PPP's - privatisation by stealth
29 August 2002
By Dr Christopher Sheil
Public private partnerships - it's the polite term for privatisation argues Dr Christopher Sheil, Visiting Fellow at the School of History University of NSW and author of Water's Fall: Running the Risks with Economic Rationalism. (Pluto Press)
'There is no clear evidence from experience that the investment
which is socially advantageous coincides with that which is the most
profitable.'
The first thing anyone can notice about so-called 'public-private
partnerships' -- or 'PPPs' -- is that the subject presents itself as both
exceedingly complicated and very boring; so complicated and boring that even
editors with the Australian Financial Review have complained to me at times
about being 'PPPed out'. Indeed, the topic can be so complicated and boring that
one suspects this is a deliberate part of the political marketing strategy
adopted by the advocates of these policies. If the editors of the Fin find the
topic tedious, what hope can critics have of raising public awareness and debate
about this direction?
Let me try to cut through some of the complexity, even if I cannot promise to
be entertaining. Actually, when preparing this paper I spent some time searching
cyberspace for some jokes about PPPs, without any luck. I naturally thought this
was because the topic is so dry and complex that it simply doesn't allow for
humour. But, on second thought, it occurred that the reason no one bothers to
think up jokes about PPPs is because the policy-makers have already done the job
for us.
Privatisation
The first joke in all the policy papers that have been released by our State
Labor governments is an insistence that PPPs are not privatisation. The Western
Australian PPP paper, for example, states in the opening paragraph of its
introduction that the government 'has a clear policy position that it does not
support privatisation'. Likewise, the NSW document says that the policy 'does
not mean privatisation of public services'.
These statements must be a joke, because all the papers are all about, and
all of them are only about, privatisation. No, this does not mean that the
policies are about 'privatisation by stealth' -- the promoters of these policies
don't really mind them being described as 'privatisation by stealth', since it
helps them to keep up their running joke, which is that these policies are not
about privatisation, pure and simple.
Let me insist, and we all should insist, that they are about privatisation,
no more no less. This point must be hammered. A close reading of the PPP policy
documents reveals that the only public activities that they all exclude from
privatisation are school teaching and clinical services within hospitals. Mind
you, the schools and hospitals can be privatised, but the governments have
generally promised that they will still continue to employ the teachers, doctors
and nurses who work in them. Some governments have gone a little further. The
Victorian government has also ruled out privatising the judges within the court
system, as has the Western Australian government, which has also ruled out
privatising the police and 'offender management'.
This then is the first important point to be made. Read at their widest, the
policies that have been represented as PPPs amount to a New Right Utopia. There
is no barrier within these policy papers that can prevent State governments
being reduced to the point where they own nothing, and their sole direct tasks
will be teaching school children and tending the sick. In Victoria and Western
Australia, they will also continue to employ our judges. Bravely, Western
Australia also promises to continue to employ police and manage 'offenders'.
Let's be clear: these policy papers supply no other limits. Beyond these slender
commitments, PPPs amount to open slather for privatisation.
I lie. The truth is that the policies don't even supply these slender limits.
A close reading of the Victorian policy, for example, reveals that the
government has only promised to remain directly responsible for 'core' services.
The problem here is that, when we go to the definition of 'core', we find that
this does not necessarily even include education and hospital services. The
policy does not make a clear statement that these are core services, and that
they are therefore not subject to the PPP policy. Rather, what the policy says
is that these tasks 'are widely regarded as core services'. Note, the policy
does not say that the Victorian government regards these services as 'core',
only that others do. Given that the paper also explicitly states that the
definition of core services will be decided on a 'case by case' basis, strictly,
the policy remains utterly open-ended.
This is, perhaps, a form of stealth. Yet it is not 'privatisation by
stealth'; rather, it is pure and simple, in your face privatisation, plus a good
deal of 'stealth' in defining the real limits of the policies. This is true of
all the States. Despite their qualified allusions to protecting so-called 'core'
services, all the policies emphasise their open-ended scope. The Western
Australian government's policy is perhaps the most explicitly open-ended. In
contrast to the vagaries employed to describe the very few functions that the
government intends to keep, the policy paper presents an explicit list of areas
that the West is actively seeking to privatise. These are: transport and port
facilities, health facilities, education facilities, water supply and waste
water treatment, electricity generation, transmission and distribution, gas
supply and distribution, housing development and new housing estates, land
development, and major construction processes. This list, the paper emphasises,
is 'non-exclusive'.
