Media Release
23 July, 2009
Public Private Investment Fund Allows New Zealanders to Invest in New Zealand
Public Private Fund Allows NZers to Invest in NZ
The New Zealand Council for Infrastructure Development has welcomed today's announcement of the Morrison & Co Public Infrastructure Partnership Fund backed by an initial $100 million from the New Zealand Superannuation Fund.
"This provides the opportunity for New Zealanders to invest in building and improving New Zealand's social
infrastructure from schools to hospitals, water services to street lighting. It also provides an opportunity to bring
private sector innovation and a whole of life management focus to the procurement of long term national infrastructure
assets, says NZCID Chief Executive, Stephen Selwood
"Internationally public private partnerships (PPPs) have been successful in the development and renewal of schools,
hospitals, courts, street lighting, water services, waste, recycling and telecommunications. Empirical research has
consistently shown PPPs to perform well in terms of value for money and on time delivery.
"The PPP model enables government agencies to oversee and control service standards while allowing the private sector to
reduce costs through good management and innovation and share the risks.
"For example, in schools, teachers and headmasters are able to get on with the job of teaching, instead of having to
look after all the buildings and facilities. Selwood says.
"PPPs have been shown to offer several benefits over more traditional public sector procurement:
- The private sector takes on the risks of design, construction and long term operation and maintenance of the
infrastructure. If there's cost blow-outs, the private sector bears those costs, not the taxpayer.
- Having an investment stake in the asset means that the private sector is highly incentivised to design, build and
maintain the asset to the highest standard that will endure over its entire life.
- Private sector skills in innovation in design, construction, asset management and ongoing maintenance are brought to
the fore in a competitive tender process that provides improved value over time.
- Value for money is an inherent part of the bid process. If the PPP bids are lower than the expected cost of public
sector provision, then the contract is awarded. If the PPP bid is higher, the public sector will procure the asset as
usual.
- Injection of private finance means that more projects - schools, hospitals, courts, prisons and other social services,
can be built sooner than traditional "pay as you go" public sector procurement
- Extra revenue is often generated to offset costs by using the infrastructural assets in an innovative and commercial
manner (e.g. on-site day care, night classes in idle classrooms)
"PPPs are not the total answer to addressing New Zealand's infrastructure needs, but they are a useful means of
providing better value for some public infrastructure service provision. The Public Infrastructure Partnership fund
announced by Morrison and Co provides another tool in the toll box to drive innovation within the infrastructure sector
and provide better outcomes for investors and the public alike".
NOTES TO EDITORS
A detailed list of reports and information on PPPs is available at the NZCID website:
Questions and Answers about PPPs...
What are PPPs?
PPPs are a form of long term partnership between the public and private sector to build and maintain public assets.
Under a partnership agreement the public sector defines the service standards that must be delivered, monitors their
delivery and pays for the service provided. The private sector contractors work in a consortium to finance, design,
construct and maintain the asset for a fixed term - usually around 30 years. The contractors ability to recover their
investment is totally dependent on meeting the key performance standards for the duration of the contract. If the
service is not up to scratch the government withholds payment. At the end of the agreement the contractor hands back the
asset to the state in an "as new" condition. Failure to do so results in a penalty.
In a typical PPP project the government would:
- engage one party to design, finance, construct, maintain and, in some cases operate the facility
- only make payments after the facility has commenced operations
- provide payments over the term of the contract based on services delivered against the achievement of key performance
indicators, with these payments being at risk for non performance.
It is important to note that the responsibility for delivering core services is retained by government and the project
must pass a rigorous public interest test. Good public policy requires that all projects must offer value for money as a
government investment, independent of the delivery method The same is true of PPP projects.
What are the benefits of PPPs?
The key benefits of PPPs are:
- the injection of private finance means that more projects - roads, schools, hospitals, courts, prisons, can be built
sooner than traditional "pay as you go" public sector procurement
- the public sector is able to focus on core services, like teaching the kids, healing the sick, or moving people and
goods on high quality roads and public transport systems
- the private sector takes on the risks of design, construction and long term maintenance of the infrastructure. If
there's cost blow-outs, they have to bear those costs.
- having an ownership stake in the asset means that the private sector is highly incentivised to design, build and
maintain the asset to the highest standard that will endure over its entire life
- private sector skills in innovation in design, construction, asset management and ongoing maintenance are brought to
the fore in a competitive tender process to provide improved value over time
- extra revenue is often generated to offset costs by using the infrastructural assets in an innovative and commercial
manner (e.g. commercial night classes in idle classrooms, tolls on roads)
What's in it for the Private Sector?
