Prozorro


ProZorro is a public e-procurement system and a symbol of dramatic reform of government procurement in Ukraine. ProZorro is a result of the collaboration between the Ukrainian government, the business sector, and civil society. This system was developed by the reputable international anti-corruption organization Transparency International Ukraine with a help of volunteers, NGOs, the business community and state bodies of Ukraine, the WNISEF fund, the EBRD, and other partners. During the pilot stage of the project, Transparency International Ukraine was administering the development of the system: the ProZorro central database and several additional modules. Innovative technologies help to ensure the system’s transparency and monitoring: currently, there are the analytics modules Qlik, public and professional. In December 2015 all ownership and relevant intellectual property rights for ProZorro system have been transferred to the state enterprise designated by Ministry of Economic Development and Trade of Ukraine.
Ukraine, similarly to other developing countries, suffers from ineffectiveness and corruption in the public services sphere. In particular, the public procurement sector's inefficiency brings multi-billion losses. For example, nearly 250 billion Hryvnias were spent in Ukraine in 2014 for the procurement of goods, services, and works for public needs. According to international research, the usage of the e-Procurement system saves at least 10% of the procurement budget. Applying simple math - 10B*10%/365 days, 2.7 million dollars can be saved each day.
The Ministry of Economic Development and Trade of Ukraine received support from European Bank for Reconstruction and Development with the drafting of the new e-Procurement policies and legislation as well as implementing e-Procurement solution country-wide.

Background

Following the collapse of the Soviet Union and Ukraine’s independence in 1991, Ukraine’s political system was extremely corrupt. After its independence, Ukraine suffered an economic slow down which, partnered with excessive crime and corruption, caused further dissatisfaction among its citizens. In 1996, a new currency the Hryvnia was introduced and the Ukrainian economy steadied, later in this year president, Leonid Kuchma, was criticized for creating a concentration of power in his office and many other criticisms which included being corrupt and discouraging free speech. In 2004 Ukraine had an election following the end of president Kuchma’s second term as president. There were two main presidential candidates - Viktor Yushchenko and Viktor Yanukovych. The win of Viktor Yanukovych, however, was followed by a public outcry and the launch of a peaceful protest known as the Orange Revolution which challenged the results. The election was claimed to have been corrupt, using tactics such as voter intimidation resulting in electoral fraud. International and domestic election monitors reported a rigged election and a re-vote was called. The re-vote confirmed that Yanukovych was not the elected president and Viktor Yushchenko became a president.
In 2010, President Yanukovych won the presidency. He was the president for three years before he was exiled from his post as president and Petro Poroshenko was elected president in 2014.
During the 2013 EuroMaidan revolution activists organized by Olexandr Starodubtsev called for more transparency within the government and its surrounding platforms. This gave rise to many changes being made since then in an attempt to make Ukraine less corrupt and more transparent. This gave rise to Prozorro, the e-procurement system initiated by anti-corruption activists in May 2014. Their idea was to create a place where public agencies could exchange and sell, while the public was able to have access to this information and see who and what deals were being made.
The system was then co-developed with Transparency International Ukraine, government representatives, private actors and anti-corruption activists. Prozorro was finally launched in 2015.
Prozorro will allow adherence of Ukrainian legislature with European standards, giving Ukraine a fair procurement procedure including transparency and effectiveness, bringing Ukraine closer to a European and Worldwide standard.

Philosophy

The corporate philosophy of ProZorro is based on three key principles:
  1. Hybrid electronic system based on an open-source model. As opposed to the single and multi-platform systems, ProZorro’s hybrid model allows collaboration between the central database and an infinite number of commercial marketplaces that provide front-end access. Such a hybrid model enables the efficient transmission of information from central databases to marketplaces responsible for attracting and serving clients. Marketplaces compete with each other which motivates them to provide the best service to attract both contracting entities and suppliers.
  2. “Everyone can see everything” – is the official motto of ProZorro. After a tender procedure is complete, absolutely all data is disclosed, including the list of all participants, their bids, decisions of the tender committee and all qualification documents, etc. This information is publicly accessible through ProZorro’s online analytics module.
  3. Golden triangle of partnership – a unique form of collaboration between business, state and civil society where functions are split between different stakeholders to ensure independence and mutual control. Such partnership aims at promoting change while maintaining a high level of trust between principal stakeholders throughout the course of this reform.

    Implementation

Reform and e-Procurement implementation had to start with the preparation of a legislative base. The Law “On public procurement” was designed to facilitate and streamline the public procurement
procedure in Ukraine, as well as to incorporate certain elements of the relevant EU law.
The law introduced mandatory electronic public procurement procedures. The transition was accomplished through two phases. Beginning with Phase 1, electronic public procurement became mandatory for central executive bodies and those offices carrying out monopolist activities for “below-threshold” contracts. During Phase 2, public e-procurement became mandatory for all procuring entities.
Prozorro system has used the Open Contracting Data Standard as a key instrument for data modeling, since the information that is available in open data and OCDS formats allows its easy analysis and processing.
Due to the success seen in the public procurement sector in lowering corruption by 25%, Prozorro has been expanded as of February 1, 2016, to include other sectors including sales. This includes the sale of state property, municipal property, small privatized objects, buildings and also involves sales of materials such as scrap metal, raw wood, and so on.

Chronology

The short chronology of ProZorro looks like this:
Prozorro has had a positive impact on decreasing corruption in Ukraine's public procurement system. Some advantages include:
ProZorro has been considered by EBRD as a possible model for e-Procurement reform. ProZorro was shortlisted during two nominations for the World Procurement Award.
Prozorro became a learning project and a showcase for the Open Contracting Partnership, a collaborative effort by the World Bank attempting to promote and enhance openness and participation by all in public contracting.
The reform was awarded the World Procurement Award 2016 at Public Sector Awards in London, on May,18 for creating and implementing an e-procurement system with unique architecture and philosophy. This victory was the first evidence of international recognition of Ukrainian approach and solution.
Prozorro also won a prestigious international award - the annual prize of the Open Government Awards 2016. This was announced at the Global Summit in Paris, France, on December 7. Ukraine also received special recognition for the involvement of youth in the project.

ProZorro.Sale

is an electronic auction system aiming to sell state property. It was initiated by the Ministry of Economic Development and Trade of Ukraine, Transparency International Ukraine, the Deposit Guarantee Fund, the National Bank of Ukraine and the Ukrainian electronic platforms. The system is designed in accordance with the values and principles of the ProZorro family.
The pilot project started on 31 October 2016.
The goal is a transparent, fast and effective sales of state and communal property, as well as fighting against corruption by the means of equal access to data, public control and the increasing number of the potential buyers.

DoZorro

is ProZorro's end-to-end online platform which allows any participant of the public procurement process - citizens, businesses, public buyers, controlling and prosecution bodies - to monitor particular tender, analyze procurement records, report wrongdoings and appeal the illegal practices. Shortly, it is online public oversight platform for public tenders, launched on November 1, 2016.
The platform is administered by the public organization Transparency International Ukraine and consolidates the efforts of 24 regional monitoring organizations. The system collects information on the quality of specific tender procedures through user feedback. In case of detection of violation of the law of Ukraine "On Public Procurement" there is a legal response. The portal contains methodological materials for the self-assertion of violated rights and interests in the field of public procurement. It has its own analytical digital tools: public analytics module, risk indicator system, best practices index. DoZorro's media component contains news, blogs, and special media projects.