So this is the first Orwellian-style joke that the State Labor governments
are enjoying at the expense of their citizens. In the tradition of 1984's Big
Brother, who insisted that war is peace, that freedom is slavery and that
ignorance is strength, our State governments have all released policy papers
that set out privatisation policies, which they insist are not privatisation
policies. Again, let's be clear. Privatising water, electricity and transport
can only mean privatising water, electricity and transport, regardless of
whether the government does or does not continue to directly employ judges and
police. Likewise, privatising school and hospital facilities, which presently
appear to be at the front-line of the PPP policies, can only mean privatising
school and hospital facilities, regardless of whether the government does or
does not continue to employ schoolteachers and nurses.
Of course, the reasons why our State Labor governments are refusing to say
that their privatisation policies are privatisation policies are plain enough.
Despite the fact that the Australian public has been barraged by 20 years of
bi-partisan pro-privatisation rhetoric, accompanied by a privatisation program
valued at around $120 billion -- a program that has placed Australia at the top
of the world privatisation rankings -- the public has remained implacably
opposed to the policy. Opinion surveys always show - always show -- that between
60 and 70 per cent of Australians are opposed to privatisation; an opposition
that stretches across all demographics and voting intentions. So entrenched is
the public's opposition that even the majority of Telstra shareholders are
opposed to the further privatisation of Telstra.
Given the unpopularity, our politicians have simply removed the word; they
have scrubbed out 'privatisation' and replaced it with a new descriptor called
'partnership', and continued to advance their privatisation policies under this
new banner. We will come to the new banner, and then to some of the issues that
arise under the new policies. But first, let me quote from a speech made by the
Australian Auditor-General in April, which goes to the most general concern
about the cheap assurances the State governments are issuing about so-called
'core' services and the continuing privatisation of the nation's public
sector:
Outsourcing and privatising areas traditionally considered public sector
activities indicates that the size of the core is shrinking. A broader issue is
whether, over the longer term, the public sector might diminish to a point at
which it no longer constitutes a credible, effective or viable arm of sound
governance.
Partnerships
This brings us to the second running joke in these policies, which is the
insistence that they are not promoting privatisation, but 'partnerships'. Now we
all know what partnerships are. We have tennis partners, marriage partners,
bridge partners, business partners and so on, and in every case -- in all
conventional contexts -- if the term is to have a distinct meaning,
'partnership' must carry connotations of equality, with both parties working
toward a joint goal.
The truth is that almost nothing in these latest privatisation policies can
be fairly described as providing for the formation of partnerships, apart from
the frequent rhetorical assertions that the policies do have this aim. On the
contrary, almost all the detail of the policies testifies to the fact that they
primarily aim to establish long-term commercial contracts, provided these
represent so-called 'value for money'. This is made unequivocal by the universal
stipulation that private firms will only be contracted to supply specified
'outputs'. This automatically necessarily means that the governments will remain
solely responsible for the 'outcomes' from the deals. The inescapable conclusion
is that the policies thus provide for the establishment of asymmetric business
relationships; relationships so starkly asymmetric that they cannot be defined
as 'partnerships'. In fact, the policies amount to nothing more than
conventional principal-agent contract relations, and principal-agent contract
relationships are not, and cannot in any reasonable sense, be described as
'partnerships'.
Thus, it seems obvious that the role of the 'partnership' rhetoric is simply
to hide the unpopularity of privatisation behind a term that implies equality,
and therefore evokes a friendly glow. There are dangers in this policy marketing
rhetoric that go beyond just fooling poor old dumb Joe Public. The danger is
that the terminology will also fool the governments themselves. The risk is that
the positive connotations of equality and joint goals that are associated with
the rhetoric of partnership will confuse and tend to disarm the governments and
their officials. There are places for genuine partnerships with government. But
falsely characterising garden variety principal-agent contracts as partnerships
only encourages institutional capture, allowing select private firms privileged
access to market and political intelligence and generally interfering with the
necessarily hard-headed and unprejudiced evaluation of whether or not the
proposed privatisations are socially beneficial.
