Title: PowerPointPrsentation
1A new agenda for improving public-private dialogue
Dr. Sonja Kurz GTZ-Seminar 23 May 2006
2- December 2005 Cairo Conference
- February 2006 Paris Conference
- -gt www.publicprivatedialogue.org,
- is a one stop shop of knowledge and advice on
PPD by Worldbank, IFC, DFID, OECD, GTZ - research papers,
- case studies,
- links
- useful tools like checklists, handbooks etc.
3Contents
- Understanding of PPD
- Benefits and Risks
- Cyclical Process of building and improving PPD
- Charter of Good Practice in using Public Privat
Dialogue for Private Sector Development
41. Understanding
- Public Private Dialogue or Competitiveness
Partnership (World Bank) is defined as a
structured dialogue between representatives of
the private and the public sector to improve the
business and investment climate. - Private sector representatives may use PPDs to
communicate their interests, identify problems
and propose solutions. - The public sector benefits by realising the
requirements of entrepreneurs and deficits in
business climate to implement credible and
realistic reforms. - PPDs may provide trust and awareness between
public and private sector.
52. Benefits
- When done well, PPD can
- Facilitate investment climate reforms by
supporting champions for reform, creating
momentum and accelerating the reform process. - Promote better diagnosis of investment climate
problems and design of policy reforms.
Governments that listen to the concerns of the
private sector are more likely to devise sensible
and workable reforms. - Make policy reforms easier to implement. When
entrepreneurs understand what a government is
trying to achieve with a reform package, they are
more likely to accept and work with the reforms
in practice. - Promote transparency and good governance by
setting an example of openness and creating
pressure of public scrutiny. - Build an atmosphere of mutual trust and
understanding between public and private sectors,
improving social cohesion and civil society.
6Risks
- When done badly, not only can it waste the time
and resources of participants, it can actually
worsen the problems it is intended to solve. - Notably
- If not sufficiently transparent and broad-based,
it can reinforce vested interests and create
opportunities for rent-seeking behaviour. - If it does not make special efforts to include
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises (SMEs) and
those based in provinces, it can be dominated by
big businesses or businesses based in a capital
city. - If poorly planned and unfocused, it can
degenerate into a talking shop which leads to
disillusionment, disengagement and loss of
credibility, giving strength to opponents of
reform and slowing down the reform process. - If not sufficiently well coordinated with
existing institutions or other dialogue
mechanisms, duplication of efforts can overburden
and confuse participants.
73. Cyclical Process of building and improving PPD
Diagnosing the status and potential of PPD
Designing and Implementing PPD
Monitoring and Evaluation of PPD
diagnose the capacity of the public and private
sectors to engage in dialogue and the areas in
which dialogue can be most fruitful
design a dialogue process that gives the best
chance for productive interactions between public
and private sectors to emerge
implement dialogue with an awareness of risk
factors that can develop and the ability to
identify and address problems as they arise
evaluate the effectiveness of dialogue
mechanisms, feeding back into the diagnosis phase
for designing and implementing improvements
83.1 DIAGNOSING THE STATUS AND POTENTIAL OF PPD
- The PPD Diamond
- It maps the strength of four essential elements
of PPD on two vertical and two horizontal axes.
The dimensions are - Public sector how strong is the capacity,
political will to engage, and leadership? - Private sector how organized is the private
sector, to what extent does it have leadership,
do entrepreneurs feel a basic sense of security
in speaking out to government without fear of
retribution? - Champion to what extent are there credible and
respected individuals with the expertise, profile
and ability to attract the attention of
participants and media? - Instruments what is the quality and capacity of
support personnel, logistical facilities and seed
funds?
9Dialogue can succeed when the diamond is
imbalanced although it is difficult to survive
a weakness in more than two dimensions !
103.2 DIAGNOSTIC PROJECT SEQUENCES
11A. Private sector
Stakeholder
- A representative sample of businesspeople should
be interviewed. - It is important to include all groups which play
a significant role in the private sector, from
small-scale informal entrepreneurs to foreign
multinational corporations. - B. Public sector
- The attitute of the public sector can make or
break public private dialogue. Public sectors are
rarely homogenous in their willingness or
capacity to engage in dialogue there will often
be wide differences between different levels of
authority, agencies, departments and regions.
