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Restructuring Cities for Efficient Service Delivery

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Title: Restructuring Cities for Efficient Service Delivery


1
Restructuring Cities for Efficient Service
Delivery
  • Vivek Srivastava
  • WSP-SA
  • ASCI-WBI Program on
  • Strengthening Urban Management - Unlocking the
    Potential of Indian Cities
  • Hyderabad January 24 2003

2
Productive Cities as Centers of Growth
3
The Context
  • A New Global Setting
    Urban Millennium
  • A New Management Challenge Creating World
    Class-Cities

4
Share of Cities in GNP
Level of Development Share of Urban Areas in GNP
Low-income 55
Middle-income 73
High-income 85
5
Important Implication
  • Municipal service delivery cannot be seen in
    isolated context
  • How municipal services come together to serve the
    city-economy
  • Managing cities to be credit worthy
  • National economic growth and poverty reduction
    efforts will be increasingly determined by the
    productivity of cities and towns

6
Models of Urban Governance
7
Which Model of City Governance?
  • Metropolitan Government
  • Metropolitan Government with Economic
    Decentralization
  • Metropolitan Government with Political
    Decentralization

8
Key Differences
  • In the politically decentralized model, political
    and fiscal power is shared between the
    metropolitan and municipal tier.The metropolitan
    tier and municipalities jointly keep each other
    in check.
  • In the economic decentralized model, political
    and fiscal powers resides at the metropolitan
    level. The regions are de-concentrated arms of
    the metro unlike the independent municipalities
    of the first model

9
Similarities
  • Fiscal and political power is devolved to city
    governments.
  • Both models adopt corporate structures for the
    financing and delivery of municipal services with
    user-charges.
  • In both models the city has share ownership with
    expected dividends from the corporations.
  • Danger of political deadlock.

10
Evaluating Decentralization
  • Political Stability
  • Quality of Public Services
  • Equity
  • Horizontal (inter-state/city)
  • Within state/city
  • Impact of Macro-economic Stability

11
Issues in Service Delivery
12
The Problem
  • Chronic poor performance is the rule rather than
    the exception in many publicly run municipal
    services
  • Technical losses
  • Poor cost recovery
  • Subsidies do not reach the poor

13
Current Situation - Water
  • Technical and commercial losses
  • filling the leaking bucket
  • 3 hour connectivity
  • Poor quality of service
  • High coping costs
  • Low Tariffs
  • Fiscally and financially unsustainable

14
Why?The Judge, The Jury and the Executioner are
the Same!
.
15
Goals
  • 24 hour delivery
  • coverage for by all geographic and household
  • quality
  • pressure

16
Elements of Separation
  • Government ownership of some form
  • Public good nature of water
  • Sustainability as a resource time and quality
  • Attacking poverty
  • Business approach to delivery
  • Private good nature of water
  • Demand driven customer responsive
  • Independent regulation

17
City RestructuringJohannesburg Example
18
Johannesburgs Original Structure
  • 4 municipalities and one metro
  • Fragmented no economies of scale
  • Duplication of service delivery
  • Typical line function responsibility
  • No integrated planning

19
IGOLI 2000
  • Program A Utilities
  • Water and Sanitation, Power Distribution, Waste
    Management
  • Program B Agencies
  • Roads and Stormwater, Parks and Cemeteries
  • Program C Privatize
  • Metro Gas, Airport, Stadiums, Power Generation
  • Program D Corporatize
  • Zoo, Bus Co., Market, Property and Project
  • Program E Traditional Governance
  • Admin, HR, Planning, Budget, Finance, Community
    Services, Welfare, etc.

20
Restructuring of Johannesburg
21
PSP Options for Service Delivery
22
Why PSP?
  • Efficiency
  • Flexibility in procurement
  • Appropriate incentives
  • Technology
  • Investment
  • Accountability

23
The Basic Options Compared
24
Large City Utility
25
The potential PPP
  • A public asset holding corporation (AHC) with
  • state and municipal shareholders
  • A private operating company (PO) with
  • with shareholder agreement with domestic and
    international partners
  • holding a concession contract with AHC
  • Appropriate mix of public and private finance
  • Appropriate division of risks between AHC and PO
  • A competent autonomous regulator

26
State Govt.
Municipalities
shareholders
Asset Holding Company
contract
Service delivery obligations Access by
poor Pricing and subsidies OM Human resource
management Investment expansion
Regulator
Operating Company
27
Medium and Small Towns
28
Need of Alternative Management Model
  • Too big to be managed by communities
  • Large and dense enough to benefit from economies
    of scale offered by piped water systems
  • Too small and dispersed to be managed by a
    conventional utility

29
Possible option
  • Regional or multi-town utilities
  • Advantages
  • Economies of scale in management
  • Minimize transactions costs of contracting
  • Viable volumes of business

30
Criteria for Clubbing
  • Large enough population base ? Clusters of 1-2
    million
  • Manageable overall distance
  • Within a watershed boundary
  • Voluntary or prescribed

31
International Examples UK
  • Economies of scale up to population of 1 million
  • 10 large utilities with population of 2-10
    million
  • 15 smaller utilities with population base of
    250,000 to 1.2 million
  • Jurisdiction based on watershed boundaries

32
International Examples France
  • WSS responsibility of Local Governments
  • Voluntary Syndicates
  • 15500 undertakings for 37000 municipalities 2/3
    per grouping
  • SEDIF manages water services for 144
    municipalities and about 4 million customers

33
Regional Utility
Shareholders ULBs, State government
ASSET HOLDING COMPANY
Contract
Private sector operator
Town 1
Town 2
Town 3
34
Rules of Engagement
  • Top down Statutorily create the regions and
    enforce all ULBs to be members e.g. England,
    Scotland
  • Need to ensure compatibility with 74th amendment
  • Bottom up Voluntary association e.g. France
  • Slow
  • How to create incentives for association?

35
Governance
  • Vesting OM control of water related assets by
    lease (or otherwise) to AHC/AMC
  • Share ownership proportional to asset value
  • Voting rights possibly allocated on a more
    equitable basis
  • State government as shareholder, coordinator and
    arbiter
  • Rules of entry and exit

36
PSP and the Poor
37
Current situation Status of the poor
  • How are the poor being served today?
  • Free water through stand posts and tankers (10
    -20 lpcd)
  • 15 of population not covered by public system
  • Is Water Really Free?
  • Poor quality water with adverse health
    implications
  • Time, physical energy, drudgery and space costs

38
PSP and the Poor
  • A sound and competitively procured PPP will
    benefit the poor through efficiency gains
  • In addition, benefits to the poor can be further
    enhanced by specific contractual design
  • The Manila example
  • 600,000 poor connected within two years
  • The poor now consume three times more water at
    half the price
  • The poor now have more time for productive work
    and more living space

39
Maximizing the benefits for the poor
  • Designing Pro-poor Contracts
  • Service expansion obligations designed to include
    the poor
  • Some form of subsidy (or finance) for one-time
    connection fee
  • Gradual phasing of prices transition finance
  • Concessionaire responsible for providing water by
    alternative means where private connections are
    not feasible or during a transition period

40
Thank you
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