Abstract

The article discusses the responsibilities of the procurement commission, acting as one of the main collective entities on the part of the customer, to verify the accuracy of the information contained in the application to combat potential abuse of the participants in the procurement. The article discusses the responsibilities of the procurement commission, as one of the main collective entities on the part of the customer, designed to combat potential abuses of procurement participants, to verify the accuracy of the information contained in the application. The consolidation of these responsibilities in the law is analyzed, including in general rules that both establish the principle of ensuring competition and the constitutional prohibition of unfair competition, some existing mechanisms for verifying the accuracy of certain information available as part of an application for participation in tenders are considered, and an attempt is made to differentiate the rights of the said commission from its responsibilities in this aspect. It also examines some of the difficulties that make it objectively impossible to verify the accuracy of all information contained in the application. Some issues of bringing to administrative responsibility for failure to fulfill the obligation to verify the accuracy of information, actually expressed in unlawful admission to participation in auctions, or, conversely, refusal from such participation, are being studied. At the level of problem formulation, one of the imperfections of legislative regulation is outlined, expressed in the absence of an effective mechanism that should allow procurement commissions to control the accuracy of all information provided as part of the application.

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