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Managing Public Investment

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Title: Managing Public Investment


1
Managing Public Investment
  • Overview of Irelands Experience of Public
    Investment Management with particular emphasis
    on Transport Projects

Tom FerrisPublic Investment Workshop Istanbul,
Turkey February 29, 2008
2
Content of Presentation
  • Background to Irish Economy
  • Planning and Appraisal of Investment Projects
    (ex-ante)
  • Budgeting for Public Investment
  • Monitoring and Implementation
  • Influence of Politics on Project Decisions
  • On-going Capacity Building

3
1. Background to Irish Economy
  • Population 4.3 million (2007)
  • Independence 1922
  • EU member since 1973
  • Real GDP growth 5.7 (2006)
  • Unemployment 4.5 (2007)
  • Exports 80 of GDP (2006)
  • Imports 69 of GDP (2006)
  • Exports and imports of goods and services

4
Irelands Economic Transformation GDP per
capita, EU15100 PPP exchange rates
5
Irelands Rapid Growthnot a Silver Bullet
  • Policy-driven
  • - embrace openness most important factor
  • - industrial policyattract Foreign Direct Inv.
  • - education policy1967/1996 (2nd/3rd free fees)
  • - fiscal policyeventually
  • - incomes policy
  • Enabling factors
  • US economy
  • high technology boom
  • elastic labour supply
  • Role of the EU
  • governance
  • funding------
  • See Reference 2 Honohan/Walsh

6
EU Membership very important for Ireland
  • Market access
  • - greater trading opportunities
  • - trade diversification
  • - reduced dependence on UK economy
  • Completion of Single Market
  • EMU and Euro
  • EU structural reform agenda
  • Access to EU funding

7
2. Planning and Appraisal of Investment Projects
  • Investment focus of 1980s/early1990s was on human
    capital, skills and education
  • Little infrastructure investment in 1980s and
    early 1990s (and rapid economic growth in 2000s),
    put serious pressure on infrastructure
  • Need to build-up technical, financial and
    managerial capacity to cope with growth
  • EU funds provided capital. Under EU regulations,
    a better planning and evaluation culture and
    capacity was introduced in Ireland
  • Some project problems erroneous initial
    estimates construction cost inflation design
    changes and project management weaknesses
  • See ESRI Reports (Reference 1 and Reference 4)

8
Overview of Planning Cycle
  • Capital Appraisal Guidelines provide for a
    4-stage project cycle
  • Appraisal and planning stages may overlap in
    practice (and also involve mid-term evaluation)

9
Evaluation Cycle involving
  • Cycle built around EU requirements
  • Ex-ante evaluation
  • Interim evaluation
  • Mid-term evaluation
  • Ex-post evaluation
  • ---Economic Social Research Institute (ESRI)
    used to do Ex-ante Evaluations and Mid-term
    Evaluations for each 5-year National Development
    Plan (linked-to EU cycles)
  • ---Most Operational Programmes had an ongoing
    evaluator presence (either an independent
    internal evaluation unit or an external
    evaluator)

10
Basic Questions developedfor Project Evaluation
  • Rationale
  • Is there a market failure?
  • Continued relevance
  • What are the implications of external
    developments?
  • Effectiveness
  • Are we meeting our objectives?
  • Efficiency
  • Are benefits commensurate with costs?
  • Could it be delivered more economically?
  • Impact
  • What difference, if any, has it made?
  • Overall question Do we get value for money?

11
Central Evaluation Unit set-up
  • Main problem
  • No common understanding of purpose or focus of
    evaluation
  • Independent Evaluation Unit under Finance
    Ministry, set-up in 1996, to
  • Assist Ministries with performance indicators
  • Responsible for interim evaluation of plans
  • Advisory role on wider evaluation issues
  • Advisory/standard-setting role re Cost Benefit
    Analysis
  • Promoting best practice in evaluation and
    appraisal, e.g. Working Rules on Cost-Benefit
    Analysis, June 1999

12
Learning from EU-driven Management/Implementation
Process
E.U. Commission
CSF Managing Authority/ Dept of Finance
Guidelines Regulations Policy
Reports Information on
Progress Reporting on Expenditure
Operational Programme Managing Authorities
Implementing Bodies (Grant Approving Bodies)
Final Recipients
13
Capital Appraisal Guidelines
  • Designed to be rigorous in their approach to
    management and evaluation of capital programmes
    and projects
  • Reflect best practice
  • Introduce greater proportionality into project
    assessment.

