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Policy Analysis & Research
The Pros and Cons of
Private Provision of Water and Electricity Service:
A Handbook for Evaluating Rationales
By
Tim
Kessler
Citizens' Network On Essential Services (CNES)
Takoma Park, Maryland, USA
January 2004
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Introduction to Private Provision of Water and Electricity Service
This booklet describes the main rationales for using the private sector
to deliver water, sanitation and electricity services, and evaluates them
in theory and in practice. It also identifies policy trends and the major
policy instruments used by multilateral organizations to promote private
provision in these sectors. It concludes with recommendations for assessing
the feasibility of private provision.
Part 1. Context
A. Evolution of Privatization
The idea of privatization first gained popularity and political support
in the 1980s, during the rising tide neoliberalism under Reagan and Thatcher.
Market enthusiasts considered state-owned enterprises (SOEs) in North American
and Europe to be inefficient. The political class and voters became increasingly
receptive to rolling back government ownership. This political trend became
both an intellectual export and a condition for official development assistance
in Latin America, Asia and Africa, where SOEs often lost money. Multilateral
lenders, in particular, argued that selling them off to the private sector
was best way to promote growth.
This trend only intensified during the 1990s, as post-Soviet countries
privatized thousands of enterprises created under communist rule. Everyone
agrees that there cronyism and corruption were widespread. And in the case
of bank privatization, several financial disasters required massive government
bailouts that taxpayers are still paying for. However, many market economists
argued that even poorly implemented privatization of SOEs was better than
keeping them public.
While the 1980s is often remembered as the sunset for SOEs, it was also
the beginning of privatization in traditional public sector services, like
infrastructure, health care and education. In the mid-1990s, we saw acceleration
of this trend. Privatization proponents argued that corruption or bad management
made these services were inefficient, that they caused budget deficits,
were unreliable, or excluding the poor. Large corporations that saw a unique
opportunity to expand into new and profitable markets lobbied their governments
to sell off services at home and pry them open abroad.
In the 1990s, at the same time that business influence was rising and
the reputation of government services was eroding, a new intellectual initiative
sought to legitimize privatization as both economically rationale and socially
just. Often called the New Public Management (NPM – Box 1), this school
of thought argues that the government’s best role was simply to protect
property rights, ensure competition, and regulate firms to protect consumers
from a variety of “market failures.” That is, it should get out of the
business of delivering services directly, leaving actual provision in the
hands of private firms with the capabilities and incentives to improve
quality and keep prices low.
The main rationales for privatizing basic public services are:
Poverty reduction. The private sector has access to far more
capital resources than cash-strapped, deficit-ridden governments. Especially
for sectors with high sunk costs, such as infrastructure, fiscal constraints
cripple developing country governments’ ability to upgrade and expand services
for low-income people.
Balancing budgets: Governments spend too much on subsidies because of
inefficiency or political patronage to influential groups. By freeing up
scarce budgetary resources, governments that sell off public assets or
put them under private management can dedicate the proceeds and cost savings
to other underfunded social programs.
Improved efficiency and performance. Private providers have intrinsic
incentives to cut costs and be responsive to customers, while the public
sector is bound by bureaucratic inertia, lacks incentives to innovate,
and is unaccountable to helpless consumers who have nowhere else to go.
Making reform irreversible. Because new political leadership can reverse
reforms, private provision offers policy stability by removes reform from
future political agendas. It’s a lot easier to increase subsidies or add
new workers than to re-nationalize private assets or expel private firms
from the market.
Each of these rationales will be evaluated in Part 3.
B. Human Rights Perspective
Airplane tickets and cell phones have important social uses, but nobody
claims that they are human rights. Market reformers make a valid case when
they stress the primary goal of increasing efficiency in a vast array of
economic activity. Basic public services, however, are qualitatively different.
The same standards of economic performance that apply to most other productive
sectors should not apply to services needed to fulfill basic human needs.
This does not mean that efficiency should be ignored. But it does mean
that it must be balanced against goals of equity, affordability and universal
access.
Essential services are central to a “social contract” between government
and citizens. While social contracts vary considerably across countries,
they generally promote equity and universality through redistributive mechanisms
that ensure a minimum level of access to goods or services that are necessary
for livelihood and dignity. Typical social contracts include sufficient
primary education to ensure literacy, basic health care, and access to
safe drinking water. More elaborate social contracts (in more developed
countries) may also include sanitation services and household electricity.
The social contract is based on two related premises: first, that governments
should be held accountable for delivery of basic services; and second,
that individuals or communities can and should exercise their citizenship
rights to ensure those services (at least in democracies). Life-sustaining
services such as drinking water are increasingly the subject of national
campaigns to guarantee human rights with special legislation or constitutional
amendments.
The human rights perspective on basic services has been articulated
at a global level. In November 2002, the United Nations Committee on Economic,
Social and Cultural Rights declared access to water to be a fundamental
right. It also stated that water is a social and cultural good, and not
only an economic commodity. The Committee emphasized that the 145 nations
that have ratified the International Covenant on Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights are now bound by the agreement to promote access to safe water “equitably
and without Discrimination.”
The implications for access and affordability put private provision
at the heart of the debate over human rights. When poor households cannot
afford access to drinking water, primary education or basic medical attention,
the stakes of privatization policies loom as large as life itself. The
impacts can result in death, disease, misery, or a stunted life, whereas
the impacts of other key policies, such as trade liberalization or tax
increases, while serious, are more indirect.
The direct linkage between basic services and human rights does not
provide constitute a categorical argument against privatization. But if
taken seriously, it changes the rules of the game for policy decision-making.
A human rights perspective implies that privatization advocates must justify
proposed reforms with more than increased efficiency, or improved quality
for consumers able to pay commercial rates. Because markets alone cannot
be expected to promote equity and access, efforts to privatize services
equated with human rights should clearly demonstrate how these goals will
be achieved.
Part 2. Key Concepts and Demystification
Private Provision. The term “privatization” refers to direct sale
of public assets to the private sector. Because it is often used imprecisely,
this module addresses “private provision” of services. In the case of water
and electricity service, common policies include contracting out, leases
and long-term concessions. Under these arrangements public assets technically
remain with the government, while responsibility for operating the assets,
delivering services and collecting user fees is transferred to a firm.
Private provision is often preceded by several policies, including corporatization,
commercialization (the imposition of cost-covering user fees) and decentralization.
These are described in Section 3B.
Public (merit) goods. Goods from which nobody can be excluded,
such as national security or environmental protection, are called “public
goods.” One never hears complaints that the armed forces “run losses” –
even though they are financed entirely by tax revenue -- because there
is broad consensus about the need for military defense. Infrastructure
and social services differ from pure public goods because they can be rationed
and are excludable. Like public goods, water and electricity provide benefits
that extend well beyond the particular individuals who consume them, such
as improved public health and greater economic productivity. However, unlike
public goods, they can be rationed and denied to specific users. Many societies
have decided, either for normative reasons of social justice or appreciation
of wider benefits, that nobody should be excluded from at least a minimum
level of service because of income or location. Economists sometimes call
these “merit goods.” Wealthy countries whose governments provide essential
services justify the decision largely because of market constraints to
providing merit equitably.
Contracts and information. When a natural monopoly like water
or electricity is privately provided, a contract is needed to spell out
the rights and responsibilities of the firm, government and consumers.
So-called “performance-based contracts” (PCBs) include measurable outputs
that firms must deliver before they are paid. Enforcing contracts requires
effective regulation, which is complicated by the “principal-agent problem.”
When agents (firms or sub-contractors) have more information about service
delivery than the principals (government or consumers), they may be able
to withhold or manipulate that information to their own advantage. The
only way to for the principal to overcome this problem is through adequate
monitoring and evaluation of the agent’s output. However, this can be quite
costly, and often forces the principal to reconsider whether those extra
costs – and risks – are worth private provision in the first place.
Generally speaking, the easier it is to observe and measure an output,
the less costly it will be to enforce a performance-based contract.
In economic jargon, the main constraint on enforcing contracts is transaction
costs. As services become more complex – and as the economic and social
outcomes they are supposed to achieve become more difficult to measure
with simple indicators – the public sector inevitably gets involved. Governments
often impose strict requirements on private firms regarding production
processes and outputs, as well as information and reporting requirements.
These details become part of excruciatingly complex and highly legalistic
contracts, and end up raising the costs of producing the desired services.
Competition and regulation. Increased private participation is
supposed to empower consumers by giving them choice – primarily the choice
to buy from someone else offering better quality or better price. This
is most valid for competitive sectors in which consumers have good information
about the product. But infrastructure is not a competitive sector. In most
settings, there can only be one energy grid or centralized water system,
making the issue of choice irrelevant. Monopolies can use their position
to charge excessive prices from consumers lacking alternative suppliers.
