Vatican norms for spending, awarding contracts refined

Vatican norms for spending, awarding contracts refined
St. Peter's Basilica. Photo: CNS/Paul Haring

VATICAN (CNS): Continuing the updating of laws and norms concerning Vatican expenditures and processes for awarding contracts, Pope Francis issued two documents on January 16.

The shorter document, on “the limits and modalities of ordinary administration,” said that when an expenditure does not exceed €150,000 [about US$163,000] or amounts to less than two per cent of the office’s average annual budget for the past three years, the expenditure does not require the approval of the prefect of the Secretariat of the Economy.

The other document, which is much longer, updates the 2020 “Norms on Transparency, Control and Competition of Public Contracts of the Holy See and Vatican City State.”

The list of people and companies with which Vatican offices are not allowed to sign contracts has been expanded.

Excluded from bidding on Vatican jobs are those who have committed “serious violations” of the obligation to pay taxes; who have been found “in breach of obligations relating to the protection of the health and safety of workers, according to the law or applicable collective agreements”; and those who are “resident or established in jurisdictions with a high risk of money laundering, financing of terrorism and/or proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, as identified by [Vatican] Supervisory and Financial Information Authority in the performance of its institutional activities.”

In the document on the ordinary administration of Vatican and curial offices, Pope Francis said the new norms “represent an objective application of the principle of subsidiarity in the management of the temporal goods of the Apostolic See.”

The pope wrote, “This principle, on the one hand, guarantees a healthy autonomy of the entities supervised, which must act with the ‘diligence of a good householder’ and, on the other hand, allows the authorities in charge of control and supervision to fulfill their own institutional functions.” 

Excluding purchases below a certain limit, he said, will promote “the flexibility, dynamism and transparent efficiency” of Vatican offices.

The expanded law for awarding contracts adds that they also must be in harmony with the principles set out in Pope Francis’ 2015 encyclical, Laudato Si’, On Care for Our Common Home.

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