There is a need to identify the capability and
enthusiasm.
12C. Intermediary organizations (eg BMOs, Chambers
of Commerce etc.)
13D. Civil society
- Dialogue between the public and private sectors
does not take place in a vacuum. The attitude of
civil society towards private sector input into
policy-making is a critical success factor. - Civil society includes
- labor union representatives
- non-governmental organizations
- academia
- media
143.3 Stakeholder analysis
15GTZ Stakeholder analysis 10 Modules
- Modul 1 Identification of key stakeholders
- Modul 2 Stakeholder Mapping
- Modul 3 Profile and startegic options
- Modul 4 Power
- Modul 5 Interests and level of support
- Modul 6 Influence and participation
- Modul 7 Resistance
- Modul 8 Trustbuilding
- Modul 9 Exclusion and Empowerment
- Modul 10 Gender
164. DESIGNING, IMPLEMENTING AND MONITORING PPD
- The following is based around the Charter of
Good Practice in using Public Private Dialogue
for Private Sector Development - See www.publicprivatedialogue.org
- PRINCIPLE I MANDATE AND INSTITUTIONAL ALIGNMENT
- A statement of objective is helpful for clarity.
A formal or legal mandate can be an important
help in some political and economic contexts, but
mandates are never sufficient to establish good
PPD. Wherever hosted and whenever possible, PPD
should be aligned with existing institutions to
maximize the institutional potential and minimize
friction. - The status of a dialogue can change over time
- Dialogue can start with an informal mission
statement and later consider seeking a formal or
legal mandate at a future date.
17PRINCIPLE II. STRUCTURE AND PARTICIPATION
18- PPDs structure should be manageable while
flexible, enable participation to be both
balanced and effective, and reflect the local
private sector context. - Too much formality in the structure can be
stifling, while too little formality risks drift - The structure that works best involves a
secretariat and working groups
- The most effective secretariats are located in a
neutral space.
19PRINCIPLE III CHAMPIONS
- It is difficult to sustain dialogue without
champions from both the public and private
sectors who invest in the process and drive it
forward. -
- Backing the right champions is the most important
part of outside support to PPD. - It is easier for dialogue to survive weakness of
champions in the private sector than the public
sector. - If champions are too strong, the agenda can
become too narrowly focused, or dialogue can come
to depend too heavily on individuals. - Champions need to see the bigger picture and
understand when they need to take a step back.
20- PRINCIPLE IV FACILITATOR
- A facilitator who commands the respect of
stakeholders can greatly improve the prospects of
PPD. - Preparatory work between meetings is important to
maintain momentum - Define the timetable well in advance and stick to
it - Pay close attention to logistical details
- Facilitators need to work hard, be transparent
and responsive - PRINCIPLE V OUTPUTS
- Outputs can take the shape of structure and
process outputs, analytical outputs or
recommendations. All should contribute to agreed
private sector development outcomes.Outputs
should be measurable, time bound, visible,
tangible and linked to indicators.
21- PRINCIPLE VI OUTREACH AND COMMUNICATIONS
- Enabling communication of a shared vision and
understanding through the development of a common
language is essential for building trust among
stakeholders. - Transparency of process in particular, an open
approach towards the media is essential for
outreach, and also contributes to measurement and
evaluation - Communication strategies must be both for
participants and for general public - Branding matters Visual images have power
- PRINCIPLE VII MONITORING EVALUATION
- Monitoring and evaluation is an effective tool to
manage the public-private dialogue process and to
demonstrate its purpose and performance. - Definition of inputs, outputs, outcomes and
impacts will be enhanced with designation of
appropriate indicators with periodic review from
stakeholders, which will rely on the collection
of reliable data. - To this effect, PPDs should develop a baseline
assessment to measure their effectiveness in
order to enable the partnership to better measure
how it is achieving its goals over time and
delivering on its envisaged benefits.