PPPs appeal to the private sector because of the long term nature of the contract which attaches long term stable
income. It is ideal for superannuation funds looking for long term secure investment opportunities.
Doesn't the need for the private sector to make a profit make PPPs more expensive?
The reality is that almost every state asset in the country is already designed, built and maintained by the private
sector. This naturally includes a profit component. Public private partnerships are merely an extension of the concept.
There is no extra profit component in a PPP. The only difference is that under a PPP the private sector finances the
asset up front and then enters into a long term agreement to recover costs in the form of service payments over the term
of the contract.
How do tax payers and ratepayers make sure they're getting value for money?
Value for money is assured by undertaking an objective comparison of the competitive PPP proposals against public sector
proposal. Competition between bidders for a whole of life asset and related services provides scope for innovation and
other factors to achieve efficiency savings above those achieved under equivalent public sector delivery and financing.
A PPP only proceeds where an objective assessment shows better value for money in the PPP model.
What represents better value?
Better value is not just cheaper. It also means the overall outcomes achieved, such as higher quality and better
maintained infrastructure over the longer term. It is about obtaining the best deal for government in the delivery of
infrastructure across a number of factors, including price, quality of service delivery to the community, design,
amenity and sustainability of the arrangement. For instance, compared to traditional built infrastructure, PPPs have
provided flexibility and higher quality in design. This has achieved efficiency in operations, reduce maintenance and
provide capacity to expand infrastructure to meet future needs without disruption to operations. Competition between
bidders and the potential for innovation, which produces savings in operational costs or related commercial
opportunities to generate revenue, reduce the overall cost to government.
Why borrow through the private sector? Can't the public sector can borrow more cheaply?
It makes sense for the public sector to borrow to fund critical infrastructure. But it makes more sense to use the
private sector when the overall package provides better value for money. Effective application of the PPP model is about
packaging projects in a way that ensures lower overall cost to the state and improved services to the community.
Competition between bidders for a whole of life asset and related services provides scope for innovation and other
factors to achieve efficiency savings above those achieved under equivalent public sector delivery and financing.
It is a myth that the value for money outcomes achieved in PPP projects are compromised by higher private sector
borrowing costs. The Government's ability to borrow more cheaply is purely a function of its capacity to levy taxes to
repay borrowings. Credit markets perceive this power as reducing the risk of their investment and therefore will lend to
government at lower rates. However, when it comes to raising finance for a project, it is the risk of the individual
project that determines the real cost of finance. The difference between the private and the public sectors is that
private sector capital markets explicitly price in the risks of a project into its sources of finance. This is not the
case in the public sector. Instead, taxpayers implicitly subsidise the cost of the project by bearing the risk of cost
overruns, time delays or performance failures, which are not priced into the Government borrowing rate.
The importance of the finance element of privately provided infrastructure lies in the incentive it can provide for the
performance of that infrastructure, and the disciplines external financiers can provide on the delivery of projects to
time and budget. While a key objective of Government is to achieve a more comprehensive upfront consideration of risks
in conventionally financed projects, it is difficult to replicate the strength of private financing incentives within a
conventional financing process where all risks of delivery reside with Government.
Aren't PPPs just a means to take expenditure off the Government's Balance Sheet?
The balance-sheet treatment of a project is not the driving force behind the use of a PPP delivery approach. In most
jurisdictions PPP projects are included on the Government's balance sheet (and the accounts are audited each year). The
decision about how a project is funded is separate to the decision of how it is delivered. PPPs compete for budget
funding along with all other capital projects. Full capital budget funding is set aside for non-self funding projects
before market interest is formally sought, allowing a project to proceed to traditional delivery should private bidders
not offer value for money.
Does real or effective risk transfer actually occur?
PPP projects assign risks to those best able to manage them, avoiding excessive premiums for inappropriate risk
transfer, and in reality, what is transferred is the financial consequences of risk occurring. Construction costs are
just one example where government can significantly benefit from transferring the risk of cost overruns to the private
sector. However, there are many other areas where the risk transfer is real, including maintenance and fit-for-purpose
design.
But aren't PPPs expensive to negotiate?
International experience including adopting standard commercial principles in PPP projects and increasing the use of the
interactive tender process in projects has reduced the time and cost of PPP contracts significantly.
Won't long-term PPP contracts unduly lock-in future Governments?
Most infrastructure, by its very nature, is built to last for 20 years or more. No matter what mode of delivery, the
government is making decisions that have long-term consequences. The benefit of a partnership approach is that the
government will need to consider more fully the whole-of-life issues before entering into partnership arrangements and
incorporate sufficient flexibility into the arrangements to take advantage of improvements in service delivery quality
and efficiency over time.
ENDS