Costs and benefits
Given that in discussing PPPs we are actually talking about various forms of
privatisation, what can we say about the costs and benefits? Let's leave aside
the actual open-ended character of the polices, and assume for the moment that
we are just talking about the present agenda to privatise schools and hospitals.
The first thing to say is that it is mistaken to think that private provision
will bring additional funding for these facilities. On the contrary,
privatisation is merely a more expensive alternative to funding the
infrastructure through public borrowing in the traditional way.
There is some inescapable arithmetic here. Irrespective of whether the
infrastructure continues to be collectively funded through the public sector, or
is funded by select private firms, there is no doubt about where most of the
money will come from: it will be borrowed from the managers of the nation's
swelling superannuation funds. The inescapable arithmetic is that the funds will
lend money to the government by purchasing bonds for a return of less than 4 per
cent, whereas they demand an additional risk premium of 6-8 per cent from
consortia that offer private infrastructure bonds.
Moreover, with private firms, someone must also fund the additional cost of
raising the capital, involving the structuring of the projects, undertaking risk
evaluation, carrying out debt and equity placement, and so on, which is usually
3 to 4 per cent of the total cost. Further, although this is rarely mentioned,
we must remember that additional costs also arise because, unlike State
governments, private firms must pay tax. While quasi-taxes or tax equivalents
may theoretically be applied to the 'public sector comparator' (in the name of
'competitive neutrality' - yes, the national competition policy lurks behind
PPPs), this does not remove the private tax disadvantage; it merely transfers
its manifestation from the comparator to the Treasuries.
The inescapable arithmetic therefore is that the cost to the public of
capital under privatisation is at least double the cost of raising the funds
directly through the public sector in the traditional way: instead of the
government rate of less than 4 per cent interest on the capital; private
consortia must receive between 9 and 16 per cent. In turn, this means that the
only way that PPPs can be profitable to private firms is if the service quality
is dramatically reduced, the taxpayer gets severely gouged, or large-scale
efficiency gains can be found.
It beggars belief to imagine that large-scale efficiencies can be found by
privatising social infrastructure such as schools and hospitals. The most likely
prospect is that the services will decline. In the UK, where private financing
has been operating for some years now, the diversion of funds to cover the
additional costs for private hospital development has led to a 30 per cent
reduction in bed capacity and a 20 per cent reduction in hospital staff. An
extensive study of the record was also undertaken last year by Tony Blair's
favourite think-tank, the Institute of Public Policy Research. Although heavily
criticised for being a deeply interested attempt to 'talk out' the policy's
opponents, the report nevertheless found that the British results showed no
significant efficiency gains in hospitals and schools.
This stands to reason, for it has long been recognised that the major
opportunity for capturing efficiencies in this area is in the construction
phase, which is already conventionally put out to private tender. Conceivably,
there may also be some gains to be made by tendering for maintenance, or
bundling the maintenance task with the construction tender, although these gains
are only likely to be small and they are, in any event, hotly contested in the
literature. Regardless, there is no need to flog private ownership rights or
long-term private franchises for schools and hospitals in order to capture these
gains.
So how do the policies justify the additional costs? The magic pudding that
bridges the cost gap is referred to as 'risk allocation'. We don't really have
the space to delve into the infinite complexities of risk allocation, but let me
make some quick points.
Firstly, the idea that substantive risk transfer occurs in these deals is
another PPP joke. As mentioned, construction risks, the major risks in physical
infrastructure, have already been privatised. And as has also been mentioned,
the policies explicitly stipulate that the governments will remain fully and
solely responsible for the outcomes in all the privatised policy areas, with the
private firms only being responsible for so-called 'outputs'. In other words, if
the privatisation of schools and hospitals has adverse impacts on education and
health, the governments will continue to carry the can.
And the major risk that all normal private firms face, the risk that actually
gives an authentic meaning to the notion of private enterprise, is non-existent
in these cases. This is, of course, the risk that there will not be sufficient
demand for a firm's product, or that it will be undercut by competition. In the
case of PPPs, this risk will be completely born by the governments, since they
have all undertaken to guarantee demand for 25-30 years. It is this remarkable
government guarantee that underwrites all PPP policies. This is the river of
gold for which the private consortia are bidding. Note the contrast between the
extraordinary 25-30 year public income security that is to be granted to the new
owners under the privatisations and the receding security it entails for
Australian workers? From this perspective, we can say not only that PPP policies
are about privatisation; we can also see that, in the most vital sense, they are
not about private enterprise.
