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Private-Public Partnerships

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Private-Public Partnerships The Relevance of Budgeting Paul L. Posner George Mason University With Shin Kue Ryu The Efficiency Imperative Efficiency benefits stem ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Private-Public Partnerships


1
Private-Public Partnerships
  • The Relevance of Budgeting
  • Paul L. Posner
  • George Mason University
  • With Shin Kue Ryu

2
Introduction
  • Build on previous OECD study to examine budgetary
    treatment and issues posed by ppps
  • Interviews with budget officials in Australia,
    Chile, France, Hungary, Korea, Portugal, United
    Kingdom, United States

3
Background
  • Worldwide Major PPP Projects Since 1985 (By
    Region)
  • Europe 205 31
  • North America 175 27
  • Asia 137 21
  • Latin America 126 19
  • Africa 14 2
  • Total Value 887.4 billion

4
Background
5
Background
Public-Private Roles and Tools
Delivery/Finance Public Finance Private Finance
Public Delivery Direct Government User Fees
Private Delivery Contract Vouchers PPPs
6
Background
  • Important features of ppps
  • Private financing provided up front for
  • Comprehensive cradle to old age design,
    construction, operation and maintenance.
  • The private sector bears a significant and
    appropriate portion of the risk.
  • Competition and metrics essential

7
Various forms of PPPs across nations
  • Different types of PPPs
  • (Role played by private sector)
  • Build-own-maintain (BOM)
  • Build-own-operate (BOO)
  • Build-develop-operate (BDO)
  • Design-construct-manage-finance (DCMF)
  • Design-build-operate (DBO)
  • Buy-build-operate (BBO)
  • Lease-own-operate (LOO)
  • Build-operate-transfer (BOT)
  • Build-own-operate-transfer (BOOT)
  • Build-rent-own-transfer (BROT)
  • Build-lease-operate-transfer (BLOT)
  • Build-transfer-operate (BTO)

8
Impetus for PPPsInfrastructure and Capital
Budgeting
  • Public infrastructure backlog and potential role
    in economic growth.
  • Rationale for ppps premised on the mixed
    incentives in budgeting for capital
  • Political credit claiming
  • Spikes in funding and competition with other
    mandatory spending items
  • Little incentive to fund maintenance

9
Capital projects recorded traditionally by
government
  • Most nations use cash based unified budget
    regimes
  • Full construction costs recognized up front
  • Comprehensive fiscal policy captured
  • Spikes in funding can discourage capital projects
  • Some nations use separate capital budget
    processes

10
Capital projects recorded alternatively by
government
  • Accrual based systems Stretching out budgetary
    recognition over time.
  • Smoothe funding and overcome potential spiking
    problems
  • Full costs of asset not required to be funded at
    project inception.
  • Both cash and accrual systems compensate to
    mitigate concerns over spiking and up front costs

11
Increasing the level of public infrastructure
  • Limited, and political painful, set of options
  • Raise taxes
  • Levy or increase user fees
  • Cut spending elsewhere in the budget
  • Borrowing
  • Reduce or manage demand
  • PPPs perceived to offer another way to provide
    for capital

12
Budgetary Impacts of PPPs
  • Do PPPs provide improved efficiency despite
    extra financing costs and transaction costs?
  • Are PPPs affordable under intertemporal budget
    constraints?

13
The Efficiency Imperative
  • Efficiency benefits stem from
  • Competition
  • Long term comprehensive contracts
  • Risk sharing
  • Reducing barriers to user charges
  • Results are early and mixed
  • Some gains in construction phase
  • Potential offsetting losses in operations phase

14
Public management problems complicate the
efficiency argument
  • Characteristic problems magnified
  • Goal Conflict
  • Principal agency problems
  • Limited competition
  • Rent seeking
  • Asymmetrical public sector risks
  • Boundary blurring undermines value provided by
    each sector

15
Fiscal Imperative
  • Fiscal rationale for PPPs
  • Permit funding of more capital projects
  • Free up near term fiscal space
  • Potential fiscal impacts
  • Fund higher levels of capital than can be
    afforded over long term
  • Encumber future fiscal space in operating budgets
  • Promote selection of lower value projects

16
United Kingdom
17
Affordability considerations
  • Long term costs include
  • Mandatory annual payment
  • Capital contributions
  • Revenue losses from foregoing user fees
  • Contingent liabilities such as guarantees
  • Long term encumbrance of fiscal space can occur
    even if projects represent value for money
  • Crowding out other priorities
  • Funding for nonentitlement costs will be more
    constrained in the future

18
Budgeting Processes and Practices for PPPs
  • Are PPPs on or off budget?
  • Critical in determining whether projects are
    governed by overall budget constraints and
    guidance
  • Impact of Eurostat guidance
  • Nations vary significantly
  • UK experience
  • Concessions

19
Budgeting Processes and Practices for PPPs
  • 2. How are ppp costs booked in budgets?
  • Most nations do not recognize costs of ppps up
    front
  • Less stringent than government capital
  • Several nations do book ppp costs up front
  • Indirect subsidies for ppps often not budgeted
    for up front when commitment is made

20
Budgeting Processes and Practices
  • 3. Do nations impose limits on ppps?
  • Some nations have imposed budgetary limits on
    annual PPP Korea and Hungary
  • UK overall capital DEL
  • Most nations include annualized ppp costs in
    medium term frameworks
  • Most nations not providing long term budget
    projections
  • UK data on long term trajectory

21
Budgeting Processes and Practices
  • 4. Is legislative and public oversight comparable
    with other spending?
  • In most nations, the annual appropriations
    process will not disclose the presence of new
    PPPs
  • Several nations do not provide for legislative
    approval of ppps
  • Public information on contract and private
    partner difficult to obtain

22
Budgeting Process and Practices
  • 5. What other practices have nations adopted to
    provide for ppp reviews?
  • Robust analytic review processes
  • PPP units
  • Public sector comparator
  • Greater rigor than government capital
  • Question whether analysis is sufficient without
    budget controls

23
Conclusions
  • Use of private financing and delivery for public
    services has its well known advantages.
  • Stronger budgetary processes and controls are
    necessary to provide greater assurance that PPPs
    are being funded for the right reasons.

24
Suggestions for Strengthening Budgetary Controls
  • Up front funding for ppps in competition for
    limited resources
  • Full on budget treatment, regardless of
    accounting
  • Affordability criteria and limits
  • Up front estimation of guarantees
  • Strengthening long term budget analysis
  • Improved disclosures of long term obligations

25
Public and Private Sectors are Alike in All
Unimportant Respects
  • Wallace Sayre
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