14
New Capital Appraisal Guidelines
  • Guidelines 2005 do Ex-Ante Appraisal of all
    Capital Projects
  • Proportionate to the value of the projects
  • Guidelines 2005 specify following thresholds
  • m 0.5
  • m 5
  • 30 million do Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Above take account of revisions announced in
    Department of Finance letter of Jan. 2006
  • Sponsoring Agency responsible for Appraisal
    (using in-house or bought-in expertise)
  • Pre-requisite to get approval from the
    Sanctioning Authority
  • See Reference 5 Department of Finances
    Circulars of February 2006 and of January 2006

15
Key Issues in Appraisal
  • Guidelines 2005 identify following steps
  • Definition of project needs and objectives
  • Options analysis
  • Constraints
  • Quantification of costs
  • Analysis of options
  • Appraisal techniques (Cost Benefit Analysis, Cost
    Effectiveness and Multi-criteria Analysis)
  • Uncertainty, risk and sensitivity analysis

16
Clear-cut responsibilities
  • Clear distinction has to be made between those
    authorising investment projects and those
    delivering
  • 2005 Capital Appraisal Guidelines require this
    distinction to be made,within project appraisal,
    planning, implementation and project management
  • Sponsoring Agency primary responsibility for
    project appraisal and management (Page 10)
  • Sanctioning Authority approves sponsoring
    agency proposals at various stages (Page 11)
  • Separation of functional responsibility

17
Sanctioning Authorities responsibilities...
  • Approving in principle the capital projects to
    be funded with public assistance
  • Reviewing conditions under which a project may
    proceed through stages of development to
    ultimately becoming fully operational
  • Paying the public assistance to the Sponsoring
    Agency and ensuring the projects delivery as
    approved

18
Sponsoring Agencies responsibilities..
  • State Bodies, who plan and manage projects, have
    the responsibility of quantifying financial
    costs, and specifying funding sources
  • Cost quantification is required to cover ongoing
    capital and life cycle costs relating to the
    operation/maintenance of projects, and receipts
    generated by use of capital assets, as well as
    the costs involved in their creation
  • Costs of projects are required to be expected
    outturn cost, including construction costs,
    property acquisition, risk and contingency (and
    include the cost of possible future price
    increases and variations in project outputs)

19
Sponsoring Agencies do what Transport Projects?
  • National Road Projects are done under the
    supervision of the National Roads Authority
    (NRA). The Department of Transport channels funds
    for national roads through the NRA which
    allocates them to the relevant local authorities
  •  
  • Light Rail Projects in Dublin are undertaken by
    the Railway Procurement Agency (RPA). The RPA is
    responsible for the procurement of light rail
    (LUAS) and metro
  •  
  • National Rail Projects are undertaken by Irish
    Rail, the operator of the Irish rail network and
    the sole provider of passenger rail services in
    Ireland

20
Risk and Uncertainty
  • We live in an uncertain world
  • Risks should be clearer through project cycle
  • Analyse risks and probability of occurrence
  • Use experience with comparable projects
  • Include some estimates for risks
  • Reduce optimism bias with adjustments
  • Adjust cost assumptions up
  • Adjust benefit assumptions down
  • Tackle uncertainties with use of sensitivity
    analysis

21
3. Strategic Planning and Budgeting
  • In the past, Ireland planned investment on an
    annual budgetary basis
  • Annual planning meant a stop-go approach to
    public investment
  • During the past twenty years, planning for
    investment has moved onto a medium-term footing

22
Move away from Annual Investment Planning
  • Specifically, Irish Government has moved from
    annual budgets to rolling investment programmes
    or financial envelopes
  • Rolling 5-year multi-annual envelopes are now in
    place for all investment areas
  • For TRANSPORT, the Irish Government decided in
    November 2005 to go further and to provide for a
    ten-year multi-annual envelope - called Transport
    21 - to tackle transport infrastructure deficit
  • see Reference 13 Ferris

