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UNIVERSITY INFRASTRUCTURE

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Title: UNIVERSITY INFRASTRUCTURE


1
UNIVERSITY INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICESConcession
Options, Considerations and Methodologies
by ENGR. MANSUR AHMED DIRECTOR GENERAL/CEO,
INFRASTRUCTURE CONCESSION REGULATORY COMMISSION
2
AGENDA
  • Introduction
  • University Infrastructure and Services
  • Challenges of Higher Education in Nigeria
  • Funding of University Infrastructure and Services
  • The PPP Typology
  • Structure of PPP Projects
  • The PPP Project Financing Process
  • Nigerias PPP Framework
  • Conclusion

3
INTRODUCTIONA BRIEF BACKGROUND
  • Before independence, less than 25 percent of all
    professional service posts were held by
    Nigerians, and most trade and industry was
    foreign-owned.
  • This was due largely to the limited access,
    limited academic freedom and limited higher
    educational curriculum policies pursued by the
    then colonial government.
  • At independence, the urgent challenge of higher
    education in Nigeria were
  • to produce high level professionals to replace
    the expatriates in the administration of the
    country, and
  • to train skilled manpower to be in charge of the
    emerging industrial sector, where activity was
    picking up as a result of the import
    substitution development strategy of the newly
    independent state.

4
INTRODUCTIONTHRUST OF HIGHER EDUCATION-PAST 50
YEARS
  • It would appear that the thrust of higher
    education effort in Nigeria for the past 50 years
    has remained largely unchanged.
  • First, the legacies of colonialism had lingered
    and in some instances directed the thrust of
    higher education policy.
  • Second, the state of the national economy, which
    is characterized by severe under-achievement in
    virtually all sectors of the economy.
  • This state of economic gloom is compounded by a
    very volatile and unstable polity.
  • Fourth, is the massive migration of talents
    (brain drain) due to frustration and low social
    expectation.
  • Incidentally, these challenges work in concert
    with other traditional problems of higher
    education in Nigeria discussed below to
    precipitate the severe crises in higher education
    in the country.

5
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATION TRADITIONAL
CHALLENGES
  • Education is recognized as fundamental to the
    construction of a knowledge economy and society,
    and a key to modernization and development.
  • The ability of Nigerias academic institutions to
    provide education, research, and service is
    severely handicapped by some traditional
    problems.
  • These are but a few of the problems that have
    laid the higher education sector prostrate
    include those of finance and funding, the growth
    of private higher education institutions,
    academic freedom, quality and excellence,
    governance and autonomy, and management
    challenges.
  • Others are gender equality, research and
    publishing and the problems of scholarly
    communication, language issues, and the migration
    of talent or brain drain.
  • Time and space would not permit me to
    exhaustively discuss these challenges, so I will
    concentrate on the problem of funding for the
    Universities in this discussion.

6
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATION THE CHALLENGE OF
FINANCE
  • Severe financial crisis appears to be the bane of
    higher educational systems at the beginning of
    the twenty-first century.
  • The pressures of expansion have added large
    numbers of students to most Nigerian academic
    institutions and systems.
  • Economic problems facing Nigeria make it
    difficult, if not impossible, to provide
    increased funding for higher education.
  • Inability of students to afford the tuition rates
    necessary for fiscal stability of the
    universities.
  • Reluctance by public authorities to impose
    tuition fees due to political or other pressures.
  • Poor prioritization of available financial
    resources, such as
  • The tradition of providing free
  • Highly subsidized accommodations and food to
    students
  • Maintenance of large and cumbersome non-academic
    personnel and infrastructure.

