ISSUE NO. 218 | December 11, 2017


Debarment on rise. Are donors becoming more critical in the fight against corruption?

Wrongful actions and professional misconduct in Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) financed projects is not a sporadic phenomenon. This has led to the establishment of the lists of penalized or excluded companies, also called debarred, which are declared ineligible to bid on such contracts.

The debarment system applied by MDBs comes into effect in one of the four sanctionable practices: fraud, corruption, collusion, or coercion. Debarment results in sanctions applied for a period of time, which is dependent on the level of severity of the case. It can last between 3 to 15 years, or permanently in extreme cases.

Lists of sanctioned organizations usually differ from institution to institution. However, in April 2010 five MDBs, the World Bank, African Development Bank, Inter-American Development Bank, Asian Development Bank and European Bank for Reconstruction and Development signed the Cross-Debarment agreement to mutually enforce other’s debarment actions.

Over the last period the increased number of companies identified committing fraud or other misconducts by the MDBs demonstrates the engagement of the Banks in the fight against corruption. The graph below shows the total number of organisations and individuals debarred by MDBs till July 2017.

Total of Debarred Organizations and Individual Consultants in 2017

For businesses, particularly those that rely heavily on MDB or government contracts, debarment represent a significant and undeniable loss of credibility. This impacts the organisation’s ability to generate revenue. Therefore, entities that form consortiums with the aim to increase their chances of winning contracts, need to perform a due-diligence check on their partners. Fraudulent practices of one partner will inevitably lead to a disqualification of the whole joint venture and an investigation, during which temporary sanctions can be applied to all consortium members.

Debarment, however, also has a positive effect. It excludes dishonest contractors from significant business transactions and sends an important message that sanctionable practices are not and will not be tolerated.

Information on all organizations sanctioned (over 1,200) by the major MDBs can be found on www.developmentaid.org. DevelopmentAid also publishes the combined lists of all the sanctioned individuals (over 900) to assure that one does not include CVs of debarred experts in their technical proposal. Last but not least, DevelopmentAid keeps track of the past performance of over 87,000 companies, their successful and unsuccessful bids, which allows one to quickly identify a reliable partner in the matter of several clicks. For more information visit www.developmentaid.org.


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