If none of the major risks are transferred under the policy, how can risk be
used to justify the policy? The answer is that the State governments have
adopted an idiosyncratic definition of risk. Ever since Frank Knight (1921),
conventional economic literature has defined risk as an actuarial concept,
applying to randomness that may affect returns that can be specified in terms of
specific insurable numerical possibilities (as with the likelihood or rain, or
lottery tickets). Beyond this strict definition, the probability of random
occurrences affecting returns is a matter of subjective belief, or the concept
shades into the broader concept of 'uncertainty'.
The widespread use of subjective risk assessment, defined in a way as to
include any and all possible imaginable uncertainties, is cause for serious
public suspicion. A major study of risk allocation in the UK, for example, found
that risk transfer was the critical element in proving the 'value for money'
case for privatising public hospitals. For the six hospitals subjected to the
study, the value of the allocated risk varied by between an extraordinary 17.4
and 50.4 per cent of total capital costs, yet, as it happened, in each case this
just amounted to a cost that was sufficient to close the gap between private and
public options, often favouring the private proposal by less than only 0.1 per
cent. Since there is no standard method of measuring the value of non-calculable
risk, and the UK government has not published the method it uses to arrive at
its figures, the study concluded that the 'value for money analysis seems to be
no more than a mechanism that has been created to make the case for using
private finance'.
The final point on the costs and benefits of the policies is that we should
appreciate that PPPs also create new and potentially very costly risks. Given
that the policies cannot, and explicitly do not, transfer the residual risks to
the private firms, this means that the governments are automatically exposed to
moral hazard -- or the practice of regulatory gaming in order to shift any
unspecified or unanticipated costs back onto the public.
Opportunities to exploit moral hazard are encouraged by the unavoidable and
therefore inevitable reduction in public accountability that comes with the
attribution of private rights in public infrastructure. This follows by
definition, since the public monitoring of private performance, including 'step
in rights', can only ever amount to partial supervision; that is, if monitoring
is not less than partial, than the government would effectively still remain the
manager, or a shadow manager, of the infrastructure -- a costly duplication that
would, of course, completely destroy any possibility of efficiency gains. The
incentives thus encourage partial monitoring. And to the extent that monitoring
is partial, private firms capture opportunities to exploit the government's
continuing responsibility for the actual policy outcomes.
Aside from the risks that come with moral hazard, the arrangements also
create new technical risks. Anyone who has read my book on the failures in the
Sydney and Adelaide water infrastructure, or who has been following the
corporate crisis in the US, will know that there are many ways in which firms
can increase their earnings without enhancing productivity by exposing the
public to additional risks. Many of the technical and accounting risks that
comprise the actors in Water's Fall are applicable within privatised public
schools and hospitals, where we can also find other specific risks.
In hospitals, for example, the current proposals will divide the ownership
and control of the buildings from the clinical services, yet there is an obvious
relationship between the two, since the level of building hygiene is a direct
cause of hospital-acquired infections. This introduces a direct conflict. It
will be in the new operators' interest to minimise expenditures in all areas,
but it is in the public interest for investment levels to be technically
optimised. Assuming the private operators are risk-neutral rational-maximisers,
as PPP policies themselves generally do, at the least, this ensures service
losses at the margin. In the UK other risks have also emerged. At the privately
financed Darent Valley Hospital in Dartford and Gravesham, nurses have
complained that the design was not conducive to effective care, and equipment
was not working properly when the hospital first opened. At the new Princess
Margaret Hospital in Swindon, the recovery room is located 80 metres from the
operating theatre.
Similar risks will be opened up in schools. In the UK, where the Blair
government is openly subsidising school privatisation, last month one school
discovered that, at the urging of the UK Treasury and education department, its
new 25-year contract didn't include the cost of 'furniture and equipment',
'access for wheelchair users', or 'cabling and IT provision'. Nor was provision
made for the costs of emptying the classrooms, storing equipment, or replacing
it after refurbishment. Other hidden additional costs have also been discovered
in the UK's schools. For example, the classroom size set out in the contracts is
now too small for the curriculum needs in at least three schools.