7
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATIONIMPOSED BY
GLOBALIZATION-21ST CENTURY TRENDS
  • Rapid developments and integration in computing
    technology, digital telecommunication and
    transportation over the past two decades have
    resulted in the globalization of trade, finance
    and investment.
  • Such other global tendencies as liberalization of
    trade, privatization of public institutions,
    deregulation of economies, economic integration
    and the development of common markets, have all
    worked in concert with globalization (global
    economy driven by technology) to provide the
    platform on which the new world economic order is
    founded.
  • In particular, the growth of the Internet has
    permanently changed the face of education,
    security, trade, commerce, finance and
    investment, and forced a paradigm shift from the
    established modes of conducting business.
  • These global tendencies, acting in concert with
    rapid and sustained technological changes in
    computing, communication and transportation,
    permanently changed the face of education and
    business around the world, Nigeria inclusive.

8
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATION IMPOSED BY
GLOBALIZATION-IMPLICATIONS-1
  • The impact of these global tendencies have been
    profound, and have forced a rethink on how we
    view education, the inherent challenges and what
    the universities must do if they must remain on
    top of the situation.
  • First, the world is turning into a global,
    knowledge-based society, where ubiquitous and
    ever-opening access to information creates a need
    for skilled workers who can transform information
    to meaningful, new knowledge.
  • The phenomenal growth of the internet has been
    the primary vector of this change. Technology has
    made it possible to hold jobs in locations quite
    remote from the employer. E.g. the toll-free
    answering services for most companies and
    institutions in the USA and UK have been
    outsourced to companies in India.
  • Second, an innovation-based society is emerging.
    Invention and innovation are no longer the
    exclusive preserve of universities and research
    centres. Successful members of society create
    innovative- and contextually-relevant
    applications for new knowledge. Bill Gates
    created the personal computing revolution and the
    technology called Microsoft from his mothers
    garage, and as a college dropout.

9
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATION IMPOSED BY
GLOBALIZATION-IMPLICATIONS-2
  • Third, knowledge and innovation-based jobs are
    moving to countries like India and China.
    Western companies have already learned that it
    makes sense to move industrial jobs offshore.
    Today, many companies are beginning to move their
    creativity and research and development jobs to
    markets with lower labour costs.
  • Fourth, personal success in the innovation
    society will require novelty at the individual
    level. Standardization and centralization at the
    workplace are giving way to individualization and
    decentralization. Employees are now viewed and
    rewarded for their creative inputs as
    individuals, not for the roles they could play as
    automatons in a structure and hierarchical
    organization.
  • Fifth, technology has changed human relations.
    Advances in technology allow people to interact
    in new ways that were previously obscured by
    geographical, economic or social boundaries.
    Technology allows people to acquire higher
    education online and hold jobs without ever
    visiting the physical location of the university
    or employer.

10
CHALLENGES OF HIGHER EDUCATION IMPOSED BY
GLOBALIZATION-IMPLICATIONS-3
  • Sixth, jobs that exist today will not necessarily
    exist when todays students finish school.
    Industrial boundaries are increasingly getting
    blurred. Jobs that existed before students were
    born may not exist when they finish school.
  • Seventh, advances in sanitation, nutrition and
    medicine have extended life expectancy in many
    countries. We are thus saddled with an increasing
    ratio of an unproductive ageing population.
  • The phenomenon of globalization compels students
    and schools to compete on a global scale.
  • Due to advances in technology, change, in itself
    is accelerating at a pace never before witnessed
    in the annals of human history. The doubling time
    of information is now under one year, the
    boundaries between sectors and industries are
    becoming blurred and in a constant state of flux.

11
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE A WORKING DEFINITION
  • Infrastructure refers to those physical
    structures that facilitate the production of
    goods and services, without themselves being part
    of the production process.
  • Often referred to as the stock of capital
    goods, they include highways, airports, harbors,
    utility production and distributive systems,
    water and sewer systems, communication networks
    and energy networks.
  • In a university environment, infrastructure will
    include but not limited to lecture
    halls/theaters, student hostels, roads, staff
    quarters, information technology, utility
    production and distributive systems, water and
    sewer systems, and the like.