22- PRINCIPLE VIII SUB-NATIONAL
- Public-private dialogue is desirable at all
levels of decision-making down to the most local
possible level, especially as this is likely to
be more practically capable of involving
micro-entrepreneurs, SMEs and other local
stakeholders. - Top down and buttom up
- Local dialogue can contribute to effective
implementation of national policies. - PRINCIPLE IX SECTOR-SPECIFIC
- Sector-specific or issue-specific public-private
dialogues should be encouraged because they
provide more focus, greater incentive to
collaborate, and more opportunity for action. - The choice of sectors to involve in dialogue can
be controversial. - Dialogue works best with the sectors most willing
to invest time and resources - Rent-seeking activity is more of a risk in
sector-specific dialogue. - Transparency is very important.
23- PRINCIPLE X INTERNATIONAL ROLE
- Broad and inclusive public-private dialogue can
effectively represent and promote national and
regional interests of both public and private
actors in international negotiations and
international dialogue processes. - PRINCIPLE XI POST-CONFLICT
- Public-private dialogue is particularly valuable
in post-conflict and crisis environments
including post-natural disaster to consolidate
peace and rebuild the economy through private
sector development. - Social and cultural elements are important
- Trust is a prerequisite for PPD, more than under
normal circumstances
24- PRINCIPLE XII DEVELOPMENT PARTNERS
- Public-private dialogue initiatives can benefit
from the input and support of donors (development
partners) when their role is determined by the
specific local context, when it is informed and
demand driven, and when it is based on
partnership, coordination and additionality. - Development partners can encourage conditions for
dialogue, and initiate, promote, support
(stakeholder analysis) , fund and facilitate
dialogue. - Capacity building and disseminating international
best practice are two areas where development
partners can play a particular role. - The role should be as neutral as possible,
maximizing the local ownership and capacity, the
development of trust and the maintenance of a
conducive and transparent environment. - Development partners should consider social,
economic and political context, exit strategies
and sustainability issues. - They should coordinate among themselves to avoid
duplicating their efforts and maximize the
availability of funds when partnership are found
to be worth supporting.
25Case study GTZs role in Vietnams Investment
Law and Enterprise Law
- GTZ provided support to the consultation process
in Vietnam prior to the passing of the Investment
Law and Enterprise Law in 2005 in a number of
important ways - It directly supported dialogue meetings between
government and key private sector associations,
exposing participants to international best
practice techniques in moderation, discussion and
use of the internet. - It supported a Regulatory Impact Assessment
carried out by the Prime Ministers Research
Commission. This included business test panels
and consultation workshops held throughout the
country. - It used the media to publicise consultation,
which increased the transparency of the process,
helped to overcome reluctance and apathy on the
part of businesspeople to make comments in
public, and built support for the new laws. - It published high-quality research studies
(illustrated) on issues relevant to the two
proposed laws. These became the neutral evidence
base which could be discussed at consultation
meetings.
26Inputs from GTZ
Inputs from GTZ
Inputs from GTZ
27Key Results Obtained
- Domestic business associations become more
proactive and more professional in public
consultation - Results of policy dialogues with support from GTZ
were documented into formal appeals and many
recommendations were reflected in the laws when
they were passed in Nov. 2005 - Critical issues were widely discussed by the
public with support of the local mass media - Business associations are becoming more and more
aware of the importance of actively taking part
in PPD - GTZs inputs and approach to PPD have set an
example and a model for other PPD activities in
Vietnam - New tools and mechanisms in public consultation
and PPD are introduced and increasingly adopted
by Vietnamese partners
28Key Factors for Success
- It is important to emphasize the ownership of
national stakeholders - Make the local stakeholders aware of the benefits
of involving in the policy dialogues with the
Government - Keep the participants informed about how their
proposal and requests have been addressed by the
Government - Do not just complain, but suggest solutions also
- Collective voices are important
- Technical advice to consultation process is
important - Good advice on business law contents is
important. However, more important is how it is
communicated - Identify the right dialogue partners
- Use the press and other media
- Build trust between the private and the public
sector
29Thank you for your attention!