When “natural monopolies” like water and electricity are privatized, claims
of superior efficiency and performance are only realized when vigilant
public regulators – not individual households – hold firms accountable.
Part 3. Economic Policy in Practice
This section evaluates the rationales for privatizing public services,
and then describes mechanisms used by multilateral lending and trade organizations
to promote these policies. Each section begins with a stylized defense
of privatization, on economic, social or political grounds. The purpose
of this approach is to make explicit the various arguments used to justify
selling off these services, so that they can be assessed in principle and
in practice. Articulating the rationales in favor of privatization does
not constitute an argument in favor of the policy. Rather, it specifies
the outcomes that should be expected to occur in order for governments,
donors or policy advisors to make the case for privatization a compelling
one.
A. Evaluating the Rationales
Rationale No. 1 — Private provision reduces poverty
From a social perspective, the most important rationale for private
service provision is that it reduces poverty. Private firms increase capital
investment in services used by poor people, improving quality and expanding
access. Especially where government has failed to invest in marginalized
people – either because of budget constraints or political neglect -- private
capital is claimed to be the only viable opportunity for reaching excluded
citizens. Particularly in the capital-intensive utility sectors, cash-strapped
governments are portrayed as unable to keep up even with basic maintenance,
much less to expand or upgrade costly infrastructure, whereas large corporations
and nimble capital markets can make major investments wherever needed.
Incentives for serving the well-off
The notion that private providers improve services for the poor rests
on an important premise: that the business is profitable. But economists
have widely observed the a behavior they call “cherry picking:” companies
tend to avoid “unprofitable people” and invest primarily in relatively
affluent consumers.
In the case of utilities, private providers like to expand household
access (e.g., hook up water pipes, make connection to electrical grid)
or upgrade services in urban areas, especially where middle class consumers
demand more and better services. Firms avoid peri-urban, slum or rural
areas, where topography is more difficult, per capita consumption is less,
and most importantly, incomes are lower. Investment patterns within countries
are replicated on a global scale. Of total foreign investment in private
infrastructure, very poor countries have received only a tiny fraction
of that capital.1
Cherry-picking incentives also constrain investment in social services.
In the private health care sector, doctors prefer to serve patients with
higher incomes, while insurance companies try to avoid sick customers,
and drop those who develop conditions requiring medical attention (e.g.,
pregnant women).
It is possible to induce the private sector to invest in the poor. But
there’s a price tag involved. Incentives for serving low-income people
don’t come from markets, but rather from public resources. The next section
explores some of the fiscal issues involved in equitable private service
provision.
Rationale No. 2 — Private provision helps balance budgets
By freeing up scarce budgetary resources, governments that sell off
public assets or put them under private management can dedicate proceeds
as well as budget savings to macroeconomic discipline or under-funded social
programs. This rationale has the greatest legitimacy for loss-making services
that put significant pressure on budgets. (However, it should be noted
that governments looking for one time gains have sold off well-functioning
and even profitable public services.)
Subsidies
One of the reasons that privatization is supposed to improve fiscal
balances is that governments often spend a lot to subsidize services. When
a public service loses money because it’s inefficient, it makes sense to
look at alternatives that provide the same services for less. Private provision
may be one of those options. Others include administrative reforms and
technical upgrading.
Another reason that government services lose money is that they subsidize
too many of the non-poor, especially influential middle class or business
constituencies. In some cases, public infrastructure services are given
away for free to other parts of government. In these cases, the root of
the budget problem is political, not administrative. Private provision
is one kind of solution, but government commitment to more progressive
cross-subsidies can also balance budgets while having a much greater poverty-reduction
impact. Making budgets transparent can help empower the poor to demand
a more equitable share of public resources.
Finally, government services sometimes lose money because they subsidize
prices for a large number of poor people. Because privatization inevitably
commercializes prices through user fees, government may be forced to keep
subsidies for those who can’t afford market prices. In other words, private
provision may still require public subsidies.
Under traditional arrangements, government provides a direct subsidy
to means-tested households, or to communities designated as poor. But there
is no evidence that subsidy systems under private provision are any more
effective than those under public provision. According to the World Bank’s
Operations Evaluation Department, “getting the private sector to focus
on the alleviation of poverty and to design tariffs in a way that does
not discriminate against the poor has proved hard to achieve in practice
. . .”2 Under “output-based”
contracts, governments could pay the private provider a fee for each low-income
customer served at reduced prices. But such arrangements require a profit
margin for the private provider and force the government to spend resources
on regulation and monitoring to ensure that services are provided at affordable
costs or free to those unable to pay .
It is possible that a subsidy scheme under private provision is more
cost-effective than available alternatives for reforming a government service.
However, this cannot and should not be taken for granted. Before a government
privatizes a service in order to balance the budget, it should carry out
an analysis of the fiscal costs involved in ensuring that private providers
serve the poor.
Attracting capital
The investments needed for capital intensive services like infrastructure
are huge. Because cash-strapped governments have a tough time coming up
with necessary resources from general revenue, privatization advocates
argue that the private sector is the only game in town. And it’s true that
private firms invest billions of dollars every year in developing country
services.
The problem is that private firms tend to avoid risky markets. In fact,
private investment in public services has actually been falling
in developing countries, especially in infrastructure. It’s common to get
just one or two serious bids for a major concession, hardly enough to generate
meaningful competition.
More and more, countries themselves are competing for private capital,
not the other way around. When firms do invest in uncertain environments,
they demand a risk premium – in other words, very high profits. Governments
often have to promise incentives to attract any private participation at
all. These include long-term tax holidays, grants, low-interest loans,
full assumption of risk for exchange rate fluctuation, and commercial and
political guarantees.
Private investment may also require contractual terms that guarantee
profit levels for firms, put all financial risks onto taxpayers or consumers,
or leave the government responsible for major investments. These arrangements
involve major fiscal obligations that can undermine budget discipline.
Policy-makers should have a good idea of how high those costs can go –
especially
off-budget liabilities that are too often ignored -- and compare them
to the costs for delivering similar services through the state.
As a leader of the Global Water Partnership and a Latin American economists
conclude: “Fundamentally, the preoccupation with ensuring stable levels
of company income has led to the award of warranties and a stability that
may eventually fail to motivate company efficiency, going as far as disassociating
company performance from that of the rest of the economy, turning them
into a regression factor. All this occurs within rigid contractual provisions
and legal frameworks.”3
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Contents
Part
1. Context: |
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A.
Evolution of Privatization |
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B.
Human Rights Perspective |
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| Part
2. Key Concepts and Demystification |
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| Part
3. Policy Making in Practice |
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A.
Rationales for Privatization |
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B.
Mechanisms for Promoting Private
Provision |
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C.
Trends in Resource Flows |
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| Part
4. Lessons Learnt, Common Mistakes |
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Elements
of New Public Management
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Productivity: How can governments produce more services
with less tax money?
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Marketization: How can government use market-style
incentives to root out the pathologies of government bureaucracy?
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Service Orientation: How can government better connect
with citizens, e.g., by providing choice?
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Decentralization: How can local government make programs
more responsive and effective?
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Policy: How can government improve its capacity to
devise and track policy? By, for instance, separating the government’s
role as a purchaser of services (policy function) from its role in providing
them (service delivery function)?
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Accountability for Results: How can governments improve
their ability to deliver what they promise through bottom-up, results-driven
systems? Such systems focus on outputs and outcomes.
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How
Trade in Services Affects
Human Rights
In 2002, the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights (UNCHR) laid the analytical and
moral foundations for the November declaration, when it released a report
that urged WTO member nations to consider the human rights implications
of liberalizing trade in services, especially health, education and water.*
The UNCHR report established the case that trade is subject to human rights
law:
“International
trade law and human rights law have grown up more or less in isolation
from each other. Yet as trade rules increasingly broaden their scope into
areas that affect the enjoyment of human rights, commentators are recognizing
the links between the two, seeking to understand how human rights and trade
interact, in an attempt to provide greater coherence to international law
and policy-making and a more balanced international and social order...
The legal basis for adopting human rights approaches to trade liberalization
is clear . . . A human rights approach sets as entitlements the basic needs
necessary to lead a life in dignity and ensures their protection in the
processes of economic liberalization.”
“Importantly,
services act as an essential input into the production of goods and even
other services and as a result can facilitate growth and development .
. . Not only can services liberalization affect economic growth and trade,
it can also have an impact on the provision of essential entitlements accepted
as human rights such as health care, education and water . . . However,
the liberalization of trade in services, without adequate governmental
regulation and proper assessment of its effects, can also have undesirable
effects. Different service sectors require different policies and time
frames for liberalization and some areas are better left under governmental
authority.”
Source:
United Nations Commission on Human Rights. Economic, Social and Cultural
Rights: “Liberalization of Trade in Services and Human Rights. Report of
the High Commissioner.” June 2002.