12
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURENATURE OF INFRASTRUCTURE
  • Infrastructure projects are lumpy, meaning that
    they are large, immobile, space specific and long
    lasting, often with life span measured in decades
    and centuries, and construction often running
    into years.
  • The implication for financing is that
  • First, infrastructure finance tends to have
    maturities of between 5 years to 40 years.
  • Second, the initial financial outlay tends to be
    quite large.
  • Third, as large amounts of money are typically
    invested for long periods, it is not surprising
    that the underlying risks are also quite high.
  • Last, real return on investment usually fixed and
    as low as near zero, although still positive.

13
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE TRADITIONAL BUDGETARY
OPTION
  • Traditionally, government has been the sole
    financier of infrastructure projects in the
    Universities and has often taken responsibility
    for implementation, operations and maintenance as
    well.
  • Budgetary financing are often
  • Volatile and rarely meet crucial infrastructure
    expenditure requirements in a timely and adequate
    manner
  • Exerts constant pressure on fiscal budget due to
    competing demands
  • Funding generally inadequate
  • Receives a larger brunt of fiscal retrenchment in
    times of financial crises
  • Rapidly declining financial resources
  • Greater the potential for mismanagement and
    unwholesome practices
  • Leads to lower quantum and quality of
    infrastructure.

14
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE CHALLENGES FOR
UNIVERSITIES
  • With rapidly dwindling financial resources
    arising in part from rapid population growth,
    rural-urban migration rapid urbanization, and the
    global economic crises, the challenges faced by
    Universities in building efficient infrastructure
    that delivers such the level of education for
    sustained economic growth would include
  • Adequate and sustainable funding for
    infrastructure development
  • Accelerated infrastructure and service provision
  • Faster implementation of projects
  • Reduced whole life cost of projects
  • Better and sustainable incentive for service
    delivery
  • Clearly, the traditional budgetary allocation for
    infrastructure development has proved wholly
    inadequate in meeting the infrastructure needs of
    the country.
  • There is therefore a dire need for alternative
    options

15
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING OPTIONS
AVAILABLE -1
  • Commercialization of Research Income sources
    include commercialization of research, income
    from international students, philanthropy and
    fund raising. 
  • Commercialization of Non-Research Activities
    Non-research commercial activities include
    education provision such as short course
    offerings, professional development courses and
    tailored corporate education.
  • Universities are also increasingly involved in
    the development and delivery of customized
    postgraduate education and training programmes
    for individual enterprises or professional
    associations. With the evolution of online
    learning, workplace project based learning and
    coaching and mentoring as tools for professional
    development, universities will need to become
    more adaptive to compete effectively with a
    growing range of other providers. 

16
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE FUNDING OPTIONS
AVAILABLE-2
  • Diversification of modes of access to university
    education The phenomenon of globalization
    compels students and schools to compete on a
    global scale through e-learning.
  • Availability of Venture Capital Investors are
    increasingly keen on backing cutting edge
    technology developed by universities.
  • Academic - Industry Partnership Most
    universities in Europe and North America now have
    commercial exploitation departments, exploiting
    their wealth of intellectual property and are
    bringing in entrepreneurs to help.
  • Public Private Partnerships Governments and
    institutions are increasingly partnering with the
    private sector for the finance, design, build,
    operation and maintenance of infrastructure, and
    delivery of associated services as one means of
    meeting the need for modern, efficient
    infrastructure.

17
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE THE PPP IMPERATIVE-1
  • The private sector has a large pool of resources
    from which they can seek funding, which
    governments may not have access to, or the
    capacity to access, both locally and in
    international financial markets.
  • Faced with many competing demands and dwindling
    resources, governments are increasingly focusing
    on fostering competitive environments to attract
    citizens and businesses particularly as they
    relate to issues such as infrastructure and the
    delivery of services.
  • Partnerships between the public sector and
    private companies (PPP) for the finance, design,
    build, maintenance of infrastructure and delivery
    of associated services are means of meeting the
    need for modern, efficient infrastructure and for
    reliable cost effective delivery of public
    services.

