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8 - Governance

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  05 September 2014

Eduardo Engel
Affiliation:
Universidad de Chile
Ronald D. Fischer
Affiliation:
Universidad de Chile
Alexander Galetovic
Affiliation:
Universidad de Los Andes, Santiago, Chile
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Summary

In this chapter, we look at the governance of the public works authority (PWA). We argue that PPPs share some of the same defects as standard public works, related to improper project design, selection, and opportunistic renegotiations. Because these problems are due to failures of governance in PWAs, our analysis leads to recommendations to address these weaknesses. We explore some issues specifically related to the governance of PPPs, but our recommendations are applicable to the governance structure of the PWA in general.

Why PPPs Need Good Governance

When delivering infrastructure, governments face three challenges: first, deciding what and when to build; second, building it cost effectively; and third, ensuring proper maintenance and service quality thereafter. Governments in general have been unsuccessful at meeting these challenges. In many countries, infrastructure facilities include white elephants or earmarks directed at particular political constituencies; pricing is inefficient; there is X-inefficiency and lack of innovation and technological advance. Because resources are limited, these projects are built at the expense of socially worthwhile projects. It is not unusual for infrastructure procurement to be opaque and even corrupt, and the PWA is often biased against maintenance spending. Heggie and Vickers describe the reason for these shortcomings in the case of roads, but their description is applicable to most types of infrastructure:

[Roads] are not managed as part of the market economy with its formidable pricing dynamic. There is no clear price for roads, road expenditures are most often financed from general tax revenues, and the road agency is not subjected to any rigorous market discipline. These bias managerial incentives. Roads are managed like a social service with multiple goals. Road users pay taxes and user charges, but the proceeds are almost always treated as general tax revenues. Instead of being financed through user charges, roads are thus financed through budget allocations determined as part of the annual budgetary process. These allocations bear little relationship to underlying needs … or to users’ willingness to pay. There is no direct link between revenues and expenditures, no price to ration demand …, and expenditures are not subjected to the rigorous tests of the marketplace.

(1998, p. 19)
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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2014

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