For more on
the impact of trade liberalization of essential services, see Part 3, Rational
No. 4. |
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A World
Bank senior economist
de-mystifies
performance contracting
“From time to
time, private sector management "discovers" the idea of paying for performance
(not just for time put in), of paying for outputs (not just inputs), and
of management by objectives accomplished (not just intentions). It all
sounds so obvious and so sensible that one must ask "Why didn't people
think of this before?" The answer is that they did. And they discovered
that it doesn't work too well—aside from fairly rude forms of labor. In
areas of human effort where effort, commitment, and the application of
intelligence are important, the carrots and sticks of external motivation
are insufficient for sustained performance. Beyond simple and specific
products, the determinants of quality are rarely susceptible to external
monitoring.”Source: David Ellerman, “From Sowing to Reaping: Improving
the Investment Climate(s)” |
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Examples
of Market Failure
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Monopoly:
Lack of competition allows firm to charge excessive prices
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Asymmetric Information:
Agents that control information can withhold or distort that information
to benefit themselves.
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Inadequate Consumer
Knowledge: Individuals lack enough information about a particular kind
of service to be good judges of their own interest (e.g., medical procedures)
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Negative Externalities:
Private firms keep costs low by engaging in activities that harm society
(e.g., polluting the environment, using up scarce water resources)
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Positive Externalities:
Left to its own devices, private market will not supply (enough of) service
to create public goods, whose benefits are enjoyed beyond individual consumer
(e.g., public health).
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Equity:
Private firms lack incentive to serve impoverished populations that cannot
pay market prices. Society decides that unregulated market cannot create
outcomes of social justice.
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Off-budget
implications of guarantees:
The example
of Indonesia
Multilateral
guarantees can dramatically increase the “off-budget” fiscal burdens of
recipient countries. The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA)
was designed to attract foreign investment in developing countries by providing
insurance against non-commercial risks. However, in direct contradiction
to the text of the Bank’s PSD documents, MIGA reduced the risk exposure
of a private multinational company and imposed the burden instead on the
government of a poor developing country.
In June 2000
MIGA paid out a claim for political risk insurance for the first time.
It made a payment of $15 million to Enron when the Indonesian government
cancelled a power project. The contract – to build, operate and maintain
a 500-megawatt power plant near Surabaya — was one of several independent
power producer (IPP) contracts signed with the dictatorship of President
Suharto. The contracts were suspended in 1997 in response to the country's
economic crisis and the collapse of the rupiah, the Indonesian currency.
A power utility, PLN, made clear to all the independent power producers
in the country that it simply could not afford to pay the prices specified
in the their long-term power purchasing agreements. Moreover, PLN and other
utilities nullified the contracts on the grounds that they were created
in a corrupt manner.
The rationale
for the cancellation and the payment of the claim were straightforward.
However, after the payment was made, MIGA insisted that the Indonesian
government reimburse the $15 million. As an incentive, MIGA refused to
issue any more coverage for business in Indonesia until it was paid. After
lengthy negotiations, the government agreed to repayment terms. Only then
did MIGA consent to provide insurance coverage for investors in Indonesia
once again.
This episode
was remarkable because the project was recognized even by MIGA as economically
and politically unsustainable. The guarantee agency actually agreed that
proceeding with the project was not a viable policy option. “While we understand
the circumstances that led to (the Enron) project suspension, international
law dictated that the cancellation be compensated,” said Luis Dodoro, MIGA's
general counsel and World Bank Group vice-president. Thus, Indonesian taxpayers
have to pay the bill for a politically corrupt and economically unviable
contract signed between a dictatorship and a multinational firm. Enron,
which negotiated the agreement, has received compensation, while the government
of Indonesia has reimbursed MIGA. |
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Multilateral Guarantees
Private lenders and investors
in infrastructure projects seek to protect themselves from risks by obtaining
commercial or political guarantees from export credit agencies, private
insurers, and multilateral institutions. Such guarantees shift private
sector risk onto taxpayers – precisely the reverse of what privatization
proponents promise for greater private sector participation in services.
When private firms lend to or invest in a water project in a borrowing
country, the Bank’s guarantee promises the private firms compensation for
certain losses if, under specified conditions, the Borrower does not meet
its obligations.
The MDBs claim that guarantees
are indispensable for building confidence and providing the incentive for
private financiers to invest in infrastructure projects. Critics argue
that such guarantees distort risk calculations and foist unsustainable
price, demand, and currency risks upon the government.
The MDBs offer two primary
types of guarantees:
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Partial risk guarantees
cover government obligations spelled out in agreements with the project
entity and ensure payment in the case of debt service default resulting
from non-performance of contractual obligations undertaken by governments
or their agencies in private sector projects
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Partial credit guarantees
cover all events of non-payment for a specified part of financing. This
helps to extend maturity periods, which is often significant in obtaining
longer-term financing for large construction projects.
There is not a clear distinction
between political and commercial realms, an ambiguity that creates its
own set of problems. As a general rule, however, the commercial side refer
to the risks to profits due to production inefficiencies or lack of demand.
The political aspect risks refer to those risks over which the government
has some measure of power. Mitigating political risks involves obtaining
government commitments not to expropriate private holding, to protect the
investment from consequences of war and unrest. World Bank guarantees also
cover local currency financing.
Guarantee Mechanisms
The World Bank is exploring
arrangements that will help sub-sovereign borrowers obtain financing without
needing sovereign guarantees. The Swedish International Development Cooperation
Agency (SIDA) helped to establish GuarantCo, which will provide partial
guarantees on issues of paper by private sector infrastructure service
providers and possibly municipalities and/or public sector authorities.
The Bank's issuance of guarantees
can constitute a serious conflict of interest. If Bank action to address
social or environmental difficulties with privately-financed projects results
in the disruption of a project or an escalation of costs, the guarantee
could be called. In other words, it could be in the public interest for
the Bank to "blow the whistle" on privately-financed projects. However,
the Bank would be constrained from taking such action given its liability
-- namely, the guarantee.
Furthermore, since guarantees
are provided by the private sector, it is redundant for the MDBs to offer
these products. If projects are not viable, the Bank could be seriously
distorting risk calculations by providing extra comfort to investors and
lenders. Assuming that the institutions do continue to utilize guarantees,
they should use investment screens to ensure that projects meet specified
“sustainable development” criteria.
Investment screens have been
commonly used by private investors in the United States and other industrialized
nations to select the portfolios of Socially Responsible Investment (SRI)
funds. An investment screen is a set of non-financial (such as social or
environmental) criteria that must be met by all companies in an investment
portfolio. There are two kinds of investment screens: "negative screens"
which are a set of criteria delineating what characteristics companies
in the portfolio cannot have (production of nuclear weapons, operations
in Burma, Superfund sites, etc.); and "positive screens," which are a set
of criteria delineating what characteristics companies in the portfolio
must have.
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Taking Governance Seriously
While privatization advocates
acknowledge the importance of rules and regulations for natural monopolies,
in practice there is little attention to governance when such policies
are implemented. Research in Latin America shows that when a regulatory
body existed at the award of a concession, the probability of contract
renegotiation was 28 percent. When it did not, the probability was 62 percent.
(1) Of more than 1,000 private concession contracts awarded in Latin America
during the 1980s, over 60 percent had to be re-negotiated within three
years. Of these, over 80 percent were in the water and transport sectors.
(2)
Public interest dimensions
of regulation include:
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Autonomy and authority.
The extent to which the regulator is insulated from political interference,
decisions are upheld within judicial system, responsibilities and jurisdiction
of different regulatory institutions are clearly defined.
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Capacity and resources.
Adequate budget for regulatory agency, as well as expertise, equipment,
and personnel to monitor services effectively.
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Transparency. Public disclosure
of regulatory processes, findings and decisions, as well as an institutional
space for information exchange with providers and consumers.
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Participation. Degree
to which citizens can contribute perspectives and information to both the
design of regulatory institutions and their routine operations
Legal issues that
affect the rights of consumers to receive affordable water include:
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Legislative framework:
Constitutional or legislative provisions affecting the allocation of water
resources.
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Land tenure: Constraints
to water connections facing informal settlements and consumers without
formal property titles.
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Recourse and appeal:
Channels available for public to lodge complaints and judicial integrity
of dispute settlement mechanisms.
(1) Estache, Romero, and Strong,
2000 in World Development Report, 2002, p. 153.
(2) Jorge Luis Guasch, “Concessions:
Bust or Boom? An Empirical Analysis of Ten Years of Experience in Concessions
in Latin America and the Caribbean,” World Bank, 2000.
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| Rationale No.
3 — Private provision improves efficiency and performance
Private provision delivers better services for less. The public sector
provider is often bound by bureaucratic inertia, lacks incentives to innovate,
and is unresponsive to helpless consumers who have nowhere else to go.
