition, governance, sustainable development, migration management
and refugee resettlement. Different UN agencies work autonomously with their
Headquarters based in different parts of the world. Agencies program interventions are
later consolidated at the UN HQs.
At country level, the Resident Coordinator’s (RC) Office coordinates with all UN agencies
operating in the country. There is a Country Director for each agency who reports to the
Country Representative in the RC Office. Different sections which include operations,
resource management (HR, Finance and Procurement) and program work in each agency
according to their specified roles.
The procurement department for each UN agency is centralized and managed by the
Resource Management Unit. There is a head of procurement at each agency. The final
endorsement and approval is given by the Country Director of that particular agency. The
procurement manual is in line with the overall UN policy documents, which includes
different thresholds. The manual segregates each procurement under services and supplies.
During 2009 – 2018, the quantum of procurement at UN, ranged between USD 13.8 billion
to USD 18.8 billion. As highlighted, involvement of significant amount of funds makes
this area not only critical but of high-risk as well. The associated risks involved due to
significant use of funds in the process makes it important for UN to review and improve
processes timely and efficiently.
The United Nation Development Programme (UNDP) provides services to refugees,
migrants and internally displaced persons (IDPs) concerning migration. UNDP established
its office in Pakistan in 1981, where the Government requested to intervene due to influx
of Afghan refugees. Pakistan signed as a Member State of UNDP in 1992 and established
a Cooperation Agreement with UNDP in October 2000.
UNDP follows its own procurement manual, which segregates ‘procurement’ under three
categories – supply, services and works. Supply means goods mainly; services include
intellectual and non-intellectual services whereas work is a mix of services and supplies
like construction contracts. On paper, the manual defines principles on which procurement
should be based. There are no thresholds defined for opting certain type of procedure, but
process is well-defined. There is a process of sole sourcing where no competitive process
is required, second is low value procurement which means comparing quotes and prices of
minimum of three vendors. The last process is called competitive bidding where tenders
are done and process is followed.
This project highlights how procurement at UNDP Pakistan is managed currently, what
practices are followed and what are the challenges and risks involved in the procurement
process. Through this research, we have tried to correlate how e-procurement can also play
a vital role in filling gaps and mitigating associated risks.