18
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE THE PPP IMPERATIVE-2
  • These partnerships fill the resource gap in
    infrastructure delivery and operation
  • They engender acceleration of infrastructure
    provision
  • They also Promote faster implementation of
    projects, and reduced whole life costs of
    project
  • They offers better risk allocation between public
    and private sectors, offers better and
    sustainable incentive to perform
  • And engender accountability in fund utilization
  • They improve the overall quality of service
  • They often leads to the generation of additional
    revenue and overall value for money for the
    entire economy.
  • Globally, governments have come to recognize that
    the collaboration between public and private
    sectors is crucial to securing dependable and
    sustainable funding for infrastructure and
    reducing the pressure on fiscal budgets.

19
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE WHAT ARE PUBLIC
PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS
  • The design, build, finance and operation, by the
    private sector, of assets and services that the
    government has traditionally procured and
    provided to the community and which have
    previously been funded by taxpayers. In return,
    the private sector generates revenue either from
    the levying of tariffs on users or the receipt of
    periodic service payments from the government
    over the life of the PPP agreement
  • KPMG.
  • It is therefore a co-operative venture for the
    provision of infrastructure or services, built on
    the expertise of each partner that best meets
    clearly defined public needs, through the most
    appropriate allocation of resources, risks, and
    rewards. The public sector maintains ownership,
    oversight and quality assessment role, while the
    private sector is more closely involved in the
    actual delivery of the service or project.

20
FUNDING OF INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC PRIVATE
PARTNERSHIP TYPOLOGY
  • All partnerships have a unique risk/reward
    allocation.
  • PPP can be categorized based on the extent of
    public and private sector involvement and the
    degree of risk allocation between the two.
  • Public-private partnerships can take many forms
    including
  • Service Contract (OM)
  • Design/Build/Operate
  • Concession/Lease
  • Finance, Design Build and Operate
  • Own and Operate
  • Asset Sale/ Transfer
  • Other combinations.

21
STRUCTURE OF PPP PROJECT

22

THE PPP PROCESS-1
The following cycle typifies public private
partnership arrangement for infrastructure
procurement.
23

THE PPP PROCESS-2
24
PPP FINANCING SOURCES
  • Commercial Banks
  • Private Equity and Debt Funds
  • Pension Funds
  • Nigerian Mutual Funds
  • Foreign/Domestic Contractor Finance
  • Sovereign Wealth Funds, etc.
  • Insurance Companies
  • Equity and Bond Market Issues

25
NIGERIAS PPP FRAMEWORKLEGAL AND REGULATORY
FRAMEWORK
  • Provided by the ICRC Act 2005
  • Establishment of the Infrastructure Concession
    Regulatory Commission. (Sec 14. 1)
  • MDAs may enter into a contract with or grant
    concession to any duly pre-qualified private
    sector proponent for the financing, construction,
    operation, and maintenance of any infrastructure
    that is financially viable or any development
    facility of the Federal Government. (Section
    1.1).
  • Functions and powers of the Commission (Section
    19)
  • Provides general policy guidelines, rules and
    regulations.
  • Take custody of every concession agreement.
  • Ensure efficient execution of any concession
    agreement or contract entered by the Federal
    Government.

26
NIGERIAS PPP FRAMEWORK NATIONAL POLICY ON PPP
  • Government Commitment
  • Policy Objectives
  • Economic
  • Social
  • Environmental
  • Enabling institutional environment
  • Guidelines for the PPP
  • Coordination and planning
  • Capacity building
  • Effective communication
  • Roles and responsibilities
  • Market development
  • Collaboration with states and other stakeholders

27
NIGERIAS PPP FRAMEWORKROLE OF ICRC-1
  • The roles envisaged by the policy and enabling
    laws for the ICRC are those of
  • The PPP Resource Center
  • Contract Compliance Monitoring and
  • Policy Formulation.

