මාතෘකා
ගවේෂණය කරන්න
විදසුන්
ශ්රී ලංකාව: දකුණු ආසියාවේ අනෙක් රටවලට සාපේක්ශව පසුගාමීයෙකි
Sri Lanka the only South Asian nation to not blacklist corrupt contractors: Verité Research New report highlights gaps in guidelines as well as a lack of compliance Sri Lanka has the worst record among South Asian countries in blacklisting corrupt contractors in public procurement, according to a new report by Verité Research. The report shows that Sri Lanka is the only country in South Asia that 1) does not recognise engaging in corrupt and fraudulent activities during procurement as a valid reason for blacklisting 2) has not blacklisted contractors that have defaulted on contractual obligations despite having the provisions to do so. The first issue can be attributed to gaps in the procurement guidelines of 2006, which govern almost all public procurement in Sri Lanka — except in a few instances such as pharmaceutical procurement. The report emphasises the importance of urgently fixing these gaps to combat corruption and restore fiscal governance. The second issue – not blacklisting defaulting contractors – shows a lack of compliance with existing regulations. Sri Lanka has provisions not only to blacklist defaulting contractors, but also to publish their names in a public, online database. However, this database, maintained by the Department of Public Finance, is empty. By contrast, as of July 2023, Nepal had 629 entries on its online database, and Bangladesh had 510. High levels of corruption in procurement and the importance of fixing it have also been highlighted in the civil society governance diagnostic and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) governance diagnostic on Sri Lanka. In fact, one of the key IMF recommendations is to enact a public procurement law in Sri Lanka that reflects international best practices by December 2024. The report by Verité Research, titled “Backwards in Blacklisting: Gaps in Sri Lanka’s Procurement Framework Enable Corruption”, is available on the Verité Research website – https://www.veriteresearch.org/publication/sri-lanka-procurement-corruption-gaps/
විදසුන්
ශ්රී ලංකාව: දකුණු ආසියාවේ අනෙක් රටවලට සාපේක්ශව පසුගාමීයෙකි
Sri Lanka the only South Asian nation to not blacklist corrupt contractors: Verité Research New report highlights gaps in guidelines as well as a lack of compliance Sri Lanka has the worst record among South Asian countries in blacklisting corrupt contractors in public procurement, according to a new report by Verité Research. The report shows that Sri Lanka is the only country in South Asia that 1) does not recognise engaging in corrupt and fraudulent activities during procurement as a valid reason for blacklisting 2) has not blacklisted contractors that have defaulted on contractual obligations despite having the provisions to do so. The first issue can be attributed to gaps in the procurement guidelines of 2006, which govern almost all public procurement in Sri Lanka — except in a few instances such as pharmaceutical procurement. The report emphasises the importance of urgently fixing these gaps to combat corruption and restore fiscal governance. The second issue – not blacklisting defaulting contractors – shows a lack of compliance with existing regulations. Sri Lanka has provisions not only to blacklist defaulting contractors, but also to publish their names in a public, online database. However, this database, maintained by the Department of Public Finance, is empty. By contrast, as of July 2023, Nepal had 629 entries on its online database, and Bangladesh had 510. High levels of corruption in procurement and the importance of fixing it have also been highlighted in the civil society governance diagnostic and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) governance diagnostic on Sri Lanka. In fact, one of the key IMF recommendations is to enact a public procurement law in Sri Lanka that reflects international best practices by December 2024. The report by Verité Research, titled “Backwards in Blacklisting: Gaps in Sri Lanka’s Procurement Framework Enable Corruption”, is available on the Verité Research website – https://www.veriteresearch.org/publication/sri-lanka-procurement-corruption-gaps/
විදසුන්
ශ්රී ලංකාව: දකුණු ආසියාවේ අනෙක් රටවලට සාපේක්ශව පසුගාමීයෙකි
Sri Lanka the only South Asian nation to not blacklist corrupt contractors: Verité Research New report highlights gaps in guidelines as well as a lack of compliance Sri Lanka has the worst record among South Asian countries in blacklisting corrupt contractors in public procurement, according to a new report by Verité Research. The report shows that Sri Lanka is the only country in South Asia that 1) does not recognise engaging in corrupt and fraudulent activities during procurement as a valid reason for blacklisting 2) has not blacklisted contractors that have defaulted on contractual obligations despite having the provisions to do so. The first issue can be attributed to gaps in the procurement guidelines of 2006, which govern almost all public procurement in Sri Lanka — except in a few instances such as pharmaceutical procurement. The report emphasises the importance of urgently fixing these gaps to combat corruption and restore fiscal governance. The second issue – not blacklisting defaulting contractors – shows a lack of compliance with existing