Winner concentration

Winner concentration is one of the indicators used to calculate the zIndex score for evaluating contracting authorities.

What does this evaluate?

The winner concentration indicator measures whether a single bidder, or a very limited group of bidders, is awarded a significant portion of the authority's contracts.

Why do we evaluate this?

Best practice guides note that „avoiding the concentration of key areas in the hands of a single individual is fundamental in the prevention of corruption“ (OECD (2009), p. 35).

A high winner concentration (which gives a low indicator rating) is usually caused by:

The winner concentration indicator is complementary to the Bidder participation indicator. The number of tenders submitted for a given contract tells us about the number of competitors participating in the procedure, while the winner concentration indicator monitors which of those bidders is awarded the contract, checking for the occurrence of a single repeated winner (despite apparent competition).

How do we evaluate this?

Winner concentration is measured as the value of all contract(s) awarded to each individual bidder, divided by the total value of all contracts awarded by the respective contracting authority. Formula:

$$z_4 =\Big(\frac{(\sum\:value\:of\:all\:contracts)^2-\sum(value\:of\:contracts\:awarded\:to\:each\:bidder^2)}{\sum(value\:of\:all\:contracts\:^2)-(\sum\:value\:of\:all\:contracts)^2}\Big)^4 $$

The calculation is inspired by the standard Herfindahl index for measuring supplier concentration, adapted for the purpose of public procurement contracts. The formula has been modified in order not to discriminate smaller contracting authorities with lower number of contracts. The resulting index is then raised to the power of four in order to emphasize the difference between highly rated and lowly rated contracting authorities.

Who may be discriminated by this indicator?

This indicator puts minor contracting authorities that award fewer contracts at a disadvantage, because they have a more limited range of bidders. It should therefore be used only for the benchmarking of comparably sized contracting authorities.

Authorities whose previous management left a dubious legacy, having allowed a supplier to establish an irreplaceable position (so called vendor lock-in, see above) would also be unjustly penalized by this indicator, as would authorities who award contracts several times to the same supplier because the supplier's bids are genuinely of unmatched quality.

How to improve this rating