US EUROPE AFRICA ASIA 中文
Opinion / Op-Ed Contributors

Infrastructure financing need

By Xiao Gang (China Daily) Updated: 2013-01-18 08:04

In recent years, such markets have grown rapidly in emerging economies, with the outstanding debt more than doubling since 2006 (before the global financial crisis), and showing significant potential to grow further.

Besides, infrastructure projects, usually with their long-term nature, are prone to unexpected shocks. Therefore if both bond markets and bank loans can be employed to fund infrastructure in direct and indirect ways, the stability of funding for projects will be improved.

The huge demand for infrastructure financing has provided the private sector with significant investment opportunities. Public-private-partnerships are different from "pure privatization", and allow the private sector to engage in developing, financing and operating infrastructure projects. PPPs could be an essential solution to the lack of funding.

There have been many successful cases in the PPP framework in several countries over the years. The key issue is how governments can effectively maintain a balance between public interests and fair returns for private investors.

In the PPP model, many projects have offered low-risk investment opportunities and stable income for the private sector largely because of a combination of measures taken by governments. For example, governments usually retain a certain amount of the risk associated with the project, and take some tax and subsidy preferential, protecting against inflationary impact on income generated from projects and enhancing the reliability and transparency of regulations in some sectors.

Of course, there are lessons that can be drawn on from the experience of PPP models. It is reported that between 2007 and 2012 in India, $225 billion was invested by the private sector in infrastructure (equivalent to 12 percent of GDP in 2012), much of it through PPPs. Roads, ports and electricity projects accounted for the lion's share.

However, some companies or PPP contracts incurred losses or were not expected to make a profit. The reasons are of course complex. For example some companies delayed construction, wrongly assumed cheap coal or gas prices and, in some cases, even took on too great a burden of debt.

It is worth mentioning that another effective way of financing infrastructure could be through municipal bonds. In the US, municipal bond issuance has a history of more than 200 years. These bonds, including general obligation bonds and revenue bonds, are usually backed by the government's future tax receipts or by revenue from specific projects.

In China, the urbanization rate - measured as the proportion of urban residents in the overall population - reached 51 percent by 2011, but there is still a lot of scope for further development. Urbanization is expected to remain a main driving force of China's long-term economic and social development, and it is a policy priority for the government to actively and steadily progress toward this goal.

Now it is imperative for the country to take further measures to utilize private investment to speed up infrastructure construction, and thus help overcome the shortage of fiscal funding.

After all, the previous model - in which local governments were overly dependent on revenue from land sales - is unsustainable. Many local governments' financing vehicles are facing a great deal of pressure in repaying their debts. This situation requires China to innovate its infrastructure financing model, drawing on international experience, further broadening financial channels and continuing reforms in its financial industry.

(China Daily 01/18/2013 page8)

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Most Viewed Today's Top News
...