23
Medium-term Budgeting means..
  • Medium-term envelopes put overall limits on the
    amount of investment that can take place
    annually.
  • Carry-over facility allows under-investment to be
    carried forward, under certain limits set-by the
    Department of Finance
  • Line Departments having to meet certain
    conditions, e.g. each required to make a
    contingency provision within overall envelope to
    meet any unforeseen demands/additional costs
  • In providing for projects, Departments must plan
    not just for contract price, but provision for
    likely price increases, variations in
    specifications and other factors which might
    arise during project construction

24
Rolling 5 year multi annual capital envelopes
conditions
  • Vote Section (Dept. Finance) determines nature of
    responsibility delegated to Department
  • General conditions of Department of Finance
    sanction
  • Additional local/sectoral conditions, if any
  • Requirements of capital appraisal guidelines
    responsibilities of sponsoring agency and
    sanctioning authority
  • PPP requirements
  • Appropriate balance between increased delegation
    and effective and efficient management of public
    capital

25
Conditions involve....
  • General conditions of Department of Finance
    sanction to spend under the envelopes
    requirements on Departments/Agencies
  • Contractual arrangements for grants of public
    funding to private companies and individuals or
    community groups to safeguard the States
    interest in the asset
  • Provision for programme and project contingencies
    to meet any unforeseen demands or additional
    costs
  • Comply with D/Finance capital appraisal
    guidelines, and carry out spot checks of projects
    for compliance and report findings to D/Finance
  • Comply with PPP guidelines, public procurement
    and tax clearance requirements
  • Report to their Management Boards regularly on
    evaluation of capital projects and progress on
    capital programmes and projects
  • Report to D/Finance annually

26
Medium-term Transport Investment Programmes (with
EU Funding)
  • Peripherality Operational Programme, 1989/93
  • Transport Operational Programme, 1994/99
  • Economic and Social Infrastructure Operational
    Programme, 2000/06
  • TRANSPORT 21 (2006-2015) within National
    Development Plan, 2007-2013
  • (with minimum EU funds see Reference 7
    Transport 21)
  • These Transport Programmes have been part of
    overall National Development Plans covering the
    same periods

27
Transport 21 10 Year 34.4 bn. Investment
Programme
  • National Strategy
  • To develop a high quality national roads and
    public transport network and improve regional
    public transport
  • Greater Dublin Area Strategy
  • To transform the transport system in the Greater
    Dublin Area
  • Reference 7 Transport 21 (1 November 2005)

28
Minister for Finance on Transport Investment
  • The launch of this ten year capital investment
    framework represents a massive and necessary
    commitment of resourcesinvolves investment of
    over 34 billion in current prices in .2006 to
    2015. All projectswill be appraised and
    implemented in line with my Departments Capital
    Appraisal Guidelines and the additional Value for
    Money initiativesThere will be intensive system
    of monitoring put in place and much enhanced
    project management skills in the agencies
    providereassurance that Value for Money will be
    provided
  • see Reference 6
    Minister for Finance

29
4. Monitoring and Implementation
  • Ireland has developed an effective evaluation
    system to ensure that projects are monitored on
    their implementation
  • National Development Plan (NDP) for 2007/2013
    states Robust monitoring and reporting
    arrangementsin relation to performance on
    implementationThis will include reporting on NDP
    outputs and impacts and will incorporate the
    preparation of an Annual Report on NDP progress
    which will be submitted to the Oireachtas
    Parliament. A Monitoring Committee, including
    regional and social partner representation, will
    be established to monitor Plan implementation.se
    e Reference 10 NDP

30
Procurement at Appraisal Stage of Projects
  • At appraisal stage a decision on form of
    procurement traditional or PPP
  • Project manager for all projects above 30
    million with individual responsibility for
  • Managing project
  • Monitoring progress against contract
  • Reporting progress to Project Board

31
Governments Value for money/effectiveness
framework
  • Reforms to public procurement including roll out
    of PPPs
  • Value for money measures in relation to capital
    appraisal, public procurement, ICT projects and
    consultancies announced by the Government on 11
    October 2005 and the Minister for Finance on 20th
    October, 2005
  • Planned improvements to the operation of the
    expenditure review initiative
  • Government reform of the Estimates and Budgetary
    process announced in Budget 2006

