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Infrastructure Session PEAM Course 2005 Vivien Foster, IEF Outline Distinguishing features Stylized facts Funding sources Budgetary boundaries Budgetary mechanisms I. Distinguishing Features Capital intensive Infrastructure services are highly capital intensive Capital costs as percentage total – Power: G (35-75%), T(90%), D(70%), Total (63%) – Telecom: 25-45% – Water: 65% Long lead times Infrastructure investments are based on long term planning decisions (5-30 yrs) Large lumpy investments are required on an occasional basis Investment projects have long lead times of several years (1-5 yrs) Investment costs may be hard to predict due to local idiosyncrasies Long asset lives Infrastructure assets have very long lives Typical asset lives by sector are as follows. – Power: Overall average (25-30) – Telecom: Fixed (15), Mobile (10), Internet (5) – Water: Civil (20-40) High maintenance Infrastructure assets have substantial maintenance needs Expressed as percentage replacement cost per year they are – 2% for electricity generation, roads – 3% for water, sewerage – 8% for fixed, mobile telephone lines Inadequate maintenance leads to exponential rehabilitation requirements Fiscal consequences For all of these reasons, ill-suited to unpredictable annual budgetary cycle Moreover, particularly vulnerable to budgetary downturns – – – – Politically soft target for budget cuts Maintenance less attractive than investment Even investments can always be deferred Long lived assets delay hour of reckoning The maintenance dilemma Very Good 100 90 -Filling Cracks Good 80 70 -Geotextile and Strengthening Fair 60 -Reconstruction of the Surface -Reconstruction of the partial base course 50 Poor 40 30 -Complete Reconstruction Very Poor 20 10 0 0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 If maintenance on a 20 year road is not done by the end of the 12th year. It starts to deteriorate eight times faster than in the early years II. Stylized Facts LAC: falling public investment Public Investment in Infrastructure Selected Latin American Countries, 1980-98 6.0% As percentage of GDP 5.0% 4.0% 3.0% 2.0% 1.0% 0.0% 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 ARG BRA CHL COL Source: Easterly, Calderón and Serven, 2003 MEX PER LAC: falling total investment Total Investment in Infrastructure Selected Latin American Countries, 1980-98 9.0% 8.0% As percentage of GDP 7.0% 6.0% 5.0% 4.0% 3.0% 2.0% 1.0% 0.0% 1980 1981 1982 1983 1984 1985 1986 1987 1988 1989 1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 ARG BRA CHL Source: Easterly, Calderón and Serven, 2003 COL MEX PER Composition by sector Percentage infrastructure spending 100% 90% 80% 70% Communications 60% Transport 50% Water 40% Energy 30% 20% 10% 0% Argentina Colombia Source: Argentina PER, 2003 & Colombia REDI, 2004 Percentage infrastructure spending Composition by jurisdiction 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Sub-national (inc. SOE) National Argentina Colombia Source: Argentina PER, 2003 & Colombia REDI, 2004 Decentralization Central Regional Local Water Occasionally Sometimes Frequently Transport Primary roads Generation, transmission Secondary roads Sometimes distribution Tertiary roads Sometimes distribution Energy Telecom Local and long distance Sometimes local Turkey: mapping institutions National Coverage State Economic Enterprises Communicatio ns Energy Transport All Fixed Telephony and some Cellular Services Postal Services Electricity generation, transmission and distribution Gas Distribution Oil processing and distribution Railways Operation Ports Operation Airlines Transportation Roads Sanitation Central Government ` Municipalities Construction of hydropower plants Construction of Railways, Ports and Airports Airports Operation Construction and maintenance of major intercity express ways Water Sub-national Coverage Irrigation Village/rural roads Major urban water supply and treatment projects Drinking water supply for rural areas Public transportation Building and operation of passenger and freight terminals Construction and maintenance of urban (intracity) roads Urban water supply Drainage Solid waste collection and disposal Sanitation III. Funding sources Diversity of sources Infrastructure services present a wide range of financing mechanisms Sources of funding are as follows – Fiscal transfers – User fees – Cross-subsidies – Quality Extent of fiscal support Power sector Bosnia Herzegovina % Under- Under- System GDP pricing collection losses 1.3 95% 5% 0% Bulgaria 3.0 87% 13% 0% Azerbaijan 5.9 46% 48% 6% Macedonia 6.5 71% 10% 19% Kyrgyz R. 10.1 34% 17% 49% Uzbekistan 12.1 69% 12% 