Share these talks and lectures with your colleagues
Invite colleaguesWorld Bank procurement approaches: Overcoming supply chain challenges in the Pacific
Abstract
This paper explores the nexus of supply chain management (SCM) challenges and explains both the impact of recent global trends and the long-standing susceptibilities in Pacific Island Countries (PICs). The paper also discusses how these supply chain challenges exacerbate difficulties in procuring infrastructure investment projects. Finally, the paper summarises the practical solutions the Bank is pursuing through its procurement practices as an entry point for addressing supply chain management constraints. Supply chain disruptions had global repercussions in the aftermath of the COVID-19 pandemic and still present potential risks given on-going economic and geopolitical uncertainties. These challenges have come on top of long-standing supply chain difficulties in logistically complicated remote markets such as the Pacific Islands. Businesses operating in that environment contend with high logistics costs and transport expenses, which can be further exacerbated by volatile fuel prices. For contractors undertaking transportation works, there are added risks such as volatility in commodity markets for raw materials such as steel. Mobilisation costs to the Pacific Islands are also high, especially when contractors must transport equipment, goods, and potentially labour from abroad. This is on top of the significant risk of adverse weather events, with works being highly susceptible to flooding and extreme weather due to their location near coastlines. This high risk is difficult to insure, and bidders often struggle to obtain adequate insurance for their projects. Ultimately, the combination of supply chain issues, localised risks and small contract values have contributed to price escalation and weak market response to works procurements in Pacific Island Countries (PICs). The weak market response also reflects a tightening supplier market, as construction companies focus on more attractive projects within the large pipeline of domestic infrastructure projects in countries such as Australia and New Zealand. The World Bank and borrowers (client countries) are addressing this challenge through procurement approaches intended to make projects more attractive to bidders. Outreach on the consolidated pipeline of infrastructure projects in PICs highlights the opportunity for repeat business; a sequence of projects in the same location helps offset high mobilisation costs. Similarly, the Bank informs bidders of opportunities for local subcontracting or joint ventures, which can offset mobilisation costs and facilitate access to local labour. Tenders can also make greater use of rated criteria, which place emphasis on past performance, quality and sustainability factors. Finally, greater use of phased approaches and provisional sums can help to spread price risk more effectively over long duration contracts where clear information on future costs is not available. In the context of global uncertainty, this can offset price risk for outyear items.
The full article is available to subscribers to the journal.
Author's Biography
Michael Osborne , MBA, BCom (Econ), MCIPS is a civil engineer with more than 20 years’ experience in global development, strategic procurement and project management, currently with The World Bank as a Senior Procurement Specialist and Hub Leader for East Asia and the Pacific based in Sydney. He has global and multisector experience including in South Asia, East Asia and the Pacific, The World Bank headquarters in Washington, DC and New Zealand. As part of the World Bank team, he specialises in strategic planning, supply chain risk management, public-private partnerships and contract management. He was the World Bank representative on the Multilateral Development Bank taskforce on abnormally low bids and on public-private partnerships and on the establishment of the external sector engagement programme to resolve recurring procurement problems in key sectors such as medical devices and high voltage direct current power.
Diomedes Berroa , a Panamanian citizen, joined The World Bank in 2000 as a member of the Integrity Vice Presidency, and since then, he has held several positions. Diomedes has been involved in World Bank initiatives deterring corruption and promoting good governance, sound public procurement systems and overall good public financial management across several regions and corporate vice presidencies. Diomedes was a core team member responsible for designing, launching and rolling out the World Bank Procurement Framework (effective 1st July, 2016). From May 2019 to August 2022, he was the Regional Procurement Manager for Latin America and the Caribbean, leading World Bank operational procurement implementation support and policy dialogue across 33 countries. Since August 2022, Diomedes has been the Procurement Practice Manager for the East Asia Pacific Region, providing operational procurement support and policy dialogue to the Pacific Islands, Indonesia, East Timor, the Philippines, Malaysia, Thailand and Brunei. Diomedes is a trained lawyer with a master’s degree in international and comparative law from George Washington University. He is the author and co-author of several publications on sustainable procurement, fiscal savings, integrity and anti-corruption in public procurement.
Citation
Osborne, Michael and Berroa, Diomedes (2023, September 1). World Bank procurement approaches: Overcoming supply chain challenges in the Pacific. In the Journal of Supply Chain Management, Logistics and Procurement, Volume 6, Issue 1. https://doi.org/10.69554/XVMT6659.Publications LLP