32
Conditions for successful project implementation
  • Clear understanding of rules and regulations
  • Systems in place to communicate rules
  • Systems in place to ensure compliance with rules
    and regulations
  • Need to pay particular attention to eligibility
    rules in certification of expenditure
  • Good working relationship with European
    Commission Desk Officers
  • Central Coordination at heart of process

33
Management by Project
  • Appointment of an individual within the
    organisation as Project Manager for each capital
    project
  • Vigorous Competition for Public Sector Contracts
  • Fixed Price Construction Contracts
  • Formal Contracts Review
  • Monitor to ensure project objectives, performance
    criteria and milestones are achieved
  • Regular Progress Reports to Project Board
  • Projects 30m, separate quarterly progress
    reports for each project to Management Board and
    Minister
  • see Reference 9 Department of Finance Circular
    (27 October 2006)

34
Drive for Compliance
  • Need to ensure compliance with all the rules and
    regulations
  • A new Central Expenditure Evaluation Unit (CEEU),
    at Finance Ministry, recently given important
    oversight role
  • CEEUs overall objective is to inculcate best
    practice in the appraisal and the management of
    projects and programmes by those delivering
    investment
  • CEEUs Unit to carry out spot checks at project
    level to verify compliance with the various rules

35
EU-driven Financial Controls in Ireland
E.U. Commission
Paying Authority Dept. of Finance
Certificates of Expenditure
  • ERDF and Cohesion
  • Control Fund Unit
  • Control Checks
  • System Audit Checks
  • Annual Reports of
  • Checks
  • Programme
  • Closure Declarations

O.P. Managing Authority
Intermediate Bodies
Grant Approving Bodies
Final Recipients
36
Doing the Back-check
  • Post Project Review to be completed by Sponsoring
    Agency
  • All Projects 30m
  • Representative sample of at least 5 of all
    projects
  • Annual Report on capital envelope programmes to
    Department of Finance
  • Performance table project outcomes vs. budgets
    for all projects over 30m
  • Included in Annual Report on Capital, and
  • Annual Report on Statement of Strategy
  • See
    Reference 11 Ferris

37
Monitoring Transport Projects
  • Department of Transport reviews projects
    progress on a monthly basis with its Sponsoring
    Agencies and results are used to update financial
    allocations on a regular basis.
  • Funds are transferred between sectors where it
    can facilitate an acceleration of projects or
    where progress is slower than anticipated
  • Transport 21 Monitoring Group assisted by
    professional companies engaged to carry out
    audits of compliance with Guidelines and audits
    of progress in project implementation
  • Projects selected for audit by the Monitoring
    Group, and auditors submit a detailed report of
    all audits carried out, setting out their
    findings and making recommendations, where needed

38
Budget Over-runs world-wide experience of
transport projects
39
5. Influence of Politics on Project Decisions
  • Ireland is a parliamentary democracy, with each
    coalition government lasting about five-years
  • Each new coalition government sets its Five Year
    Programme at start of period of government
  • Such Five Year Programmes include overall
    commitments for planned investments
  • Such commitments are in the public arena for
    checking
  • Naturally, there may be potential to front-load
    or back-load projects within Plans (but now all
    Capital Projects have to go through the new
    Ex-Ante Appraisal process)

40
Extracts from An Agreed Programme for
Government, FIANNA FAIL, GREEN PARTY and
PROGRESSIVE DEMOCRATS, June 2007
  • Overall, to implement a programme under
    Transport 21 of investment and service
    development which will
  •  
  •         Cut travelling times
  •         Improve safety
  •         Deliver real commuting choice
  •         Reduce congestion
  •         Protect the environment
  •  
  • .committed to the implementation of Transport
    21 on time and on budget.
  •  
  •  ..Public Transport, recognising the importance
    of long-term planning in public transport
    investment, the Government will, in 2011,
    commence preparation of a successor to the
    2006-2015 Transport 21 programme
  • .Dublin Transport AuthorityIntegrated Public
    Transport SystemRoadsRoad Safety