regulations. Sri Lanka has provisions not only to blacklist defaulting contractors, but also to publish their names in a public, online database. However, this database, maintained by the Department of Public Finance, is empty. By contrast, as of July 2023, Nepal had 629 entries on its online database, and Bangladesh had 510. High levels of corruption in procurement and the importance of fixing it have also been highlighted in the civil society governance diagnostic and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) governance diagnostic on Sri Lanka. In fact, one of the key IMF recommendations is to enact a public procurement law in Sri Lanka that reflects international best practices by December 2024. The report by Verité Research, titled “Backwards in Blacklisting: Gaps in Sri Lanka’s Procurement Framework Enable Corruption”, is available on the Verité Research website – https://www.veriteresearch.org/publication/sri-lanka-procurement-corruption-gaps/
විදසුන්
ශ්රී ලංකාව: දකුණු ආසියාවේ අනෙක් රටවලට සාපේක්ශව පසුගාමීයෙකි
Sri Lanka the only South Asian nation to not blacklist corrupt contractors: Verité Research New report highlights gaps in guidelines as well as a lack of compliance Sri Lanka has the worst record among South Asian countries in blacklisting corrupt contractors in public procurement, according to a new report by Verité Research. The report shows that Sri Lanka is the only country in South Asia that 1) does not recognise engaging in corrupt and fraudulent activities during procurement as a valid reason for blacklisting 2) has not blacklisted contractors that have defaulted on contractual obligations despite having the provisions to do so. The first issue can be attributed to gaps in the procurement guidelines of 2006, which govern almost all public procurement in Sri Lanka — except in a few instances such as pharmaceutical procurement. The report emphasises the importance of urgently fixing these gaps to combat corruption and restore fiscal governance. The second issue – not blacklisting defaulting contractors – shows a lack of compliance with existing regulations. Sri Lanka has provisions not only to blacklist defaulting contractors, but also to publish their names in a public, online database. However, this database, maintained by the Department of Public Finance, is empty. By contrast, as of July 2023, Nepal had 629 entries on its online database, and Bangladesh had 510. High levels of corruption in procurement and the importance of fixing it have also been highlighted in the civil society governance diagnostic and the International Monetary Fund (IMF) governance diagnostic on Sri Lanka. In fact, one of the key IMF recommendations is to enact a public procurement law in Sri Lanka that reflects international best practices by December 2024. The report by Verité Research, titled “Backwards in Blacklisting: Gaps in Sri Lanka’s Procurement Framework Enable Corruption”, is available on the Verité Research website – https://www.veriteresearch.org/publication/sri-lanka-procurement-corruption-gaps/
දත්ත
වාර්තා
පනත් සහ ගැසට් පත්ර
විදසුන්
ඩෑෂ්බෝඩ්
Annual Budget Dashboard
අයවැය පොරොන්දු
Fiscal Indicators
ඉන්ධන මිල නිරීක්ෂණ ට්රැකරය
IMF මීටරය
යටිතල පහසුකම් විපරම
PF වයර්
අපි ගැන
SIN
English
සිංහල
தமிழ்
;
Thank You
රාජ්ය මූල්ය දත්ත හා විශ්ලේෂණයන් සඳහා
නිදහස් හා විවෘත ප්රවේශය
නිවස
PF වයර්
PF වයර්
වීශේෂාංග
SriLankan loses Rs. 12.9 b in Q1
SriLankan Airlines recorded a Rs. 12.9 billion net loss in Q1 FY25, driven by cash flow challenges, legacy issues, and financial costs from past debt. ...
2024-11-05
The Morning
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
තෝරාගැනීම
මාතෘකාව
2021 අයවැය
2022 අයවැය
2023 අයවැය
2024 අයවැය
International Monetary Fund
Articles
ආදායම
වියදම
ණය
සේවක අර්ථසාධක අරමුදල
මූල්යකරණය
කෘෂිකර්ම හා වාරිමාර්ග
සිවිල් පරිපාලනය
ආරක්ෂාව හා මහජන සාමය
අධ්යාපනය
බලශක්තිය සහ ජල සැපයුම
පරිසරය
සෞඛ්යය
සමාජ ආරක්ෂණය සහ සුභසාධනය
ප්රවාහනය සහ සන්නිවේදනය
නාගරික සංවර්ධනය සහ නිවාස
Surakimu Ganga Programme: Govt sets aside Rs 200 M to protect 103 rivers
The Government has set aside Rs 200 million for the Surakimu Ganga Programme which aims to protect 103 rivers islandwide. Funding has been allocated in response to Minister of Environment Mahinda Amaraweera’s request, and projects for...
2021-09-14
Ceylon Today
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
Govt. to negotiate US$ 2.5 BN loan to pay for fuel import bill
Government is to proceed with talks for a massive US$ 2.5 billion loan from foreign insurance or pension funds to offset part of the accumulated fuel import bills, ministerial sources said.
2021-09-12
Sunday Times
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
Tax amnesty bill, new SEC Bill get Parliament approval
Parliament yesterday approved two important finance bills including one to grant tax amnesties as well as the new Securities and Exchange Commission of Sri Lanka Bill. The Finance Bill which indemnifies persons who voluntarily disclose taxab...
2021-09-08
Daily FT
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
17 State-run institutions show total loss of LKR 131.62 BN
It is reported that 17 of the 52 State-run institutions, including the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), have registered losses totalling Rs 131.62 billion in 2020.
2021-09-06
Ceylon Today
වැඩිදුර කියවන්න
page
132
of
154
‹
1
2
...
132
...
153
154
›