Public Procurement Reform in Morocco

Over the last decade Morocco has made important strides in responding to citizen demands for more transparency, accountability, and shared prosperity. This has also extended into the public sector and its varied functions. In Morocco public contracts account for some 17 percent of GDP and are responsible for critical activities in the economy, including delivery of key public services.2 Given its important role, the Government of Morocco (GoM) prioritized public procurement for comprehensive reforms. Starting with 2003 Country Procurement Assessment Report (CPAR) Morocco embarked on a productive dialogue with the World Bank to improve its procurement system and optimize the performance of its public investments.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Lipson, Rachel, Benouniche, Salim, Keita, Abdoulaye, Faridi, Khadija
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2014-03
Subjects:ACCOUNTABILITY, ANTI-CORRUPTION, AUCTION, BARRIERS TO ENTRY, BEST PRACTICE, BIDDERS, BIDDING, BUSINESSES, BUYERS, CAPACITY BUILDING, CIVIL SOCIETY, CLAUSES, COMPETITIVE PROCESS, COMPLAINT, COMPLAINTS, CONTRACTORS, COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT, COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT, E-PROCUREMENT, E-SYSTEM, ELEARNING, ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT, ENTRY POINTS, EPROCUREMENT, ETHICS, GOOD GOVERNANCE, GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS, IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY, INITIATIVE, INSTITUTION, INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK, INTEGRITY, INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE, INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS, JUDICIARY, LAWS, LEGAL BASIS, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, MANDATE, MINISTERS, NATIONAL PROCUREMENT, NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTORS, PROCUREMENT, PROCUREMENT CAPACITY, PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES, PROCUREMENT POLICY, PROCUREMENT PROCESS, PROCUREMENT REVIEW, PROCUREMENT SYSTEM, PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS, PROCUREMENT TRAINING, PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY, PROCURING ENTITY, PROVISIONS, PUBLIC, PUBLIC CONTRACTS, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM, PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, RESULTS, SOLICITATION, SUPPLIERS, TENDERS, TRANSPARENCY, TYPES OF CONTRACTS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/03/20143893/public-procurement-reform-morocco
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/20553
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
id dig-okr-1098620553
record_format koha
spelling dig-okr-10986205532024-08-08T13:48:30Z Public Procurement Reform in Morocco Lipson, Rachel Benouniche, Salim Keita, Abdoulaye Faridi, Khadija ACCOUNTABILITY ANTI-CORRUPTION AUCTION BARRIERS TO ENTRY BEST PRACTICE BIDDERS BIDDING BUSINESSES BUYERS CAPACITY BUILDING CIVIL SOCIETY CLAUSES COMPETITIVE PROCESS COMPLAINT COMPLAINTS CONTRACTORS COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT E-PROCUREMENT E-SYSTEM ELEARNING ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT ENTRY POINTS EPROCUREMENT ETHICS GOOD GOVERNANCE GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY INITIATIVE INSTITUTION INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK INTEGRITY INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS JUDICIARY LAWS LEGAL BASIS LOCAL GOVERNMENT MANDATE MINISTERS NATIONAL PROCUREMENT NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATE SECTORS PROCUREMENT PROCUREMENT CAPACITY PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES PROCUREMENT POLICY PROCUREMENT PROCESS PROCUREMENT REVIEW PROCUREMENT SYSTEM PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS PROCUREMENT TRAINING PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY PROCURING ENTITY PROVISIONS PUBLIC PUBLIC CONTRACTS PUBLIC PROCUREMENT PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM REGULATORY FRAMEWORK RESULTS SOLICITATION SUPPLIERS TENDERS TRANSPARENCY TYPES OF CONTRACTS Over the last decade Morocco has made important strides in responding to citizen demands for more transparency, accountability, and shared prosperity. This has also extended into the public sector and its varied functions. In Morocco public contracts account for some 17 percent of GDP and are responsible for critical activities in the economy, including delivery of key public services.2 Given its important role, the Government of Morocco (GoM) prioritized public procurement for comprehensive reforms. Starting with 2003 Country Procurement Assessment Report (CPAR) Morocco embarked on a productive dialogue with the World Bank to improve its procurement system and optimize the performance of its public investments. 2014-11-19T16:49:08Z 2014-11-19T16:49:08Z 2014-03 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/03/20143893/public-procurement-reform-morocco https://hdl.handle.net/10986/20553 English en_US MENA knowledge and learning quick notes series;no. 117 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic ACCOUNTABILITY
ANTI-CORRUPTION
AUCTION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIDDERS
BIDDING
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLAUSES
COMPETITIVE PROCESS
COMPLAINT
COMPLAINTS
CONTRACTORS
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT
E-PROCUREMENT
E-SYSTEM
ELEARNING
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT
ENTRY POINTS
EPROCUREMENT
ETHICS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTION
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
JUDICIARY
LAWS
LEGAL BASIS
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MANDATE
MINISTERS
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTORS
PROCUREMENT
PROCUREMENT CAPACITY
PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES
PROCUREMENT POLICY
PROCUREMENT PROCESS
PROCUREMENT REVIEW
PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT TRAINING
PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY
PROCURING ENTITY
PROVISIONS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RESULTS
SOLICITATION
SUPPLIERS
TENDERS
TRANSPARENCY
TYPES OF CONTRACTS
ACCOUNTABILITY
ANTI-CORRUPTION
AUCTION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIDDERS
