Contract management practices and sustainability preparedness in Local Government Engineering Department (LGED): A review study
Date
2025-09
Authors
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Journal ISSN
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Publisher
BRAC University
Abstract
Public sector infrastructure projects are vital to Bangladesh’s socioeconomic progress,
with the Local Government Engineering Department (LGED) leading their delivery. However,
persistent weaknesses in contract management hinder timely and cost-effective outcomes.
Challenges include poor planning, procurement delays, weak monitoring, limited
accountability enforcement, and inadequate integration of sustainability principles.
This study employs a mixed-methods approach: a survey of 44 LGED officials and case
studies of government-funded, mixed-funded, and donor-funded projects. Results show
systemic shortcomings: only 14-20% of projects were completed on time, over 75% required
extensions, and cost overruns occurred in up to 11.54% of cases. Liquidated damages were
enforced in fewer than 7% of contracts. Digital tools are underutilized, with only 13.33% of
officials using contract management software.
Sustainability preparedness is partial. Although half of respondents reported its
inclusion, practices mostly address environmental aspects, while social and economic
dimensions, such as gender inclusivity and life-cycle costing, remain overlooked. Donor
funded projects demonstrated stronger sustainability compliance due to external requirements.
The analysis, framed through Principal-Agent, Transaction Cost, and Institutional
theories, reveals that LGED’s challenges are systemic and institutional rather than individual.
To address them, the study recommends reforms including a centralized Contract Management
Information System (CMIS), mandatory pre-feasibility assessments, performance-based
payments, sustainability scorecards, updated SOPs, a dedicated Contract Management and
Sustainability Cell, and professional certification programs.
Strengthening contract management is a strategic imperative for enhancing
transparency, accountability, and sustainability in public infrastructure, supporting
Bangladesh’s development goals and the SDGs.
Description
This thesis is submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Masters in Procurement and Supply Management, 2025.
Cataloged from the PDF version of the thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 70-71).
Cataloged from the PDF version of the thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (pages 70-71).
Keywords
Contract management, Sustainability, Public procurement, Local Government Engineering Department, LGED