  • -- see Reference 13 Ferris

41
Control on Expenditure
  • Government has collective responsibility for
    formulating overall budgetary policy
  • Government agrees annual aggregate levels of
    expenditure for the different Ministries, within
    this overall framework
  • Expenditure is required to be submitted for
    Parliamentary approval
  • Government also approves capital investment
    envelopes, while Ministers have delegated
    sanction from the Minister for Finance (but
    subject to certain checks)

42
Spot Checks imperative
  • Departments to ensure annual spot checks on a
    representative sample of all capital projects
  • Report annually to Department of Finance on spot
    checks carried out and on findings
  • Guidelines in place that have to be adhered to
  • see Reference 12 Department of Finance
    Compliance Circular, 15 May 2007

43
Checking-up on Spot Checks
  • CEEU to review Departments spot checks reports
    and report back on conclusions/findings
  • CEEU may carry out its own spot checks
  • To verify the quality and systems in place in
    Departments and Agencies for spot checking, or
  • On an ad hoc basis in respect of specific
    programmes/projects
  • Project Progress Reports and Contract Reviews may
    also be subject to spot-checking by the CEEU
  • CEEU Central Expenditure Evaluation Unit _at_
    Department of Finance

44
Departments provide Annual Report to Department
Finance
  • Delegated responsibility means increased
    accountability for line Departments and their
    agencies
  • By end January each year
  • Outline priorities for capital programme
    consistent with capital envelope
  • Provide statement showing consistency with
    National Development Plan, National Spatial
    Strategy, Government programmes
  • For PPP projects an estimate of the unitary
    payments with breakdown between components
  • Total level of contractual commitment by year
  • Progress report on projects and programmes

45
6. Capacity Building
  • In 1990, little prior tradition of formal
    evaluation of public expenditure programmes in
    the Irish public administrative system
  • Ireland learned quickly to develop an extensive
    experience with the evaluation of EU structural
    fund programmes during three successive
    programming rounds (1989/93 1994/99 2000/2006)
  • Ireland is consolidating evaluation experience
    with current National Development Plan
    (2007/2013)
  • see Reference 3 Hegarty

46
Specific Steps taken
  • Ireland has been developing an extensive
    experience during past 20 years, through
  • Learning from EU processes
  • Developing its own systems, e.g. Central
    Evaluation Unit and Evaluations, e.g. ESRI
  • Putting in place Guidelines
  • --Working Rules on Cost-Benefit Analysis, June
    1999,
  • -- Capital Appraisal Guidelines, February 2005
  • While the foregoing are necessary, they are not
    sufficient there has to be effective and
    efficient delivery on-the-ground

47
Importance of Training
  • Specialised training is being provided in the
    public sector
  • Ensures that officials are properly trained in
    areas such as procurement, project management,
    project appraisal and policy analysis
  • Professional courses and training are provided on
    three fronts
  • Civil Service Training Development Centres
    Courses
  • Masters in Policy Analysis
  • Higher Diploma in Policy Analysis

48
7- Some Key Lessons
  • A well-organised and adequately resourced
    evaluation system, underpinned by appropriate
    structures and a clear sense of purpose or focus,
    is the key to maximising the benefits of
    investment
  • Evaluations carried out at right time by
    experienced and detached evaluators, with a focus
    on appropriate questions and support of key
    stakeholders, can make a difference
  • Important to develop networks for officials to
    share experience and best practice, including
    on-going EU liaison

49
Keep up the Momentum !
  • In 2006, ESRI called for the quality of project
    appraisal to be enhanced, by having Cost-Benefit
    Analysis (CBA) of projects conducted rigorously
    and independently of project promoters, and
    having central commissioning of CBAs and the
    exercise of quality control on studies delegated
    to Departments and agencies
  • In 2008, Ferris called for the early
    establishment of fully operational Dublin
    Transport Authority to allow for much greater
    co-ordination in the planning of transport
    investment in Dublin, and the delivery of a
    supporting detailed traffic management plan for
    the GDA
  • See Reference 8 (ESRI) and Reference 14
    (Ferris)

50
Thomas Jefferson (1743/1826)
  • The price of freedom
  • is eternal vigilance
  • ? the delivery of successful
  • projects depends on focussed
  • planning, efficient implementation
  • and effective monitoring

51
  • Questions?
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