Public procurement represents a large part of the economy in Germany
EUR 500 billion
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15% of GDP
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35% of government spending
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With such amounts involved, public procurement can play an important role in shaping society and affect citizen’s well-being. This is why analyses of public procurement need to go beyond spending. In particular, Germany could increase data gathering and measurement of public procurement’s impact on four dimensions of future well-being: social, environmental, economic and human capitals:

Since "What doesn’t get measured, doesn’t get done", the OECD compiled a set of indicators to measure the impact of public procurement (See Table 1.2).
Key Recommendations
Germany’s 2016 public procurement reform changed profoundly the procurement system at all levels of government. It significantly streamlined the legal framework, and aligned Germany’s system with the new EU directives on procurement. More can be done to maximise the potential of public procurement:
- Track the impact of public procurement on the four capitals for future well-being (social, natural, economic, human)
- Further streamline the legal framework
- Use bundling more strategically and systematically
- Continue developing the e-procurement system
- Align strategies for sustainability and public procurement practices
- Invest in professionalisation of public procurers
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*Bundling: combining two or more procurement needs previously provided or performed under separate smaller contracts into a solicitation for a single contract)
For more information, contact the Public Procurement Unit: [email protected]