Legal misconduct

Legal misconduct is one of the indicators used to calculate the zIndex score for evaluating contracting authorities.

What do we evaluate?

Indicator reflects the number of misconducts detected by the Office for the Protection of Competition (OPC), which is the authorized body for reviewing the legality of public procurement practices of contracting entities. A contract is penalized only if a serious misconduct was detected.

Why do we evaluate?

Legality of public procurement is a fundamental prerequisite for best practice. Contracting authority may never become efficient and effective while committing misconduct that can be challenged, resulting in possible tendering procedure cancellation. It is the OPC that reviews the legality of tendering procedures, most commonly based on a bidder's complaint. If a serious misconduct on contracting authority's part is detected (especially defective tender specifications or improper approach towards bidders), such contract does not comply with best practice principles. In 2013 the OPC initiated 383 administrative proceedings with the total of 470 reviewed contracts (OPC Annual Report 2018). Following cases of misconduct were identified as most frequent:

Such serious misconduct clearly fails to comply both with the law and the best practice principles.

How do we evaluate?

We manually browse through all OPC rulings related to the evaluated contracting authorities in the reference period. We focus on those where misconduct has been proven and may be considered as serious according to the methodology below.

Only final rulings of the OPC are considered in the indicator evaluation - e.g. if the first-instance decision ruled the misconduct as proven, but then the ruling was changed in the contracting authority's favour in the second-instance decision, only the latter is taken into account. Should the OPC proceeding still be pending then the last published ruling is taken into account. Likewise in case of judicial review of the OPC ruling - only the last ruling of the court is considered (not previous rulings of either the court or the OPC).

Definition of pertinence to the reference period proves sometimes difficult. Contract notice publication date is mostly regarded as the decisive point. Some cases are treated differently however, due to specific circumstances (e.g. OPC proceeding includes several different contracts, misconduct was committed in course of the award procedure etc.). The OPC reviews various degrees of misconduct - but Legal misconduct subindicator only reflects the serious cases according to the following criteria:

Indicator for an individual contract is assigned the value of 1 if OPC's ruling proved a case of serous misconduct and the value of 0 if not. Aggregate value for all contracts of a respective contracting authority is then computed as follows:

$$z_7 = 1 - \Bigg(\frac{4 \times number\:of\:serious\:misconduct\:cases}{number\:of\:contracts}\Bigg)$$

Number of serious misconduct cases is a number of successful objections to the OPC against the contracting authority's actions, where the OPC proved serious misconduct in tendering procedure execution falling within our reference period. Number of contracts is the total number of contract award notices. Application of the overall fourth root enhances the effect of successful objections on the indicator value.

Who may be discriminated by this indicator?

The OPC reviews just a fraction of public procurement procedures (initiated by a complainant's proposal in most cases, number of ex officio reviews is minimal) - it is most likely that a number of unreviewed contracts would also prove defective. A contracting authority proven guilty of misconduct therefore does not necessarily perform worse procurement than an unreviewed one.

Indicator may punish authorities that despite believing in their inculpability recognized the OPC's ruling rather than challenged it. They cancelled or adjusted the respective tendering procedure - mostly because of time or the petty nature of the alleged misconduct. In the same manner a contracting authority is still penalized if the dispute over the verdict is yet not concluded (by second-instance decision or in court).

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