Private providers improve efficiency and expand service because of inherent
incentives to cut costs and to satisfy a growing number of paying customers,
while the state retains the role of regulator.
If economic gains were the only ones that mattered, privatization would
be easier to assess and its results would be less controversial. That’s
one reason why one rarely hears protests against the privatization of SOEs
in traditionally competitive sectors. If these private firms serve customers
badly or are mismanaged, they simply go out of business. There are two
reasons that this isn’t a serious social problem: first, if there is true
competition, customers can get their goods from someone else; second, if
the private provider is not engaged in “essential” services, the welfare
consequences for poor performance are mitigated. But as we’ll see, providers
of essential services usually cannot be disciplined by markets, while poor
performance – especially in non-economic outcomes – can have serious consequences
for the poor.
There is a considerable number of cases supporting claims that privatized
firms have performed better than the state-run services that they replaced.
Research on privatization of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) reveals evidence
of increased efficiency and profitability.4
Moreover, efficiency improvement in basic services has often been accompanied
by improved service quality and access.
There is no shortage of cases in which these improvements are not forthcoming.
Indeed, a number of empirical studies of the U.S. and United Kingdom since
the 1970s suggest that publicly-owned utilities are equally or even more
efficient that privately-owned ones.5
Nevertheless, the observation of better performance in many cases in developing
countries certainly merits consideration.
Importantly, the main indicator for performance in most privatization
studies is profitability or efficiency. However, profitability
is an inappropriate measure for the performance of essential services,
as it reflects the satisfaction of shareholders, not consumers. Essential
services are expected not only to run efficiently, but also to provide
high quality service and reach the poor. Yet poor people are often the
most costly to serve, living in outlying, remote and physically cramped
areas. Making matters worse, they are also the least profitable. In short,
promoting
equity goals may directly undermine efficiency.
The indicator of efficiency, such as labor productivity or number of
outputs per cost unit, is a legitimate consideration – but it is not the
only one. For example, in a country with few formal sector jobs, there
is a trade-off between efficiency and employment, which itself may be a
legitimate developmental goal in poor countries. Of course this does not
justify gross over-employment, nor unproductive public sector workers.
But it does suggest that the gains from efficiencies are not pure, and
must be evaluated in the context of offsetting losses.
Monopoly Services and Regulation
There is consensus that privatized monopolies require public regulation
to prevent market failure. Private providers of water and electricity can
raise profits by improving efficiency, but have no incentives for translating
higher productivity into gains for consumers. For that reason, the state
emerges as the unique institution to protect the public interest.
Some proponents of putting natural monopolies under private provision
are enthusiastic about performance-based contracts (PBCs), which were traditionally
used to improve the bottom-line of firms that contract out for goods and
services that they used to produce internally. Analysis of the effectiveness
of PBCs involves the “principal-agent” problem. When agents (sub-contractors)
have much more information and knowledge about a given task than the principals
(contracting firms), they may be able to withhold or manipulate that information
to their own advantage. As a World Bank infrastructure specialist explains:
“The fundamental problem of regulation is one of asymmetric information
between the regulated company and the regulatory agency. The regulated
company will have a strong incentive to abuse [its] strategic advantage
by under-supplying information or distorting the information supplied.
It is therefore critical that the regulatory framework establishes the
obligation of the regulated company to supply information to the regulator
in the form required.”6
The only way to for the principal to overcome this problem is through
adequate monitoring and evaluation of the agent’s output. However, this
can be costly. At a certain point, those costs force the principal to reconsider
whether it is worth subcontracting in the first place. Generally speaking,
the
easier it is to observe and measure an output, the less costly it will
be to enforce a PBC. As outputs become more complex or subjective,
the likelihood of undetected non-compliance or contractual disputes grows.
The main constraint on performance contracts is transaction costs. As
services become more complex, the public sector inevitably gets involved.
Governments often impose strict requirements on contractors regarding production
processes and outputs, as well as information and reporting requirements.
These details become part of excruciatingly complex and highly legalistic
contracts, and end up raising the costs of producing the desired services.
Not only does the state have to monitor outputs of private provision.
It has to ensure that the outputs are equitably distributed and that the
costs are appropriate. As a World Bank research note acknowledges: “Even
if a [water] contract were bid on basis of perfect information about the
current status of the water company’s assets and about new investments
needed, the future would hold uncertainties that could not be handled by
contract. And an initial contract is usually based on highly incomplete
information.”7
Proponents of private provision point out that both public and private
monopoly providers require regulation. And there is no shortage of evidence
about the inability of public regulators to discipline failing public providers.
As the 2004 World Development Report argues, there is sometimes
a “conflict of interest” when one government entity is charged with controlling
another. While there may certainly be cases in which adequate regulation
of private providers is a viable option, it is important that policy-makers
make their decisions based on the risks of pursuing such arrangements.
At a minimum, they should ask how feasible it will be to establish a functioning,
independent regulator, and the time horizon for doing so. Equally importantly,
the decision about whether or how to privatize should be informed by an
impact analysis of private provision under weak or non-existent regulation.
Competitive Services and Choice
For services with low barriers to entry, the rationale for private provision
is choice; consumers “shop around” based on price and quality. Here
the government’s main role is to ensure adequate levels of competition
that create viable choices for all citizens.
Expanding private provision in competitive service sectors can certainly
increase choice – but not necessarily for all consumers. As with utility
services, firms in key social sectors engage in cherry-picking. Not only
are poor people least able to pay commercial prices. They are often the
most costly to serve, living in less accessible areas, more prone to getting
sick, and transient.
Especially when existing public services are of low quality, expanding
the choice of providers draws better off consumers into the private sector.
However, those who are unable to afford commercially priced private services
must remain with the state, thus creating a “two tier” system based on
income. Public services that are funded through progressive cross-subsidies
-- or where high-use customers account for the bulk of revenues -- are
especially vulnerable to increased private sector participation, which
reduces the public sector’s revenue base.
If policy-makers do not address market failures associated with natural
disincentives to serve vulnerable populations, improved efficiency may
go hand in hand with increased social exclusion. Policy constraints inevitably
raise issues of fairness. On one hand, neither middle class consumers (nor
any anyone else) should be forced to use low quality services. If greater
choice can improve quality and efficiency, such benefits should not be
ignored. On the other hand, poor people are already marginalized politically.
After addressing the interests of the more influential constituencies by
increasing private provision, governments may be tempted to “move on” and
neglect complementary policies needed to serve the poor.
Corruption
If there was ever a double-edged sword in the debate over reforming
services, it’s corruption. Private provision proponents argue that front-line
government service providers routinely engage in petty bribery and theft
of supplies, and portray high ranking officials as perpetrators of massive
graft. They have no shortage of evidence. Skeptics, in turn, can choose
from a large and growing menu of non-transparent and criminal practices
among firms that deliver essential services. Former World Bank Chief Economist
Joseph Stiglitz once memorably referred to privatization as “briberization.”
But rather than engage in stale debates about which is worse, policy-makers
should assess existing or potential accountability mechanisms as they consider
which kind of provider is more likely to serve public welfare.
Neither public officials nor private businesses are inherently honest.
If not made accountable to service users, both try to get richer or more
powerful at the expense of consumers. Information disclosure and external
monitoring are therefore essential for both kinds of arrangements. Corrupt
governments clean up their act only when they have to answer to citizens.
Where policy-makers depend on privileged elites for political survival,
or where citizens lack the information they need to evaluate the behavior
of those entrusted to serve the public, accountability is hard to deliver.
By contrast, private firms refrain from corruption when they have to answer
to government – meaning an effective public regulator.
If one accepts the premise that ungoverned profit-maximizing companies
are no more philanthropic than their public sector counterparts, then state
institutions become the weakest link in fighting corruption regardless
of who the provider is. What tends to be lost in the debate over service
reform is that regulatory integrity is the key to both effective public
and private provision. Critics of privatization often point to a paradox:
the same government officials that were too corrupt to deliver services
to citizens are expected to be immune to the lucrative inducements of private
firms. Public sector managers unable to control the behavior of front-line
government agencies must somehow enforce compliance with standards of corporate
responsibility.
While public service employees may steal from consumers, supply warehouses
and budgets, private providers also have numerous opportunities for corruption
and regulatory capture. These include the bidding process for public contracts,
the establishment of contractual terms, enforcement of contract compliance
(including tariff changes), and anti-competitive collusion. Corporate corruption
is not an isolated phenomenon. There are countless examples of corruption
in privatizations undertaken developing countries.8
Moreover, the more money is at stake, the greater the potential for corrupt
behavior. For example, according to the World Bank itself, “transnational
firms headquartered abroad are more likely than other firms to pay public
procurement kickbacks.”9
Rationale No. 4 – Private provision makes reform permanent
The ebb and flow of the political system creates a certain degree
of uncertainty. What one reformer accomplishes today may be undone by the
next administration. Private provision can therefore be seen as a way to
remove politics from the political agenda. It is much easier to increase
subsidies or reverse employment cutbacks than to re-nationalize private
assets or expel private firms from the market. Especially when the political
system is inherently corrupt or overly responsive to rent-seeking interests,
it’s better to prevent anyone from making policy changes than allow policy
to be constantly subject to manipulation and political calculus.