19% Tajikistan 19.1 87% 4% 9% Source: Ebinger, forthcoming Te le co m Ag ua Source: REDI Colombia, 2004 G as 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Tr an sp or te El ec tri cid ad Porcentaje de inversion Colombia: funding source Generacion interna Transferencias fiscales Historic under-pricing Ratio of revenue to costs 1.8 1.6 1.4 1.2 1 0.8 0.6 0.4 0.2 0 Telecoms Source: WDR 1994 Gas Power Water Historic inefficiency US$ billions annually 200 200 150 100 123 50 55 0 Subsidies through mispricing Source: WDR 1994 Costs of technical inefficiency Public investment Cost recovery: water Median tariff Degree of cost recovery US$/m3 Nil 8% Partial O&M 42% Partial capital 50% HIC 0.96 UMIC 0.35 39% 22% 39% LMIC 0.22 37% 41% 22% LIC 0.09 88% 9% 3% Global 0.35 40% 30% 30% Source: Foster & Yepes, forthcoming Cost recovery: electricity Median tariff Degree of cost recovery US$/kWh Nil 0% Partial O&M 17% Partial capital 83% HIC 0.11 UMIC 0.06 0% 71% 29% LMIC 0.05 27% 50% 23% LIC 0.05 31% 44% 25% Global 0.07 15% 44% 41% Source: Foster & Yepes, forthcoming Who really gets the subsidy? government subsidy inefficiency UTILITY tariffs below cost inadequate quality of service utility workers customers coping costs alternative providers In Hyderabad (India), employees capture 40% of the subsidy, and consumers 60%, half of which they spend on alternative providers What distributional incidence? Omega indicator Water Electricity subsidies subsidies Consumption based 0.56 0.57 Other welfare programs 1.00 Geographical targeting 1.07 1.10 1.33 Means testing 1.63 1.28 1.55 Self-selection 1.84 1.89 Source: Komives et al., forthcoming IV. Budgetary Boundaries Budgetary boundaries Infrastructure has a tendency to creep off the budget for both good and bad reasons There are a number of mechanisms through which this takes place – Extra-budgetary funds (fuel tax, USL) – State Owned Enterprises – Public Private Partnerships Earmarked funds Loved by sectoralistsprovide a stable source of financing in sectors without possibility of user fees, isolated from budgetary and political interference Loathed by macroeconomistsreduce budgetary flexibility and optimization of public resources, often lead to poor governance, lack of transparency Tot al energy and t ransport subsidies ($m) Argentina: exploding funds 2000 Special Funds Transport 1800 1600 1400 Special Funds Energy 1200 1000 800 National Budget Transport 600 400 200 0 1999 2000 Source: Argentina PER, 2003 2001 2002 2003 National Budget Energy Argentina: weak governance Legal basis International Argentina best practice transport fund Established by law Established and modified by decree Governance Autonomous userrepresented board Accountability Published accounts, audits Controlled directly by Min Econ Internal public sector controls Resource allocation Under continual modification Transparent, stable guidelines Argentina: vicious circles 1930/49 National Roads Fund established funded through levy on diesel Post 2000 Creation of new Diesel Fund to finance road infrastructure 1950/69 Levy modified to tax rate and Federal Roads Council created 1970/99 Road funds diverted to general budget, change in allocation of diesel tax State Owned Enterprises Often represent a large percentage of public investment in infrastructure May or may not be consolidated into fiscal accounts May be net contributors or drains on the public purse Operate in restricted environments that limit their autonomy and commercial orientation Management may be guided by macroeconomic concerns LAC: importance of SOE 22% 44% Local government 34% Source: REDI Colombia, 2004 Central government Public enterprises Contribution to public surplus/deficit (% GDP) -0.1 -0.2 -0.3 Source: REDI Colombia, 2004 Ecopetrol ISAGEN ISA EPM ESSA Huila Corelca Telecom ETB Emcali Colombia: drains vs. cash cows 0.7 0.6 0.5 0.4 0.3 0.2 0.1 0 Colombia: government bailouts Mechanism Period Transfer utility debts to central govt 1991/97 Refinancing and debt forgiveness 1992 Transfer of dividends across SOEs 1994/96 Payment of guarantees for credits Payment of debts owed by govt Payment of liquidation costs 1998 2001 2002/03 Capital injection to privatized SOEs 2002/03 Total 1991/03 Source: REDI Colombia, 2004 Value (US$m) 1,538 600 41 200 104 28 45 2,556 Peru: restrictions on SOEs Restrictions Consequences – Budgets subject to – Higher costs approval (labor cap) – Lower profitability – Dividend targets set to – Sub-optimal gearing meet surplus – Limited investment – Strong unionization, political limits on lay-offs – Public regulations on • Investment • Procurement • Employees Public Private Partnerships Significant potential for PPPs, but varies