The
necessary variations that must be made to the original UK contracts will now add
substantial new costs on to the schools, which reminds us that among the real
risks created by the polices here are those which are presently unforeseeable,
since they relate to the continuing development of educational and health
standards. Remembering that the policies involve 25 to 30 year contracts, we
must also remember that, as standards change which require changing building
space or servicing requirements, governments will have to deal with today's
competitive private provider, who by virtue of the contract will have
automatically become tomorrow's private monopoly exploiter.
Why have
governments gone this way?
If all of this is true, if the policy is nothing but virtually open slather
for privatisation, which is deeply unpopular within the community, more costly,
leaves all the substantial and residual risks with the governments, and creates
new risks, we are left with one question, which is why on earth have the State
Labor governments gone this way?
There appear to be two interlocking reasons. The first is simply the
opportunity PPPs present to exploit an accounting quirk, whereby the liabilities
incurred are entered into the public accounts as expenses rather than debt. Here
it is important to appreciate that all the fiscal characteristics of the PPPs
are exactly the same as public debt, except these funds are more expensive and
less flexible. While strictly this means that they increase the exposure of the
governments to financial risk compared with debt, they are not accounted for in
the same way and therefore do not incur the same scrutiny or criticism.
The contemporary refusal of the States to maintain let alone increase public
borrowing has thus opened up the way for PPPs. Let me stress that the present
zero public debt policies are driven by nothing but pure populism, or economic
irrationalism. There is no reputable rationale in any economic theory for our
State governments not to borrow. Australia's public debt to GDP ratio is
ridiculously low, at 6 per cent compared to an OECD average of 40 per cent.
There is no microeconomic or macroeconomic justification for eliminating this
remaining skerrick of debt. Leaving aside empty populist blather about
mortgages, bankcards and baby boomers, the common justification that gets
trotted out by grown-ups in this area is that public borrowing 'crowds out' more
valuable private borrowing by raising interest rates. This is an entirely
irrelevant consideration in this case, and it is theoretically wrong in any
event.
As John Quiggin has pointed out, the macroeconomic effects of infrastructure
investment will be exactly the same whether the investment is made collectively
through the public sector or by select private firms. This is to say, whoever
does the borrowing, the effects on firms outside the infrastructure sector will
be identical. And as Kenneth Davidson has recently reminded us, in any event
public borrowing levels do not determine Australia's interest rates. Rather, in
globalised financial markets, interest is determined in relation to the world
rate, with adjustments for inflation and currency risks. This is an easy point
to demonstrate. While Australia has one of the world's lowest levels of public
debt, our interest rates are among the world's highest. By contrast, Japan has
the world's lowest interest rate, yet at 135 per cent of GDP has one of largest
public debts. Likewise, the US has lower interest rates, but carries three times
the level of public debt. Plainly, there is no straightforward relationship
between public debt and interest rates.
Thus, the only available conclusion is that, effectively, our States have
become imprisoned within their own populist anti-public debt rhetoric. Under the
present circumstances, where pressure for public infrastructure investment is
intense, PPPs are attractive because they offer the governments a way to take on
debt-equivalent obligations, while avoiding the appearance of having done
so.
This motivation dovetails with second reason why the States have gone this
way, which is that the policies are simply a consequence of the direct political
pressure from vested financial interests on the current Labor premiers. PPPs are
attractive to the politicians as a way of pacifying or buying off the local
lobbies, which, of course, are simply seeking secure public rents. Labor
premiers always seem to be vulnerable to these kinds of pressures from the
so-called 'big end of town'. This stems from the somewhat absurd but
nevertheless lingering idea that Labor is somehow anti-business, or a poorer
economic manager than the conservative parties. Labor governments always dread
local business charges that lead to headlines like 'the go-slow state', the
'shut-down state', and so on, and hence they are always keen to prove their
business credentials.
All this is to say that, as far as can be divined, the policies have not been
driven by the State Treasuries. This follows because PPPs deeply offend one of
the most basic of Treasury operating principles: the law against hypothecation.
