Upload
dale-horn
View
217
Download
3
Tags:
Embed Size (px)
Citation preview
By
PATRICK MABUZA
SOUTH AFRICAN ECONOMIC REGULATORS CONFERENCE
Institutional Arrangements Necessary for Private Sector Investment in Infrastructure
21 - 22 August 2012
2
• Introduction
• Institutional requirements
• Regulations and private sector participation in infrastructure projects
• Good vs poor regulation
• Institutional framework for private sector participation in infrastructure projects
• Development of the SA institutional framework for PPPs
Outline
3
Why institutional requirements?
Infrastructure projects are characterized by:
o Large sunk costs
o Low mobility
o Area specificity
o High risks of opportunistic behavior(Ex-post inefficiencies)
o Incompleteness of contracts
All the above increase risks for the investor
Introduction
Institutional requirements
4
Institutional requirements for the private sector include:
o Strong legal system
o Well developed domestic debt market
o Less corrupt economic environments
o Stable and reliable political institutions
o Stable economic and financial conditions
o Well established regulatory environment
Legal environment
5
The private sector relies heavily on contracts which in turn are dependent on the legal system.
The legal environment includes laws governing:
o Contracts
o Contract enforcement
o Property rights
o Respect of the rule of law
Uncertainty in the legal system may result in high project risks and transaction costs
A well developed domestic debt market
6
Funding projects from domestic sources has economic merits:
o A well developed domestic debt market increases access to finance, especially for small firms
o It encourages competition for the infrastructure market
o It provides long-term debt maturities
o Reduces reliance on foreign capital markets
Less corrupt economic environment
7
Corrupt economies experiences low private investment
o It reduces the productivity of public expenditure
o Distorts the allocation of resources
o Lowers private investment
o It raises uncertainty and increase the costs of investment
o May trigger political instability etc.
Strong political institutions
8
Countries with weak political institutions are more likely to result in war, civil strife or ethnic tension, and difficult for foreign firms to repatriate profits
Weak political institutions may;
o Increase project transaction costs and risks
o Result in arbitrary changes to investment policies
o Result in expropriation of assets
Stable economic environment
9
Countries that want to attract private sector investment in infrastructure must develop strong economic and financial institutions. This may include;
o Stable macroeconomic system
o Market size
o Integrity of the monetary and financial system
o Reform of the fiscal system
Stable and predictable regulatory environ--
10
Countries with well established regulatory institutions tend to experience a high volume of infrastructure investment
A good regulatory system is the one that:o Has a sound, transparent and honest infrastructure investment
procedures
o Enables the regulated entity to raise finance for investment at an acceptable costs
o Provide efficiency in operation, pricing, and investment and innovation
o Adheres to regulatory principles to avoid regulatory uncertainty
Regulatory principles
11
Regulatory principles include: Effectiveness and targeting: focus on regulatory problem it has
been established to address
Transparency: regulations must be designed in a transparent manner to facilitate learning and sharing of information within industry
Proportionality: intervention be proportional to the problem. Regulators should intervene when necessary
Consistency and predictability: regulatory processes and decisions should be applied consistently across regulated parties in similar circumstances
Accountability: regulators must be accountable to their decisions and subjected to public scrutiny.
Regulation and private sector participation in infrastructure provision
12
Successful implementation of PPPs depends to a large extent, on sound regulatory framework
The objective of the framework should be to:
o Reduce opportunistic tendencies
o Align the interests of the parties involved
o Achieve a balance between economic efficiency and social equity
o Assure the private sector that the regulatory system includes protection from:
Expropriation, arbitration of commercial disputes and respect of contract agreements.
Good vs. bad regulation of PPPs
13
Good regulation Problem with poor regulation
Acts as a buffer against political interference in pricing decisions
Over regulation can restrain economic growth
Improves access and affordability of services to the poor
Too much compliance requirements may increase costs to the regulated entity
Improves service quality May distort market signals
Reduces ex-post inefficiencies Can turn viable projects to be financial unviable
Introduces competition Might tied up resources on complicated restructuring instead of investing them
Institutional framework for private sector participation in infrastructure
14
The framework should includes:
o Political commitment and good governance
o Development of an appropriate legal framework
o Development of project expertise within the public sector
o Refinement of project appraisal and prioritization criteria
o Reforms on public sector procurement requirements
The Development of the SA PPP institutional framework
15
Date Action Purpose1997 Cabinet approved the appointment of
an interdepartmental task teamTo develop policy, legislation, and institutional reforms to enable the use of PPPs
1999 Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) was enacted
To create a good governance structure for the procurement of goods and services including PPPs by the public sector
Mid 2000 PPP unit was formed To create policy and regulatory framework for PPPs
2004 Regulation 16 of the PFMA was issued
To regulate PPPs at both national and provincial level to ensure that such projects are transparent, equitable, and fair
2004 PPP manual was issued To guide both governments departments and provinces through PPP project life cycle
2005 Municipal PPP regulation was issued in terms of the Municipal Finance management Act of 2003
It defines the elements of a municipal PPP and set out the stages and approval it will have to go through
Private and public sector views about SA institutional framework
16
Topic Private sector Implementing Agencies
Government Agencies responsible for PPP policy
Legal environment
- Rules for procuring PPPs are broadly acceptable at the national and provincial level, but better suited for higher value transactions and more developed PPP markets
- PPP unit micro-manage transactions
- BEE/SMME thresholds included in PPP guidelines are not necessarily in line with sector charter
- Rules do not work at the municipal level
- Treasury or other legal rules for procuring PPPs are too demanding and confusing
- Rules for procuring PPPs are good, but there is a need to streamline for smaller value projects
- PPP unit has already developed, and will develop more, streamlined processes for smaller value projects, or projects in more familiar sectors (example, small cap, ecotourism projects)
Role of the PPP unit
PPP unit does too much regulation, and too little promotion and facilitation of PPPs within implementation agencies
PPP unit spends as much time as it can promoting and facilitating PPPs
PPPs by sector and sphere of government
17
Sector National Provincial Municipalities Total Real estate 0 0 5 5Prison 1 0 0 1Transport 1 0 0 1Health 4 14 0 18IT 2 0 0 2Office accommodation
8 4 1 13
Education 0 1 0 1Nature 9 3 0 12Tourism 0 3 5 8Communication 1 0 1 2Energy 1 1 0 2Water/waste management
2 0 11 13
Total 29 26 23 78
Tank you
18