substantially across sectors Key criterion for judging whether extrabudgetary is extent of risk transfer However, unless 100% risks can be transferred contingent liabilities remain Complex fiscal accounting issues arise regarding the treatment of – Contingent liabilities – Private investment – Committed future public subsidies LAC: private relative to total Ecuador Colombia Brazil Mexico Bolivia Chile Peru Argentina Venezuela 0% 20% 40% 60% Private investment as % total Source: Calderon, Easterly and Serven, 2003 80% 100% Private investment as percentage total LAC: private relative to total 100% 90% 80% 70% 60% 50% 40% 30% 20% 10% 0% Telecom Power Transport Source: Calderon, Easterly and Serven, 2003 Water Colombia: fiscal costs of PPP Pre 2004 Post 2004 Electricity generation PPA 1,900 1,100 Estimated As % total invested 3,000 90% First generation toll roads 300 150 450 45% Telecom Joint Ventures 136 800+ 936+ 25% 6 Na. El Dorado second runway Total Source: REDI Colombia, 2004 2,342 2,050 4,386+ Colombia: new policy New policy guidelines on risk allocation between public and private partners Mandatory estimation of contingent liabilities using Monte Carlo (continuously updated) Required payments to cover liability are ‘smoothed out’ into a Deposit Plan Deposits are made from budget to Contingency Fund in individual accounts Aggregate estimates reported annually to parliament (infrastructure >0.5% GDP) V. Budgetary mechanisms Budgetary challenges Project selectiondeficiencies in technical capacity for project evaluation, plus political attraction of ‘white elephants’ Multi-year planninglong term projects required multi-year budget envelope to assure execution Implementation bottleneckscomplex procurement plus unforeseen delays make it difficult to execute budget Institutional complexitycomplicates decision-making process and achievement of consistency Peru: project selection SNIP – MinFin unit does (pre-)feasibility studies – CBA methodology with min. IRR 14% – Declares viability without prioritization Coverage – 2/3 of projects with regulated exceptions – Smaller local projects with domestic financing – Projects supported by Supreme Decree Too many projects leads to budget constraints, delays and declining IRRs Colombia: future appropriations 2500 US$m 2003 2000 1500 1000 500 0 2 4 0 0 2 6 0 0 2 8 0 0 2 0 1 0 2 2 1 0 2 4 1 0 2 6 1 0 2 8 1 0 2 0 2 0 Central Government Public E nterprises Inversion de INVIAS (US$m) Colombia: low execution 1200 1000 Aprobacion inicial 800 600 Aprobacion final 400 200 0 9 5 99 6 99 7 99 8 99 9 00 0 00 1 00 2 00 3 9 1 1 1 1 1 2 2 2 2 Ejecucion final Ghana: absorptive capacity Ghana – Status of Funding Road Development Program, 2002-03 (in US$ millions) Funding Source Secured Funds Commitments Disbursements Donor Funds (1) Road Fund Consolidated Fund 768.63 149.33 65.46 370.45 149.33 57 149.83 149.33 48.07 Total 983.42 576.78 347.23 Source: Ministry of Roads and Transport. National Roads Maintenance Program, 2003 Review (1) WB Road experts pointed out that the Ghanaian government is in the process of revising these figures to set an alternative accounting system for donors funds based on annual disbursements against committed contract for a particular year Turkey - Public Financial Programming Investment Budget Current CG Budget Consolidated and Annexed Budget Agencies May State Economic Enterprises MoF, Treasury and SPO (I) --> Budget Circular Drafting June High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) (II) --> Budget Circular Approval Prime Minister (III) --> Budget Call July MoF SPO --> Current Budget Guide Distribution --> Investment Preparation Criteria Distribution Central Government Agencies --> Current Budget Proposal August September MoF and CG Agencies SPO and CG Agencies --> Current Budget Negotiations --> Investment Budget Negotiations MoF, Treasury and SPO --> Aggregate Budget Allocations October SEEs --> Investment Budget Proposal Treasury --> Internal technical revision of SEEs annual programs Treasury, SEEs, High Audit Board, Line Ministries, PA --> Transfers revision --> Borrowing requirement estimation Prime Minister and Council of Ministers November (VIII) (IX) Treasury --> Principles and Procedures for annual program implementation by SEEs President (X) (XI) --> Budget Law January (VII) Treasury, SEEs and SPO --> Annual Program/Investment Financing Decree Inception December (VI) --> SEE Targets' Actualization --> Budget Allocation Endorsement --> Budget Approval (V) --> Annual Programs Preparation High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) Turkish Grand National Assembly (IV) SPO --> List of Investment Projects as an Annex to the Annual Program