Navigating contract renegotiations with sustainability at the helm: Societal benefits and transaction costs

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Autores

Domingos, Fernando Deodato
Heinrich, Carolyn J.
Saussier, Stéphane
Shiva, Mehdi

Orientador

Co-orientadores

Citações na Scopus

Tipo de documento

Artigo Científico

Data

2024

Unidades Organizacionais

Resumo

Public procurement and cross-sector collaborations in national economies offer the opportunity for advances in sustainability practices, including through sustainability-related renegotiations during the execution of public contracts. Using rich, granular data from contract modification notices made publicly available by the European Union (EU) tenders electronic daily (TED), we investigate whether sustainability-related renegotiations, apart from generating positive environmental externalities, also limit ex-post transaction costs associated with contract renegotiations. Transaction costs are assessed in our study by the sentiment of renegotiations (negative or conflictual) and potential red flags associated with overly costly adjustments. Our findings suggest that regardless of whether contracts were initially focused on sustainable issues or not, sustainability-related renegotiations could have the dual benefit of a priori reducing environmental externalities while further limiting ex-post transaction costs associated with contract execution. More generally, contract modifications (renegotiations) may be under-utilised in public procurement contracts given their possible ‘double dividends’.

Palavras-chave

Public procurement renegotiation; Sustainable contracting; Transaction costs; EU tenders

Titulo de periódico

Journal of Strategic Contracting and Negotiation
DOI

Título de Livro

URL na Scopus

Sinopse

Objetivos de aprendizagem

Idioma

Inglês

Notas

Membros da banca

Área do Conhecimento CNPQ

CIENCIAS SOCIAIS APLICADAS

Citação

Avaliação

Revisão

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