Determinants of non-compliance in public procurement in Uganda: A case study of Civil Aviation Authority
Abstract
The study examined the determinants of non-compliance in public procurement in Uganda. To explore
the effect of professionalism on public procurement, examine the effect of familiarity on public
procurement and to assess the effect of organizational culture on public procurement. The study used a
case study design and the study focused on Civil Aviation Authority. The population of the study was
90 respondents and the sample size was 73 though the actual respondents were 58. The study used both
qualitative and quantitative research approaches for data collection. The study indicated that there is a
positive moderate relationship between professionalism and public procurement presented by 0.532.
The study indicated that there is a positive relationship between familiarity and public procurement
represented by 0.446. The study indicated that there is a positive relationship between organizational
culture and public procurement presented by 0.316. The study concludes that the procurement officers
have capacity to negotiate contracts since procurement is recognized as a profession. The study
concludes that the organization has a budget to cater for continuous training of procurement officers
since the organization is an association of a professional body. The study concludes that staffs are well
conversant with the legal obligations to follow the procurement regulations. The study concludes that
the overall knowledge of procurement rules is low among the procuring officers since there are
complaints raised about the tender processes. The study concludes that sometimes public procurement
regulations are ignored by the procuring officers. The study concludes that efficient communication
increases commitment of procuring officers. The study concludes that organizational culture increases
commitment of goals and objectives of public procurement. The study recommends that the findings
will facilitate future researchers who choose to conduct empirical studies on public procurement
compliance in Uganda and other geographical contexts. This will also be of significant benefit to policy
makers in understanding how to improve public procurement compliance and reduce the negative
consequences of non-compliance. By enhancing compliance, vast resources usually lost through non-
compliance and corruption in public procurement will be saved. This study also revealed that public
procurement rule compliance generates a mixture of both negative and positive consequences. The
study may guide management and policy makers in ensuring compliance in public procurement while
minimizing its negative consequences such as slow service delivery due to bureaucratic delays, low
employee motivation due to deprived discretion imposed by procurement rules and cognitive
dissonance emanating from forced compliance.