Decree (XII) Turkey - Public Financial Programming Investment Budget Current CG Budget Consolidated and Annexed Budget Agencies May State Economic Enterprises MoF, Treasury and SPO (I) --> Budget Circular Drafting June High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) (II) --> Budget Circular Approval Prime Minister (III) --> Budget Call July MoF SPO --> Current Budget Guide Distribution --> Investment Preparation Criteria Distribution Central Government Agencies --> Current Budget Proposal August September MoF and CG Agencies SPO and CG Agencies --> Current Budget Negotiations --> Investment Budget Negotiations MoF, Treasury and SPO --> Aggregate Budget Allocations October SEEs --> Investment Budget Proposal Treasury --> Internal technical revision of SEEs annual programs Treasury, SEEs, High Audit Board, Line Ministries, PA --> Transfers revision --> Borrowing requirement estimation Prime Minister and Council of Ministers November (VIII) (IX) Treasury --> Principles and Procedures for annual program implementation by SEEs President (X) (XI) --> Budget Law January (VII) Treasury, SEEs and SPO --> Annual Program/Investment Financing Decree Inception December (VI) --> SEE Targets' Actualization --> Budget Allocation Endorsement --> Budget Approval (V) --> Annual Programs Preparation High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) Turkish Grand National Assembly (IV) SPO --> List of Investment Projects as an Annex to the Annual Program Decree (XII) Turkey - Public Financial Programming Investment Budget Current CG Budget Consolidated and Annexed Budget Agencies May State Economic Enterprises MoF, Treasury and SPO (I) --> Budget Circular Drafting June High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) (II) --> Budget Circular Approval Prime Minister (III) --> Budget Call July MoF SPO --> Current Budget Guide Distribution --> Investment Preparation Criteria Distribution Central Government Agencies --> Current Budget Proposal August September MoF and CG Agencies SPO and CG Agencies --> Current Budget Negotiations --> Investment Budget Negotiations MoF, Treasury and SPO --> Aggregate Budget Allocations October SEEs --> Investment Budget Proposal Treasury --> Internal technical revision of SEEs annual programs Treasury, SEEs, High Audit Board, Line Ministries, PA Prime Minister and Council of Ministers November (VIII) (IX) Treasury --> Principles and Procedures for annual program implementation by SEEs President (X) (XI) --> Budget Law January (VII) Treasury, SEEs and SPO --> Transfers revision --> Borrowing requirement estimation --> Annual Program/Investment Financing Decree Inception December (VI) --> SEE Targets' Actualization --> Budget Allocation Endorsement --> Budget Approval (V) --> Annual Programs Preparation High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) Turkish Grand National Assembly (IV) SPO --> List of Investment Projects as an Annex to the Annual Program Decree (XII) Turkey - Public Financial Programming Investment Budget Current CG Budget Consolidated and Annexed Budget Agencies May State Economic Enterprises MoF, Treasury and SPO (I) --> Budget Circular Drafting June High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) (II) --> Budget Circular Approval Prime Minister (III) --> Budget Call July MoF SPO --> Current Budget Guide Distribution --> Investment Preparation Criteria Distribution Central Government Agencies --> Current Budget Proposal August September MoF and CG Agencies SPO and CG Agencies --> Current Budget Negotiations --> Investment Budget Negotiations MoF, Treasury and SPO --> Aggregate Budget Allocations October SEEs --> Investment Budget Proposal Treasury --> Internal technical revision of SEEs annual programs Treasury, SEEs, High Audit Board, Line Ministries, PA --> Transfers revision --> Borrowing requirement estimation Prime Minister and Council of Ministers November (VIII) (IX) Treasury --> Principles and Procedures for annual program implementation by SEEs President (X) (XI) --> Budget Law January (VII) Treasury, SEEs and SPO --> Annual Program/Investment Financing Decree Inception December (VI) --> SEE Targets' Actualization --> Budget Allocation Endorsement --> Budget Approval (V) --> Annual Programs Preparation High Planning Council (Council of Ministers) Turkish Grand National Assembly (IV) SPO --> List of Investment Projects as an Annex to the Annual Program Decree (XII) Conclusions Cost structure of infrastructure services leads to fiscal complications Wide variety of potential funding sources for infrastructure Tendency for infrastructure to be on the boundaries of the budget Infrastructure poses challenges from a budgetary perspective