Monday, 8 September 2025

Mitigating Corruption in Public Procurement: The Role of E-Procurement Risk Strategies in Tanzania | Chapter 2 | New Advances in Business, Management and Economics Vol. 10

 

Background: The government of Tanzania has started to fully implement an online procurement system since 2020 as an effort to increase efficiency and reduce corruption in the public procurement sector. However, despite these reforms, corruption has persisted in various forms.

 

Purpose: This study aimed to examine the effect of e-procurement risk mitigation strategies on preventing corruption in public procurement following the widespread use of bad corrupt practices in the public procurement process.

 

Methods: The study employed a case study design, and the study population involved 140 staff working at the Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries and officials working at the Prevention and Combating Corruption Bureau (PCCB). The study employed the Yamane formula to get a sample size of 104 respondents, whereby questionnaires, an interview guide and a documentary checklist were used as data collection instruments, and during administering the tools, all respondents were responsive, which made a response rate of 100%. The collected data were analysed using descriptive statistics and inferential statistics (regression model) to determine the effect of e-procurement on preventing corruption in public procurement.

 

Results: The results indicate that three variables out of five, namely visibility (0.000), risk control (0.016), and political control (0.004), had a p-value < 0.05, which means that these variables significantly contribute to preventing corruption in public procurement under e-procurement.

 

Conclusion: When public procurement practitioners and suppliers use the e-procurement system effectively, it will prevent physical interactions between the parties, thus ending corruption. In this case, policy makers and decision makers should establish a robust mechanism of preventing corruption in public procurement by digitalising the procurement practices through automating the whole process by using e-procurement technology, as well as integrating all participants and stakeholders. This will establish a transparent procurement process whereby all online transactions are visible to all parties, thus increasing the integrity of procurement practitioners and suppliers on the other side. The awareness campaign and empowerment of institutions and regulatory frameworks will help end loopholes that still tempt corruption in public procurement. This study was limited to two organisations, which may not achieve the principle of study generalisation on corruption in Tanzania. Future research should include a larger and more diverse sample of public institutions across different sectors and regions of Tanzania.

 

 

Author(s) Details

Chawala, E
Ministry of Livestock and Fisheries, P.O. Box Dodoma, Tanzania.

 

Maagi, B.
College of Business Education, P.O. Box 2077, Dodoma, Tanzania.

 

Please see the book here:- https://doi.org/10.9734/bpi/nabme/v10/6128

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