Title: Infrastructure and Fiscal Policy Specific Challenges
1Infrastructure and Fiscal PolicySpecific
Challenges
- Marianne Fay
-
- Many thanks to Vivien Foster on whose 2005 PEAM
course presentation this is largely based
2Outline
- Stylized facts
- Funding sources
- Budgetary boundaries
- Budgetary mechanisms
3I. Stylized facts
4Infrastructure is big money
- Stocks
- Equivalent to about 100 of developing country
GDP - Dominated by electricity (45-55), and transport
(30 to 40) - cheaper telecom (5-15 and growing) and WS (5
to 15) - Maintenance
- About 2 to 3 of GDP per year
5Infrastructure is big money
- Output
- About 6 of GDP for electricity (MICs)
- The same for telecom transport?
- Much smaller for WS
6Expensive when poorly managed
- Electricity
- Total hidden costs (underpricing technical and
commercial losses) estimated in ECA at 4 of GDP - In Mexico untargeted subsidies amount to 1 of
GDP - Rail and public transport historically huge
drains on public coffers - Water and sanitation typically much smaller
(0.4 of GDP in ECA)
7Much of it, public responsibility
- Differences across sectors
- Fairly universal trend for privatization of
telecom, air transport, possibly rail - More varied with electricity, public transport
- Limited potential for roads
- WS complicated
8Distinguishing features
- Investment
- Highly capital intensive (60)
- Long term planning horizons (30 yrs)
- Infrequent lumpy investments
- Long lead times (Up to 5yrs)
- Unpredictable investment costs
9Distinguishing features
- Maintenance
- Long asset lives (Up to 30 yrs)
- High maintenance (2-3 AV)
- Exponential cost of deferred maintenance
- Catch-22
- Decision to invest based on estimated rate of
return, itself conditioned by whether maintenance
occurs
10The maintenance dilemma
100
Very Good
90
-Filling Cracks
80
70
Good
-Geotextile and Strengthening
60
Condition of Pavement ()
-Reconstruction of the Surface -Reconstruction of
the partial base course
Fair
50
40
Poor
-Complete Reconstruction
30
20
Very Poor
10
0
0
2
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
20
22
24
26
Lifetime of Pavement (years)
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
11Fiscal 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
- Long lived assets delay hour of reckoning
- Even investments can always be deferred
12The infrastructure public finance paradox
- Maintenance and investment are prime candidates
for cuts - Subsidies however poorly targeted - are
difficult to eliminate - Some countries spend more on consumption
subsidies than on either investment or
maintenance
13A complication no data
- No country systematically collects investment
data on infrastructure - infrastructure a broad and vague category
unlike health and education - Poor fit with IMF GFS categories
- Public investment data notoriously poor hard to
distinguish from OM - A few valiant efforts (Calderon Serven
specific country studies) - The implication no monitoring
14II. Funding sources
15Only three possible sources
- Tax payers (fiscal transfers)
- Users
- fees
- cross-subsidies
- Asset depletion
- quality
- non-expansion of service
16Historic under-pricing
Ratio of revenue to costs
Source WDR 1994
17Cost recovery water
Degree of cost recovery
Source Foster Yepes, forthcoming
18Cost recovery electricity
Degree of cost recovery
Source Foster Yepes, forthcoming
19Who really gets the subsidy?
In Hyderabad (India), employees capture 40 of
the subsidy, and consumers 60, half of which
they spend on alternative providers
20What distributional incidence?
Source Komives et al., forthcoming
21III. Budgetary Boundaries
22Budgetary 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
23Earmarked funds
- Loved by sectoralists?provide a stable source of
financing in sectors without possibility of user
fees, isolated from budgetary and political
interference - Loathed by macroeconomists?reduce budgetary
flexibility and optimization of public resources,
often lead to poor governance, lack of
transparency
24Argentina exploding funds
Source Argentina PER, 2003
25Argentina weak governance
26State 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
27Colombia drains vs. cash cows
Source REDI Colombia, 2004
28Public Private Partnerships
- Potential for PPPs varies substantially across
sectors - Key criterion for judging whether extra-budgetary
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
29LAC private relative to total
Source Calderon, Easterly and Serven, 2003
30LAC private relative to total
31Colombia new policy after 4.4 Bn bailouts
- 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 gt0.5 GDP)
32IV. Budgetary mechanisms
33Budgetary challenges
- Project selection?deficiencies in technical
capacity for project evaluation, plus political
attraction of white elephants - Multi-year planning?long term projects required
multi-year budget envelope to assure execution - Implementation bottlenecks?complex procurement
plus unforeseen delays cash budgeting! make it
difficult to execute budget
34Peru 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
35Colombia low execution
36Conclusions
- 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