Permanence has its attractions, but it’s risky to cast reforms in stone.
Unfortunately, policy-makers often lack sufficient information and analysis
to be able to predict the social and economic impacts of major reforms.
So while it’s desirable to make effective reforms hard to reverse, it’s
also dangerous to leave no exit door behind when policies are poorly implemented,
have far deeper negative impacts than initially expected, or have major
unintended consequences that were not originally considered.
The most common way that government can tie its own hands in service
reform is through privatization or long-term private concessions. Expropriating
private property (and to a lesser extent breaching a legal contract) is
typically considered a radical, populist and irresponsible act, especially
by investors upon which governments depend to generate jobs and economic
growth. Such actions can bring the wrath of multilateral and bilateral
lenders, and lead private rating agencies to seriously downgrade sovereign
credit risk. Because such pressures can lead to higher interest rates or
even a cutoff of credit, private provision can effectively remove government
from service provision for the foreseeable future.
Even in cases where it is politically feasible to take back control
of essential services, over time private provision may make such an alternative
impossible for more practical reasons. Especially when it comes to complex,
integrated sectors such as utilities, surrendering the capacity to deliver
services may make it impossible for the government to turn back the clock.
Liberalizing Trade in Services
Governments can also make public service reforms permanent through legally
binding constraints. One of the most controversial of these is through
the WTO’s General Agreement on Trade in Services. Once a government has
made specific sectoral commitments under GATS, it may only reverse those
commitments by negotiating acceptable compensation with all affected parties
– a costly undertaking that virtually ensures continuity. The WTO itself
declares that “because unbinding is difficult, [government] commitments
[to a sector] are virtually guaranteed . . .”10This
means that if subsequent events reveal serious negative social or economic
effects, it may be too late to take corrective action.
GATS does not privatize services. However, if governments do not limit
market access by foreign service providers, it does prevent governments
from taking actions that affect the competitive position of foreign investors.
GATS restricts government’s ability to regulate or subsidize service providers,
especially in ways that provide advantages that might discriminate against
an existing or potentially existing competitor.
WTO officials routinely deny that GATS applies to basic public services.
However, the ambiguity of existing language suggests otherwise. GATS exempts
those services “supplied in the exercise of governmental authority,” but
defines those services as being provided neither on a competitive nor commercials
basis. Thus for services in which governments compete with private providers
or charge cost covering fees, it’s quite plausible that they could fall
under GATS jurisdiction.
Moreover, in the Doha round of negotiations, northern countries made
numerous requests for opening up water, electricity, health and education
services, making it quite clear that governments are now being pressured
to make commitments in essential services that would be fully subject to
GATS disciplines.
Common sense suggests that governments should not make GATS commitments
until they have conducted impact analyses of liberalization in a particular
sector. Yet neither the WTO nor the multilateral lending institutions have
prepared a framework for assessing even the economic – to say nothing of
the social impact -- of opening services under GATS.11
B. Mechanisms for Promoting Private Provision
Since the mid-1980s the international financial institutions (IFIs)
have been aggressively promoting private provision for utilities, and to
a lesser extent for increased private participation in social services.
In the mid-1990s, the IFIs got more serious about cost recovery. The 2004
World Development Report, which calls for the state’s continued involvement
in delivering health care and primary education, while claiming that “there
are few advantages” to government delivery of water and electricity. It
is increasingly common for the World Bank and regional development banks
to finance a series of reforms that lead up to transferring control of
public assets to private firms. Typically these include:
-
Decentralization: Basic services are devolved to local governments
or even communities, which often lack experience or capacity to deliver
them directly. In addition, when local governments face fiscal constraints
imposed from the center, they lack budgetary resources needed to provide
services, and as a result adopt private provision “by default.”
-
Corporatization. As a way of taking public services off the general
budget, services are corporatized as financially autonomous entities. Although
still nominally public, they must fund themselves entirely through revenues
generated through service delivery (e.g., user fees) and cannot count on
general budget support.
-
Unbundling. When there is explicit recognition that poor people
cannot pay commercial rates, a service can be segregated into a profit-making
business (that caters primarily to the middle class and well off) and a
loss making one (that serves the poor). The profitable segment can be easily
privatized, while government (without the benefits of cross-subsidies)
retains responsibility for providing free or subsidized – and typically
low quality -- service to the poor.
-
Commercialization: Services are delivered on a full “cost recovery”
basis. Consumers must therefore pay out-of-pocket “user fees” in order
to have access. Commercialization is a common step prior to privatization,
as it makes a public service financially much more attractive to prospective
investors.
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Health
Care and Asymmetric Information
Privatization
advocates frequently cite health care as an area in which competition can
generate both greater efficiency and superior service. However, claims
about the ability of the private sector to improve equity and choice in
health care provision are contradicted by considerable evidence about imperfect
information and “market failure, such as those arising from the strong
power imbalance between providers and patients.” (1) Even for contracting
out of specific services, an empirical review calls into question the private
sector’s management capabilities, the existence of genuine competition
and the translation of competition into efficiency gains, as well as government
capacity to deign and enforce appropriate contracts with private providers.
(2)
Provision of
health care is unusually complex. There is a vast array of public, private,
and mixed systems that range from highly successful to dysfunctional. Unlike
basic infrastructure, choosing health care reform is not a matter of selecting
among a small number of distinct models with clear ownership arrangements,
but rather shaping incentives for public and private providers. There is
no “boilerplate” health care contract that a government can easily adapt
to its own circumstances.
However, there
is growing consensus on several principles about health care provision.
According to an IMF researcher: “Allocation can not be based solely on
cost-effectiveness, which focuses on efficiency, but ignores equity . .
. Markets alone cannot produce efficient outcome in the health care sector,
which suffers serious [market] failures due to asymmetry of information,
imperfect agency relationships, barriers to entry and moral hazard.” Because
patients know far less than physicians about how to “consume” health care,
doctors have tremendous power to induce consumption. (3) In other words,
because of the supply-side particularities of health care, demand can be
induced with relatively little consideration for price. As a result, private
provision that is not rigorously regulated is often characterized by over-supply.
(1) Biljmakers
and Lindner, “The World Bank’s Private Sector Development Strategy: Key
Issues and Risks,” Wemos/ETC Crystal, April 2003.
(2) Waelkens
and Greindl, “Urban health: particularities, challenges, experiences and
lessons learnt: A literature review,” Ecole de Santé Publique/ Université
Libre de Bruxelles, 2001
(3) William
Hsiao, “What Should Macro-Economists Know About Health Care Policy” IMF
Working Paper WP/00/136, International Monetary Fund, 2000. |
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Private
Incentives, Land Tenure and Water Access for the Poor in Buenos Aires
In the early
1990s, the water system for Buenos Aires, Argentina, was turned into three
private concession. Each concession included provisions for “universal
coverage,” including marginal and informal settlements. However, a decade
after the concessions began, the unconnected poor have seen few of the
benefits.
“Expansion of
water systems is driven by commercial viability, not delivery of rights
to water provision. Companies are profit-driven, so they see little gain
in extending the network to the poor, which they believe will be more costly,
both in physical infrastructure and in obtaining revenues. Expansion targets
and criteria are not in the public domain. So company officials can decide
for themselves where to extend networks, or how to comply with their obligations.
Campaigners are unable to obtain suitable information on which to base
their arguments for the connection of poor communities.”
Moreover, in
spite of laws and contractual provisions that impose universal service
obligations, “lack of legal land tenure is being used as reason for scant
service provision to poor settlements. Companies use excuses, such as that
poor neighborhoods have irregular layouts, are far from existing networks,
or may not pay for water once installed, as reasons not to extend the networks.”
Source:
Florencia Almansi, et. al. “Everyday Water Struggles in Buenos Aires: The
Problems of Land Tenure in the Expansion of Potable Water and Sanitation
Service to Informal Settlements” in New Rules, News Roles: Does PSP
Benefit the Poor? WaterAid and TearFund, 2003 Back |
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Private
Provision and Government Capacity
When governments
transfer control over their water system to private companies, the loss
of internal skills and expertise may be irreversible, or nearly so. Many
contracts are long term – for as much as 10 to 20 years. Management expertise,
engineering knowledge, and other assets in the public domain may be lost
for good. Indeed, while there is growing experience with the transfer of
such assets to private hands, there is little or no recent experience with
the public sector re-acquiring such assets from the private sector.
