E-procurement in the EU opens doors to cross-border business

The European Commission is moving a step closer to making it easier for companies, in particular small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), to bid for public sector contracts anywhere in the EU; a crucial step towards achieving the single European...

The European Commission is moving a step closer to making it easier for companies, in particular small- and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs), to bid for public sector contracts anywhere in the EU; a crucial step towards achieving the single European market.

The commission said it will co-finance a pilot project, driven by eight European countries that will create the conditions to link existing national electronic public procurement (e-procurement) systems.

Simplifying cross-border procurement will generate savings on administrative and transaction costs and will benefit taxpayers who ultimately pay for public purchases. The project will invest more than € 19 million over three years, € 9.8 million of which will come from the European Commission's Competitiveness and Innovation Programme.

Government contracts amount to more than 16 per cent of the EU's gross domestic product (GDP), but many European companies, especially SMEs, miss out on this substantial business because of the extensive paperwork required for bidding for government contracts, particularly across borders.

Several member states have already realised the high impact of e-procurement, generating savings on administrative and transaction costs by eliminating invoices and orders by fax or e-mail, the reduction of data entered manually and the time businesses spend queuing, filling out forms and sorting out paper work. While e-procurement is paving the way for simpler, more open and transparent public procurement at national level, the cross-border challenge remains.

The European Commission is working with Austria, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary and Italy as well as Norway (as a member of the European Economic Area) to enable companies from one country to respond to public procurement tenders in another. The project will not replace, but rather build on existing national e-procurement systems using information and communication technologies to enable them to communicate with each other. This would allow, for instance, a Czech or Swedish company to bid for a Spanish or Hungarian government contract as easily as for a contract in their home country.

The results go beyond saving taxpayers' money and having leaner procedures: By levelling the playing field for SMEs, the backbone of Europe's economy, cross border e-procurement can boost competitiveness by providing tools for businesses to access the entire European market for public services. At present, SMEs account for 67 per cent of employees in the business sector and 58 per cent of turnover in the EU, but only win 42 per cent of government contracts.

This pilot project, called PEPPOL (Pan European Public Procurement online), focuses on cross-border activities within the procurement process. It will enable all member states and other stakeholders, including standardisation bodies, the software industry and SMEs, whether participating in the project or not, to follow the work and influence the definition of specifications as they will be developed.

More information at http://ec.europa.eu/information_society/activities/egovernment/policy/impact/eproc/index_en.htm .

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