BIDDING
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLAUSES
COMPETITIVE PROCESS
COMPLAINT
COMPLAINTS
CONTRACTORS
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT
E-PROCUREMENT
E-SYSTEM
ELEARNING
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT
ENTRY POINTS
EPROCUREMENT
ETHICS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTION
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
JUDICIARY
LAWS
LEGAL BASIS
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MANDATE
MINISTERS
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTORS
PROCUREMENT
PROCUREMENT CAPACITY
PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES
PROCUREMENT POLICY
PROCUREMENT PROCESS
PROCUREMENT REVIEW
PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT TRAINING
PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY
PROCURING ENTITY
PROVISIONS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RESULTS
SOLICITATION
SUPPLIERS
TENDERS
TRANSPARENCY
TYPES OF CONTRACTS
spellingShingle ACCOUNTABILITY
ANTI-CORRUPTION
AUCTION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIDDERS
BIDDING
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLAUSES
COMPETITIVE PROCESS
COMPLAINT
COMPLAINTS
CONTRACTORS
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT
E-PROCUREMENT
E-SYSTEM
ELEARNING
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT
ENTRY POINTS
EPROCUREMENT
ETHICS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTION
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
JUDICIARY
LAWS
LEGAL BASIS
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MANDATE
MINISTERS
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTORS
PROCUREMENT
PROCUREMENT CAPACITY
PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES
PROCUREMENT POLICY
PROCUREMENT PROCESS
PROCUREMENT REVIEW
PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT TRAINING
PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY
PROCURING ENTITY
PROVISIONS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RESULTS
SOLICITATION
SUPPLIERS
TENDERS
TRANSPARENCY
TYPES OF CONTRACTS
ACCOUNTABILITY
ANTI-CORRUPTION
AUCTION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIDDERS
BIDDING
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLAUSES
COMPETITIVE PROCESS
COMPLAINT
COMPLAINTS
CONTRACTORS
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT
E-PROCUREMENT
E-SYSTEM
ELEARNING
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT
ENTRY POINTS
EPROCUREMENT
ETHICS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTION
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
JUDICIARY
LAWS
LEGAL BASIS
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MANDATE
MINISTERS
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTORS
PROCUREMENT
PROCUREMENT CAPACITY
PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES
PROCUREMENT POLICY
PROCUREMENT PROCESS
PROCUREMENT REVIEW
PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT TRAINING
PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY
PROCURING ENTITY
PROVISIONS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RESULTS
SOLICITATION
SUPPLIERS
TENDERS
TRANSPARENCY
TYPES OF CONTRACTS
Lipson, Rachel
Benouniche, Salim
Keita, Abdoulaye
Faridi, Khadija
Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
description Over the last decade Morocco has made important strides in responding to citizen demands for more transparency, accountability, and shared prosperity. This has also extended into the public sector and its varied functions. In Morocco public contracts account for some 17 percent of GDP and are responsible for critical activities in the economy, including delivery of key public services.2 Given its important role, the Government of Morocco (GoM) prioritized public procurement for comprehensive reforms. Starting with 2003 Country Procurement Assessment Report (CPAR) Morocco embarked on a productive dialogue with the World Bank to improve its procurement system and optimize the performance of its public investments.
topic_facet ACCOUNTABILITY
ANTI-CORRUPTION
AUCTION
BARRIERS TO ENTRY
BEST PRACTICE
BIDDERS
BIDDING
BUSINESSES
BUYERS
CAPACITY BUILDING
CIVIL SOCIETY
CLAUSES
COMPETITIVE PROCESS
COMPLAINT
COMPLAINTS
CONTRACTORS
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT
COUNTRY PROCUREMENT ASSESSMENT REPORT
E-PROCUREMENT
E-SYSTEM
ELEARNING
ELECTRONIC PROCUREMENT
ENTRY POINTS
EPROCUREMENT
ETHICS
GOOD GOVERNANCE
GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS
IMPLEMENTATION STRATEGY
INITIATIVE
INSTITUTION
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
INTEGRITY
INTERNATIONAL BEST PRACTICE
INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS
JUDICIARY
LAWS
LEGAL BASIS
LOCAL GOVERNMENT
MANDATE
MINISTERS
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT
NATIONAL PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATE SECTORS
PROCUREMENT
PROCUREMENT CAPACITY
PROCUREMENT OPPORTUNITIES
PROCUREMENT POLICY
PROCUREMENT PROCESS
PROCUREMENT REVIEW
PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
PROCUREMENT SYSTEMS
PROCUREMENT TRAINING
PROCUREMENT TRAINING STRATEGY
PROCURING ENTITY
PROVISIONS
PUBLIC
PUBLIC CONTRACTS
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT REFORM
PUBLIC PROCUREMENT SYSTEM
REGULATORY FRAMEWORK
RESULTS
SOLICITATION
SUPPLIERS
TENDERS
TRANSPARENCY
TYPES OF CONTRACTS
author Lipson, Rachel
Benouniche, Salim
Keita, Abdoulaye
Faridi, Khadija
author_facet Lipson, Rachel
Benouniche, Salim
Keita, Abdoulaye
Faridi, Khadija
author_sort Lipson, Rachel
title Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
title_short Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
title_full Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
title_fullStr Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
title_full_unstemmed Public Procurement Reform in Morocco
title_sort public procurement reform in morocco
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2014-03
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/03/20143893/public-procurement-reform-morocco
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/20553
work_keys_str_mv AT lipsonrachel publicprocurementreforminmorocco
AT benounichesalim publicprocurementreforminmorocco
AT keitaabdoulaye publicprocurementreforminmorocco
AT faridikhadija publicprocurementreforminmorocco
_version_ 1807158170566524928