Source:
Peter Gleick, The New Economy of Water: The Risks and Benefits of Globalization
and Privatization of Fresh Water, Pacific |
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Global
Investment Rules and
National
Policy Space
Although GATS
is nominally about “trade” in services, its most economically significant
provisions are really about foreign investment. GATS reflects broader efforts
to create a multilateral framework for investment that applies to all WTO
members. Numerous legal analyses conclude that such agreements could limit
governments’ ability to regulate firms in ways that promote development
goals (e.g., local employment), protect the environment, or subsidize activities
that promote social equity. Technically, such agreements offer scope for
policy flexibility, since government may “carve out” special exemptions
during negotiations. However, in practice these agreements can erode governments’
ability to experiment with innovative policies, due to:
-
Limited ex-ante
knowledge. The requirement that all exemptions be scheduled at the
time of commitment implicitly presumes an inconceivable degree of ex ante
knowledge… Requiring countries to carve out space for all potentially useful
policies they may wish to enact in the future is unreasonably onerous.”
-
Limited capacity.
The burden of forecasting and scheduling [exemptions] is especially perverse
from the perspective of countries that lack the US or EU’s legion of trade
negotiators, industry groups and network of research institutions.
-
Changing political
contexts. Governments and political preferences change over time, but
the commitments and schedules they create at the international levels do
not. If one government expresses its commitment to deep liberalization
by scheduling a wide range of sectors with few protective exemptions, subsequent
governments who have contrasting but legitimate views about social policy
may find it difficult to cultivate space for inconsistent investment policies.
-
Domestic policy
coherence problems. Environmental and social government ministries
were rarely consulted or involved in decision-making related to the power
sector. Limited communication or consultation between various parts of
governments means that commitments may not reflect concerns articulated
by ministries and agencies responsible for social and environmental issues.
-
Inflexibility.
Once made, commitments are extremely difficult to reverse. In the GATS,
for example, suspension requires negotiating compensatory adjustments in
other sectors…[so] that governments are locked into potentially damaging
policy commitments even if unforeseen crises or developments arise.
Source:
Albert Cho and Navroz Dubash, “Will Investment Rules Shrink Policy Space
for Sustainable Development?” World Resources Institute Working Paper,
September 2003. |
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Selectivity: The New Face
of Conditionality
Even more important than old-fashioned
conditions on loans is the emerging practice of selectivity. The 2004 World
Development Report, noting the failure of “traditional conditionality,”
argues that conditions haven’t led to sustainable development not because
they may have been inappropriate, but rather because borrowing government
don’t keep their promises after receiving aid. The report concludes that
“What works better is choosing recipients more carefully, based on performance
(country selectivity) and setting conditions that reward reforms completed
rather than those promised.” Under this approach, conditionality thus becomes
even more coercive, forcing governments to adopt the Bank’s policies before
receiving assistance. This shift has potentially profound implications
for aid allocation. The principle of selectivity may eventually obviate
the need for conditions in country assistance strategies or adjustment
loans. As countries and localities are rewarded for “good policies,” the
Bank increasingly focuses its resources on governments that agree to implement
liberalization and privatization policies. For example, the World Bank
is concentrating the bulk of its lending in India to just three states
that have shown willingness to adopt policies that it supports.
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Decentralization: A Political Incentive to Privatize Services
Weak governance in central governments has been widely documented. Nevertheless,
the world has seen an accelerating shift of responsibilities to subnational
governments, which have even fewer resources for managing public services.
As a Latin American economic observed: “organizations responsible for managing
water resources often do not have any accounting or administrative capacity,
a problem that frequently becomes worse at the local level as a result
of decentralization processes implemented without an adequate analysis
of existing capabilities.” (1) When local governments face increasing social
demands without receiving corresponding increases in resources or capacity,
they have strong incentives to unload these political liabilities onto
the private sector. Unfortunately, local governments are even less prepared
to negotiate and regulate private contracts than national governments,
which themselves have shown serious limitations in governing private providers.
South Africa provides an illustrative example. (2) Because of decentralization
reform and re-zoning, the municipality of Nelspruit found its population
multiplied by a factor of ten in 1994, while its total income grew only
by 38 percent. Moreover, most of the new residents were poor. “It was apparent
that the [Nelspruit city] council would have difficulties . . . with existing
tariff revenues coming from Nelspruit alone.” These challenges were increased
further after the 2000 demarcation process, when the Greater Nelspruit
area was incorporated into Mbombela Municipality. The new frontiers doubled
the population of the municipality, “yet the financing for keeping this
newly enlarged area functioning predominantly relies on the tax base of
the town of Nelspruit.” As a result, , “cash-strapped” local government
wanted to “wash its hands of responsibility” for water by handing it over
to a private concession. Senior officials have reported that if the concession,
now in jeopardy, should fail, they will simply look for a new private provider.
In this sense, privatisation of water became a convenient political exit
strategy for local officials desperately lacking resources.
1. Pena and Solanes. “Effective Water Governance in the Americas,” Third
Water Forum, Kyoto, Japan, March 2003.
2. L. Smith, S. Mottiar and F. White, “The Nelspruit water concession:
Testing the limits of market-based solutions,” Civil Society Consultation,
Commonwealth Finance Ministers Meeting on Provision of Basic Services,
Bandar Seri Begawan, Negara Brunei Darussalam, July 22-24, 2003
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Decentralization and Private Provision
Decentralization has become a common “first step” toward private provision
of services. When adequate revenues are not available for local government,
decentralization can lead to privatization by default. When local governments
face increasing social demands without receiving corresponding increases
in resources or capacity, they have strong incentives to unload these political
liabilities onto the private sector. According to the UNDP’s 2003 Human
Development Report,, “As urban populations increase, fiscally strapped
local authorities cannot expand services to cover them. As a result water
services decline in quantity and quality in middle-class neighborhoods
- and fail to reach new poor neighborhoods.” However, local governments
are even less prepared to negotiate and regulate private contracts than
national governments.
While the logic behind decentralization is to put services closer to
the people and improve accountability, in practice local governments are
often given responsibility for delivering services without sufficient capacity
or resources. “Financial decentralization often renders local governments
vulnerable to macro-economic shocks and remedial measures to control public
expenditures and national budget deficits . . . [Amid] sharply reduced
[national] spending . . . the quality and reach of public services is bound
to suffer in the absence of complementary measures to raise local resources.”*
The IMF can require governments to take measures that severely limit
the ability of local governments to delivery public services, even when
decentralization reforms devolve service delivery responsibilities to lower
levels of government. For instance, following its institutional priority
to ensure macroeconomic stability, the IMF may pressure central governments
to: reduce or eliminate budget subsidies (and domestic credit) to services,
especially utilities that operate in the red; limit fiscal transfers to
subnational governments; allow the creditors of local governments to “intercept”
transfers to local governments in order to collect debt-related obligations;
refrain from “bailing out” indebted local governments.
While local governments may not make a deliberate, premeditated decision
to contract out public services, when faced with serious resource gaps
they often have to choose between reducing access and quality, or transferring
responsibility for service delivery to a private provider. In this decentralized
context, the fiscal rationale for pursuing privatization may simply be
one of desperation.
* Mark Robinson, “Participation, Local Governance and Decentralized
Service Delivery,” Ford Foundation workshop on “New Approaches to Decentralized
Service Delivery,” Santiago, Chile, March 2003, p. 12.
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The IMF, whose loans are widely recognized as a “seal of
approval” for developing countries, also imposes important conditions for
financial assistance. It can require governments to take measures that
severely limit the ability of local governments to delivery public services,
even when decentralization reforms devolve service delivery responsibilities
to lower levels of government. For instance, following its institutional
priority to ensure macroeconomic stability, the IMF may pressure central
governments to:
-
Reduce or eliminate budget subsidies (and domestic credit) to services,
especially utilities that operate in the red;
-
Limit fiscal transfers to local or state governments;
-
Allow the creditors of local governments to “intercept” transfers to local
governments in order to collect debt-related obligations;
¨ refrain from “bailing out” indebted local governments.
In addition to longstanding lending instruments, the World Bank has created
a number of recent initiatives to advance the agenda of service privatization.
Several examples illustrate how diverse lending and non-lending instruments
converge on a common policy approach.