All Treasuries hate hypothecation, or the ring-fencing of parts of the annual
budget to particular areas. There are two levels of objection. The first and
milder objection is to using hypothecation to raise additional money. This is
bad, but not so very bad as the second objection, which is to hypothecating
existing moneys.
It is not difficult to understand the Treasury objections. The more of a
budget that gets immunised from annual management, the less room they have to
move and the harder their annual budget task becomes. The more that certain
areas are walled off from discretion, the less room they have to adjust for
annual variations, and - by definition - the more that the pressure will fall on
the remaining parts of the budget. This is an important point to appreciate, and
is not well understood in the general community. To restate, the more public
money that is hypothecated (tied) to the operation of physical infrastructure,
the more that increased pressure will be automatically placed on the funds that
are provided for the remaining services. And when we come to PPPs, we are
talking hypothecation big time, since we are talking about hypothecating funds
for the operation of the infrastructure for periods of up to 30 years. The value
of the fixed-capital stock in NSW schools alone is some $17 billion. By
definition, the continuing hypothecation of budget funds to pay expensive rents
to private firms for this infrastructure must continuously mount the pressure on
the remaining service areas. In this sense, PPPs are analogous to those smart
bombs that preserve buildings but kill people.
So if we can assume that
professional Treasury officials will be opposed to the policy, or at least
policy neutral, we must look to the political pressure that has been placed on
the premiers by the business lobbies for the second part of the policy
rationale. And of course there are no mysteries about why lobbyists are pushing
so hard for the policies. Private consortia will always seek to purchase the
benefit of a very secure income stream, with risk characteristics similar to a
government security, but higher returns. And who can blame business for chasing
the security of government contracts, as they always have?
For business, PPPs amount to a form of corporate welfare, which brings us to
my final point, which is to recall, as one of my economist colleagues recently
reminded me, that the ideology of private enterprise originated specifically in
opposition to governments allocating private monopolies. This historical
perspective lends a sense of perspective to the objections to PPPs raised in
this paper, which are scarcely radical. To insist that private firms should
stick to private enterprise is to insist on nothing more than a policy that has
historically been most strongly advocated by Adam Smith. In The Wealth of
Nations, Smith explains why governments, as masters, cannot turn over exclusive
responsibilities to private commercial servants:
The real interests of their masters ... is the same as the country... But the
real interests of the servants is by no means the same with that of the country,
and the most perfect information would not necessarily put an end to their
oppressions ... Such exclusive companies, therefore, are nuisances in every
respect.
Notes:
. John Maynard Keynes, The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money,
Macmillan, Cambridge 1973 [1936], p. 157.
. This paper draws on research undertaken on behalf of the Evatt Foundation
for the State Public Sector Federation (publication forthcoming). Note that the
precise terms used to describe the policies that are the subject of this paper
varies between jurisdictions. While public-private partnership (PPP) is commonly
employed by the Australian media to describe the policies in all jurisdictions,
NSW uses the term private finance project (PFP), and in the UK, where the policy
originated, it is known as the public finance initiative (PFI). Nonetheless,
both NSW and the UK also locate their polices within a wider (neo-corporatist?)
framework of public-private partnerships.
. See also Christopher Sheil, 'Muddy waters as tail tries to wag dog',
Australian Financial Review, 7 December 2001.
. See David Hayward, 'The public good and the public services: what role for
the private sector? Dissent, Autumn- Winter 2002, pp. 8-12.
. Ibid.
. P. J. Barrett (Auditor-General for Australia), "Implementing adequate
supervision - What kind and how much', Address to a laboratory for politicians
and top managers from different public institutions in Europe, Regione
Lombaredia, Italy, 6 April 2002.
. This is an advance on past policies, since it makes explicit what has
always been the case in the context of privatised essential services (see
Christopher Sheil, Water's Fall, Running the Risks with Economic Rationalism,
Pluto Press, 2000, p. 75). Regardless, the point being made here is that the
explicit acknowledgement that this is the case makes nonsense of the idea of
'partnership'.