28
NIGERIAS PPP FRAMEWORKROLE OF ICRC-2
  • Contract monitoring unit
  • Take custody of agreements
  • Monitor implementation
  • Oversight of existing concessions as necessary
  • Board will oversee both functions
  • Recommend policies to FEC
  • Propose legislative changes
  • Advise FEC on project approval
  • Annual report and accounts
  • PPP Resource Centre
  • Disseminate guidance, best practice
  • Communicate plans / policies to private sector
  • Coordinate PPP activity across Federation
  • Standardise where possible
  • Manage flow of projects to market
  • Centre of technical expertise for MDAs/States
  • procurement/negotiation, contract/banking law,
    land/planning, financial intermediation
  • Overcome internal barriers eg tax law
  • Maintain project database

The PPP Resource Centre will assist
Universities, through the Federal Ministry of
Education provide support from Project Ideation,
Identification, Appraisal, Design, to Procurement
and Implementation
29
NIGERIAS PPP FRAMEWORKICRC KEY ACTIVITIES
  • Provide technical expertise to MDAs and state
    governments in their procurement transactions,
    and provide support during negotiations, contract
    drafting, and financial mediation
  • Ensure that adequate capacity for entering, and
    carrying out PPP projects on the basis of best
    practices exists both in the MDAs and the
    Commission itself
  • Review and monitor the tendering process
  • Harmonize the PPP process with other agencies
    such as the Ministry of Finance, National
    Planning Commission, Budget Office, and the like
  • Take custody of every concession agreement,
    maintain a project register and ensure that they
    are implemented in accordance with the law.
  • Streamline and standardize the process involving
    PPPs.
  • Draft policies, guidelines and procedures to
    ensure that PPP transactions are carried out in
    an eminently controlled manner by all MDAs are
    being developed and will be circulated to the
    MDAs for review and comments. Once finalized,
    ICRC will ensure all MDAs comply with these
    procedures before approval is given
  • Review of all projects identified by the MDAs and
    their structure before presentation to the FEC
    for approval
  • Review of contract documents before they are
    signed
  • Coordinate PPP activities across the country and
    manage the timing and flow of projects to the
    market

30
CONCLUSION-1
  • Traditionally, government has been the sole
    financier of infrastructure projects through
    budgetary allocations and has often taken
    responsibility for implementation, operations and
    maintenance as well.
  • Low investment, improper planning, poor
    maintenance and corruption conduce with
    dwindling governments resources to dismal and
    rapidly deteriorating infrastructure base.
  • Funding of infrastructure through budgetary
    allocation is volatile, rarely meet crucial
    infrastructure expenditure requirements in a
    timely and adequate manner, receives a larger
    brunt of fiscal retrenchment in times of
    financial crises, and has a greater potential for
    corruption.

31
CONCLUSION-2
  • PPP arrangements, on the other hand, have
    engendered acceleration of infrastructure
    provision, a faster implementation of projects,
    reduced whole life costs of project, offers
    better risk allocation between public and private
    sectors, better and sustainable incentive to
    perform, engender accountability in fund
    utilization, and improve the overall quality of
    service.
  • They are, however, complex.
  • The infrastructure market in Nigeria is vast,
    underdeveloped and unexploited. It covers such
    sectors as roads and highways, light railways,
    ports, waterways, airports, dams, bridges and
    tunnels. Others are electricity power, oil and
    gas pipelines, water and sanitation,
    telecommunication and indeed the entire spectrum
    of infrastructure services. These present
    opportunities for the discerning investor.

32
CONCLUSION-3
  • As the world awaits global economic recovery and
    the restoration of global credit, the legal,
    regulatory and institutional framework, together
    with policy and macro economic environment for
    PPP to thrive in Nigeria, is been put in place.
  • The ICRC Act is in place and the relevant
    institutions have already been inaugurated.
  • The National Policy on PPP has been approved by
    the FEC and the guidelines and procedures to
    ensure that PPP transactions are carried out in
    an eminently controlled manner by all are being
    developed with the robust engagement of all
    stakeholders.
  • Universities can take advantage of the support of
    ICRCs Resource Centre to accelerate their own
    infrastructure development.

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