Conditionality. Notwithstanding widespread evidence that loan
conditions do not improve effectiveness of aid, they continue to be widely
used by the IFIs. Conditions for commercialization and private provision
can be found in policy “triggers” for lending in World Bank country assistance
strategies, as well as “tranche release” criteria for structural adjustment
loans. In the electricity sector, a World Resources Institute study of
six countries found that reforms were driven by the immediate need for
capital, usually as the result of the withdrawal of international donor
support for the power sector. In Argentina, the IDB and World Bank withheld
assistance to the provinces unless governments agreed to conform to federal
pricing requirements. In Orissa, India, donors instructed consultants to
“create a process that was irreversible.”12
In a study of ten cities by the Director of Water and Sanitation at the
Asian Development Bank, only one (Macau) was found to have privatized of
its own volition, having done so a century ago.13
Private Sector Development. The World Bank’s 1995 Annual Report
referred to the institution’s shift toward direct support of private sector
investment (as opposed to direct lending to governments) as “a dramatic
departure from what had been Bank policy for half a century.” The Private
Sector Development (PSD) Strategy, which was approved by the World Bank’s
Board in February 2002, puts real power behind this shift. Under the PSD
strategy, the World Bank’s private sector affiliate, the International
Finance Corporation (IFC), is to team up with the International Development
Association (IDA), the World Bank’s concessional loan arm, to privatize
services in low-income countries, including “frontier” areas, such as social
programs and basic infrastructure. The PSD strategy’s purpose is to transform
much of the World Bank Group’s traditional operations into support for
the role of the private sector.
Output-based aid. The World Bank is scaling up the financing
of infrastructure and social service projects through output-based aid
(OBA) design. OBA projects delegate service delivery to private “third
parties” under contracts that make payment conditional on outputs or services
actually delivered. A Global Partnership for OBA was launched in 2003 by
the World Bank Group, with support from DFID. It is now experimenting with
and scaling up OBA schemes, some of which would provide subsidies to corporations
when they deliver services or meet certain performance benchmarks. Examples
of pro-poor OBA payments include one-time payment for expanding coverage
(e.g., new water connections), or subsidies for lifeline consumption in
poor households.
Community-driven development. An approach to private service
provision that the World Bank has embraced with particular enthusiasm is
community-driven development (CDD), which currently absorbs about half
of IDA credits and grants. According to the Bank’s web site, CDD gives
control of decisions and resources to community groups, not local governments.
“These groups often work in partnership with service providers, local governments,
the private sector, NGOs, and central government agencies . . .” A common
type of CDD is the Social Fund, through which the Bank has channeled $3.7
billion in 57 countries, with donor and government co-financing brining
the total to about $9 billion. Social Fund resources are distributed directly
to communities, rather than local governments, and often contain thousands
of sub-projects, which are bid out to private and non-profit contractors.
The quality and extent of service provision depends largely on strong,
effective local governments, but CDD funds bypass and weaken governments
that are assuming responsibility for transparent privatization, regulation
and financial management.14
Importantly, CDD efforts rarely finance public provision, so citizens are
denied the full range of choice. Moreover, the Bank’s own record in CDD
suggests that its enthusiasm may be poorly placed (see box).
LICUS. The World Bank addressed the special needs of “failed
states” through its Low-Income Countries Under Stress (LICUS) program.
LICUS turns the idea of improving governance on its head. Rather than building
the institutions of governance, an external institution -- the independent
service authority (ISA) — simply replaces the state’s essential functions
altogether. ISAs are largely autonomous from government, with high standards
of accountability directly to donors. They are wholesale institutions,
contracting out services with multiple providers, including firms and NGOs,
for retail services that they monitor and compare to ensure cost-effectiveness.
Communications strategy. The Bank has financed “strategic communication
campaigns” to persuade citizens in Borrowing countries of the soundness
of privatization. For example, after negative publicity on water privatization
in Ghana began to interfere with policy implementation, the Bank adopted
a public marketing strategy. To deliver this message, the Bank and the
Government each hired a full-time staff person (funded by Japanese bilateral
aid) to carry out the “strategic communications” program. The World Bank’s
External Relations department offers specific guidance for conducting such
campaigns.15 In what appears
to be a direct violation of the Bank’s own Articles of Agreement, which
prohibit interference in domestic political affairs of borrowers, Bank
staff are instructed on how to work with legislatures to overturn congressional
or parliamentary opposition to privatization and ensure the passage of
laws that would institutionalize a "customer focus" in government.
C. Trends in Resource Flows
Since 1998, the developing world has become a net capital exporter to
the developed world. At the same time, growth rates are declining in many
countries. In 2000, the world community committed itself to a set of eight
Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that would, among other things, halve
by 2015 the proportion of people whose income is less than one dollar per
day. In the poorest countries, the shortage of capital is compounded by
a reduction in official development assistance from bilateral donors. While
donors and creditors publicly highlight the importance of meeting the MDGs,
they are not providing the capital needed to raised investment levels to
achieve these targets. For example:
Even more troubling than stagnating aid levels is the recent decline
in private investment. If the overall FDI picture is bleak (as discussed
below), when it comes to investment in basic services for developing countries,
the situation is worse. Many multinational firms have been scaling back
their investment plans. In January 2003, as part of its efforts to restructure
massive debt, Suez announced that it would pull back from new water business
in developing countries, and curtail investment in existing operations.16
The investment prospects for rural water service are particularly discouraging.
According to International Rivers Network, “Water multinationals have
little or no interest in rural drinking water systems. Corporations are
rarely able to profit from poor and dispersed rural populations who mainly
depend on local water sources such as wells, springs and streams.”17
Even small businesses appear hesitant to invest in the areas that need
it the most. As a WaterAid study of rural water reform in Uganda explains,
“communities that are disadvantaged by the terrain in their locality –
where the more expensive technical options are required – are unlikely
to benefit from [private sector] projects . . . Contracts to the private
sector avoid expensive deep drilling operations.”18
The neglect of poor users is most apparent in Latin America, where private
provision has had the greatest expansion over the last decade. Despite
efforts to make the water sector function like a competitive market throughout
the region, “coverage for the low income population has not significantly
improved.”19
The fact that foreign direct investment levels were so much larger than
official development assistance was portrayed as evidence that multilateral
development banks were becoming irrelevant. Between 1988 and 1999, service
sector foreign direct investment (FDI) increased at an annual rate of 28
percent and accounted for 37 percent of total FDI stocks in developing
countries in 1999. The share of infrastructure in total FDI flows nearly
doubled during 1990-98. Hence, it is significant that net FDI inflows to
developing countries fell sharply in 2002 to an estimated $143 billion
compared to $171 billion in 2001. FDI has dropped to Latin America, since
the region has sold most of its assets, many to foreign buyers.20
While FDI is often touted as the critical resource for the entire developing
world, FDI flows to developing countries remain highly concentrated. Today
about three quarters of FDI to developing countries goes to just 10 countries,
and most of this amount goes to China, Brazil and Mexico. All low-income
countries combined received only $11 billion in FDI in 2002. Economist
David Woodward divided developing countries by per capita equity inflows.
He found that the 71 countries receiving less than $1 per capita received
a combined total of just 0.1 percent of total equity flows, despite having
22.3 percent of the population of the developing world.21
Moreover, not all FDI has the same developmental potential. Increasing
foreign investors are spending on mergers and acquisition (M&A), rather
than new “greenfield” investment in new assets and production capacity.
Private provision of essential services by foreign investors, especially
infrastructure, usually takes the form of sale – or long term lease – of
existing assets. According to a study by UNCTAD, the share of M&A in
total FDI among developing countries – not including China, the largest
recipient of greenfield investment – grew from 22 percent in 1988 to 72
percent in 1997. According to Cambridge University economist Ajit Singh,
“When FDI takes the form of green field investment, it represents a net
addition to the host country’s capital stock. However, FDI entry via an
acquisition may not represent any addition at all to the capital stock,
output or employment.”22
Part 4. Lessons Learnt, Common Mistakes.
While many of the rationales for private provision are compelling, private
provision in practice does not always deliver on the benefits associated
with those rationales. In some cases, private service delivery results
in a fiasco, while in other cases undeniable improvements are evident.
However, in many of the latter cases, the economic logic underlying private
provision of essential services can exclude or harm poor people, or force
the government to assume far costs that rival or vastly exceed those of
public sector reform.
Moreover, the benefits of private provision are often most doubtful
precisely where public services are performing the worst. Governments that
already have strong institutions and accountability mechanisms are likely
to be able to implement privatization policies quite effectively. However,
they are also more likely to have effective service providers and low levels
of corruption to begin with. On the other hand, rent-seeking public institution
and governments driven by special interests typically deliver poor quality
services, or limit access to the privileged few. While there may be much
room for improvement, such governments offer little hope for properly regulating
private firms that deliver services.
Proponents of private provision often assume a “counter-factual of inaction.”
They compare best-case private provision scenario with continuation of
failing public service. The implication in much privatization literature
is that government is simply beyond hope. Yet there are often viable options
for reforming public services, especially by increasing accountability
to citizens, and making budgets more progressive. In many cases, the constraints
on these options are starkly political, while in others the need is for
greater technical capacity or better organizational incentives. Before
committing to private provision, especially with weak regulatory capacity,
governments should assess the constraints to “doing privatization right,”
the costs of doing it wrong, and options for reforming existing public
sector services. Toward that end, citizens and policy-makers are encouraged
to:
-
Determine which kinds of institutions are needed for different provision
options.