. See also Christopher Sheil, 'Let's drop the PPP: it's simply a deal',
Australian Financial Review, 15 February 2002. On the other hand, to the very
slight extent that the policies do occasionally refer to conditions that really
do suggest characteristics associated with genuine partnerships -- such as the
suggestion that is generally made that the governments should share in any
'windfall profits' that the private firms may gain -- the policies tend toward
government-business relations that have been heavily criticised in the past
under the popular rubric of 'WA Inc'. Once governments have a financial stake in
the earnings of the private firms, a whole range of important, difficult and
unresolved horizontal accountability issues arise (see Barrett, op. cit.).
. For the figures, see: John Quiggin, 'Sums starting to sink in', Australian
Financial Review, 1 August 2002; Kenneth Davidson, "What's left?' Dissent,
Autumn-Winter 2002, pp. 2-4; Nixon Apple, 'Welcome to the 5% Club', Dissent,
Spring 2002, pp. 8-10.
. For the estimate, see Apple, op. cit., pp. 8.
. The reasons for the lower premium demanded of government has been long
debated in the economics profession, and it is generally agreed that the
difference is largely due to inefficiencies and transaction costs associated
with private financing, on the one hand, and the high degree of security and
liquidity associated with public borrowing, on the other. Yet, whatever the
reason, the fact remains that it is cheaper for governments to borrow than it is
for private consortia. On the equity premium puzzle, see John Quiggin, Great
Expectations: Microeconomic Reform and Australia, Allen & Unwin, Sydney,
1996, pp. 147-53.
. Allyson Pollock, Jean Shoal & Neal Vickers, 'Private finance and "value
for money" in NHS hospitals: a policy in search of a rationale?' BMJ (British
Medical Journal), 18 May 2002; 324 (7347): 1205-9.
. Commission on Public Private Partnerships, Building Better Partnerships:
the final Report of the Commission on Public Private Partnerships, Institute for
Public Policy Research, London, 2001.
. For a good discussion of the issues, including the story of the infamous
'Domberger 20 per cent', see Bob Walker & Betty Con Walker, Privatisation:
Sell Off or Sell Out? ABC Books, Sydney, 2000, Ch 6.
. Again, it is important to emphasise that the explicit recognition that this
is the case by the State governments is a policy advance, but, again, the point
being made here is that it makes nonsense of risk transfer (see also note 7
above).
. See also Sheil (2000), op. cit., p. 76.
. For a recent discussion, see Steve Keen, Debunking Economics: The Naked
Emperor of the Social Sciences, Pluto Press, Sydney, 2001, esp. pp. 151-2,
211-12.
. Pollock et al. op. cit. Transparency is also a major concern in the
Australian policies, as the final contracts will not even be available for
scrutiny by the parliaments or Auditors-General, let alone citizens generally.
Rather, the polices only committed to making contract summary statements
available. The lack of transparency has been a constant source of outrage in the
UK. See, for example, George Monbiot, 'Public fraud initiative, Guardian, 18
June 2002, and 'Public disgrace', The Spectator, 9 March 2002.
. See also Sheil (200), op. cit, pp. 71-81.
. Ibid. See also Michael H. Granof & Stephen A. Zeff, 'Generally accepted
accounting abuses', New York Times, 28 June 2002.
. Pollock et al., op. cit.
. Melanie McFadyean & David Rowland ,'A costly free lunch', Guardian, 30
July 2002. For another horror story associated with schools and the UK's PFI
scheme, see Francis Beckett, 'Private profit, public squalor', New Statesman, 15
July 2002. Nor is it clear how the social returns that are presently captured by
schools in their roles as community centres are to be funded under PPPs.
. See Walker & Walker, op. cit., p. 178.
. John Quiggin, 'Private financing of public infrastructure', Dissent,
Autumn-Winter 2002, p.16.
. Kenneth Davidson, 'Myths and mismanagement', Dissent, Spring 2002, pp.
2-7.
. See Christopher Sheil, "Superficial appeal of PPPs falling apart",
Australian Financial Review, 24 May 2002.
. Adam Smith, An Inquiry into the Nature and causes of the Wealth of Nations,
University of Chicago Press edition, Chicago 1976 [1776], Vol. 2, pp. 157-8.
Smith's famous text can be read almost entirely as a polemic against exclusive
privilege, and perhaps PPPs are best defined as a form of
'neo-mercantilism'.
...
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