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Identify the Purchases Most at Risk for Bid-Rigging

12/3/2014
Detecting bid-rigging schemes is no easy feat. It becomes a little bit easier, however, if you know which purchases are the most likely to be the subject of anti-competitive schemes by vendors. Three factors make a product or service especially vulnerable to bid-rigging:
 
· Products that have no readily available substitutes. When buyers cannot feasibly switch to another product if the price of the current product goes too high, they have no choice but to accept the rigged bid and are far less likely to question the high price.
· Products that are either homogenous or at least simple or standardized. If the product offered by every bidder is identical in terms of quality, safety, appearance, effectiveness, and all factors other than price, then the bid-rigging conspirators can steer the contract to the pre-determined winner just by controlling who bids what dollar amount.
· Products that are offered by a small and stable group of bidders year after year. If the same few bidders are the only ones submitting a bid each time the purchaser advertises an opportunity, a bid-rigging conspiracy is easy to maintain. A few conspirators can communicate and keep an eye on each other easier than when there are many competitors. Having new sellers appear on the scene on a regular basis is a nightmare for conspirators, since they have to recruit the new players into their scheme each time to keep the conspiracy going.
 
Two products — school milk and computer software — provide good examples.
 
On the one hand, school milk has every one of the factors described above. There are no real substitutes for milk in meeting the nutritional needs of the students. Milk is homogenous (pun intended). In other words, every container of 2 percent milk is identical to every other, regardless of the vendor. And finally, the number of dairies large enough to bid on public school milk contracts is relatively finite and changes very little from year to year.
 
On the other hand, computer software is widely varied, ranging from simple to complex. A vast number of sellers offer it, and many frequently come and go from the market. Purchasers judge the products on far more than price alone. They look at how user-friendly it is, whether additional hardware is needed, how well it interfaces with existing programs, how much technical support is provided, and much more.
 
While no method of predicting bid-rigging is ever absolute, it is easy to see why it would be easier to conspire on school milk contracts than computer software purchases.
 
The takeaway? Look at the list of products and services you purchase through competitive bidding and apply this test. You will be able to determine which purchases are most at risk for bid-rigging and keep an extra-watchful eye on those contracts, reducing the likelihood of being harmed by a bid-rigging scheme.