-
Assess the feasibility and time horizon for strengthening or creating
those institutions,
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Evaluate the risks associated with different reforms and ask whether
they are acceptable
-
Estimate the potential social and economic costs of service provision
while appropriate institutions are being built.
-
Consider a range of roles that the private sector might play in
essential service
This module identified the main rationales for private provision of services,
as well as reasons for calling those rationales into question. In order
to minimize the risks of undertaking reforms that don’t deliver on promised
benefits, we conclude with five recommendations:
Don’t assume the problem. Privatization advocates often
start from the assumption that public services are failing because of public
sector weaknesses: apathy, incompetence, political patronage or outright
corruption. Moreover, they often imply that these problems are so entrenched
that they are essentially unreformable, leaving no choice other than replacing
the government provider with a private one. As noted in Part 3, this position
creates a paradox: the same weak state must now regulate profit-seeking
private interests with severe disadvantages in information and monitoring
capabilities. Citizens and policy-makers should begin with the simple question:
What’s the problem? Is it really an organizational “pathology?” All too
often, the root problem is simply insufficient resources. Public sector
critics often assume that insufficient resources is the result of improper
pricing that doesn’t produce enough revenue to invest in expansion, or
sometimes even to maintain existing infrastructure. Is this really the
case? Or does the problem lie elsewhere: fiscal austerity measures eroding
investment over many years, profits being sent back to the general budget
instead of re-investment, non-payment by major users, including the government
itself, or rapid growth of poor users who cannot afford to pay commercial
prices?
Don’t assume the solution. When the nature of the problem
has been determined, deliberations over the right reform can begin. A comparison
of costs and risks is essential. For each proposal, citizens should demand
that proponents justify it as the most feasible or least costly option
for reform. For example, when organizational mismanagement is found to
be a problem, is it really unreformable? A great deal of public management
literature focuses on the use of incentives and accountability mechanisms
to improve performance. Can the organization be restructured or given better
incentives to deliver services? When insufficient resources are the problem,
is privatization the best way to procure adequate resources? If large numbers
of poor people still require subsidies, is private provision the most efficient
way to deliver those subsidies? If better off users are paying much less
than they are able (e.g., middle class, industry, government), can a more
progressive cross-subsidy mechanism be created to produce enough revenue
for serving the poor?
Take regulation seriously. Without proper governance and
monitoring, privatization of natural monopolies is a house of cards. This
means that there needs to be an ex ante analysis of regulatory capacity,
autonomy and authority, as well as the legislative framework which gives
regulators their mandate. [An EPEP module focusing on regulatory regime
is to be produced in the near future.] Where regulation is found to be
weak, promises to improve regulation, technical assistance and “capacity
building” programs should not be accepted as sufficient for moving ahead
with privatization. The damage to public welfare while a private provider
operates without regulation can be extensive, or even irreversible.
Make contracts transparent. An evaluation of regulation
is not possible with access to details of what is to be regulated. This
means that proposed contracts with private providers must be publicly disclosed.
Currently utility firms resist subjecting contractual terms to public scrutiny,
claiming that the contract is private intellectual property and that the
government itself adequately represents the public interest. This argument
must be rejected. Governments are typically woefully unprepared to negotiate
complex legal contractual provisions with sophisticated corporations. Moreover,
those contracts, once signed, can last for decades, amplifying the cost
of mistakes, ambiguities or omissions that firms can exploit. To the extent
that civil society can support government with advice, opinions and information,
the public interest will benefit. Civil society has a very strong case
to insist: No transparency, no deal!
Carve out essential services from trade agreements. The
uncertainty of the legal implications of trade deals like GATS is enormous,
as is the impact on public welfare. Because there is so little information
or analysis available to help guide governments in negotiations – and because
commitments made are essential irreversible, trade negotiators should simply
make a categorical policy to exclude essential services from trade liberalization.
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Labor
Rights Violations and
Water Privatization
in Colombia
Privatization
can threaten – and even abrogate – the rights of workers. The transfer
of ownership or control of public sector assets to the private sector can
effectively do away with formal labor rights enjoyed under public sector
employment.
In 2001, the
Municipality of Pereira, Colombia approved a Performance Plan that included
privatization of the public water service. The plan complied with explicit
recommendations of the InterAmerican Development Bank (IDB) to eliminate
the presence of SINTRAEMSDES, the union representing employees of the utility.
Article 8 of
the Plan obliges the company to convert to a mixed enterprise for public
services, a change that removes the protections of the acquired labor rights
of SINTRAEMSDES from the remaining employees. The conversion of the public
service company, which requires the presence of at least 11 percent private
investment in the enterprise, removed the designation of ‘official workers’
from the company’s employees. The shift provides workers with only the
coverage of the national labor code instead of the employment terms previously
negotiated by the union.
In compliance
with the new terms of employment, Article 9 of the Performance Plan directs
the company to develop a new labor policy: “The Enterprise will determine
and maintain an updated and optimal payroll, i.e., the number of positions
and job profiles required by the Enterprise under efficient conditions.
This payroll will include, without distinction, ‘official workers’ and
‘public employees’ who may be freely hired and fired and who have the required
minimum qualifications. The Enterprise will also develop a policy designed
to adapt its actual payroll to the optimal payroll.” Given that, according
to the IDB, the optimal number of employees would be 274, this directive
indicated the reduction of 100 additional posts.
The withdrawal
of the designation of ‘official’ workers illegally deprived these employees
of their protections under the SINTRAEMSDES new contract, making them vulnerable
to dismissal. At present, with respect to staff reductions, the Enterprise
is in the process of fulfilling these directives and reducing the number
of unionized employees.
Source:
Public Services International |
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Private
Investment:
Not for
the Poor
According to
British environment minister Michael Meacher,
“Private sector
finance will certainly be important but it will generally not be used for
basic services. Thus the World Bank's database on Private Participation
in infrastructure, whilst it shows that private investment in water and
sanitation in developing countries to date totals $25 billion, also reveals
that none is in South Asia, and almost none is in Africa. Yet these are
the two regions in the world without adequate water and sanitation services.
This indicates that private sector investment is at present insignificant
at providing basic water and sanitation services to the very people who
most need it.” (International Conference on Freshwater, Bonn, December,
2001)
The World Panel
on Financing Water Infrastructure, chaired by former IMF Director Michel
Camdessus, promotes private capital investment, but concedes that, “Compared
with other types of infrastructure, the water sector has been the least
attractive to private investors, and the sums involved have been the smallest.”
In a meeting on water policy in Uganda, staff from the French multi-national
Vivendi stated that making a reasonable profit limits investment to larger
cities with sufficient per capital income. (1) The CEO of SAUR, another
French water multinational, said that there were unreasonable demands on
the private sector in developing countries, such as universal provision
requirements. Noting a “marked increase in risk for the private operators,
particularly in developing countries,” he lamented the “emphasis on unrealistic
service levels [which leads to] limited interest in the market.” He concluded
that investment requirements cannot be met by the private sector and that
“Service users can’t pay for the level of investments required, not for
social projects . . . The scale of the need far out-reaches the financial
and risk taking capacities of the private sector.” (2)
(1) Marie-Marguerite
Bourbigot & Yves Picaud, Vivendi Water, ‘Public-Private Partnership
(PPP) for Municipal Water Services’ Regional Conference on The Reform of
the Water Supply and Sanitation Sector in Africa, Kampala Uganda, February
2001
(2) “Is the
Water Business Really a Business?” Mr J.F.Talbot, CEO Saur International
World Bank Water and Sanitation Lecture Series 13th February 2002 |
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More
Rhetoric: Less Aid ¨
In 2000, donor
aid for education totaled $4.1 billion, with just $1.5 billion for primary
education. In the 1990s, bilateral aid for education fell from $5 billion
to $3.5 billion, dropping to just 7% of official development assistance
(ODA) – an all-time low
-
In 2000, the median
per capita spending on public health was $1,061 in high human development
countries; $194 in medium human development countries and $38 in low human
development countries.
-
During the 1990s,
an average of $3 billion per year in ODA was allocated to water and sanitation
projects. The share of water and sanitation in total ODA remained relatively
stable throughout the decade, at 6 percent of bilateral and 4-5 percent
of multilateral aid. (Non-concessional World Bank lending adds over $1
billion per year.)
-
The total share
of International Development Association (concessional lending) devoted
to basic social services (basic health, primary education and water and
sanitation) has rarely surpassed 10 percent. The multilateral share (UN
agencies, the World Bank and regional development banks) accounts for a
third of ODA.
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