Economics & Management of Privatization Professor Simon Hakim [email protected] [email protected] Lecture 1     Definition: Political Science, Economics The Concept of Public Goods: Adam Smith Characteristics of Goods that.

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Transcript Economics & Management of Privatization Professor Simon Hakim [email protected] [email protected] Lecture 1     Definition: Political Science, Economics The Concept of Public Goods: Adam Smith Characteristics of Goods that.

Economics & Management of
Privatization
Professor Simon Hakim
[email protected]
[email protected]
1
Lecture 1




Definition: Political Science, Economics
The Concept of Public Goods: Adam Smith
Characteristics of Goods that Require
Intervention
Techniques of Public Sector
2
Definitions—Public
Administration
1.
2.
3.
4.
Relying more on private institutions of society and less on
government to satisfy people’s needs. Private institutions
include businesses operating in marketplace, voluntary
organizations– religious, neighborhoods, civic, co-operatives
and charities. Individuals, family, clan or tribe.
Act of diminished role of government or increased role of
private sector in an activity or in the ownership of assets.
Act of transferring government enterprise or assets to the
private sector
Webster’s: Making private, especially changing from public to
private control or ownership.
3
Definition: Economics
A move of an asset or activity from
bureaucratic government monopoly
towards competitive markets.
4
Public Goods: Adam Smith

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The need for National defense
The duty of protecting every member of
society from injustice or oppression of every
other member of society
Establish and Maintaining highly beneficial
public institutions and public works which are
of negative profit nature if supplied in small
quantities
The duty of meeting expenses of ruling
powers.
5
Public Intervention in
Marketplace

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Pure Public Good: Collective
consumption (non-divisible) with nonexclusion, and non-rivalry in
consumption. MC=0. Motivation for
free ridership.
Externalities: Positive and negative;
Production and Consumption.
Monopolistic Power.
Asymmetric information between the
6
Pure Public
The case of MC=0 and constant is typical for
pure public good. A non-competitive provider
will produce at MR=MC and eliminate a
significant part of Consumers’ surplus.
Example, a road without congestion.
Degree of collective consumption VS. Size of
relevant interacting group.
7
Mapping of Public And Private Goods
8
Dichotomy of Goods & Services
RIVALRY
EXCLUSIVE
NON
EXCLUSIVE
Pure Private
Common Pool
Public domain ponds, rivers.
Regulation by licensing,
contracting-out.
NON-RIVALRY
Club
Swimming pools, toll roads,
country clubs. Membership,
tolls or users’ charges. Private
provision. contracting-out, and
vouchers.
Pure Public
9
Exclusion & Consumption
Properties of Goods & Services
10
Externalities
Definition: By-product of activities that escape
the price mechanism, and may be of positive
or negative nature. Government role is to
internalize externalities such that the price
includes it. In case of negative externalities
the product is over produced and at a lower
price than it should (social). Positive
externalities cause under production of the
good at a higher price than socially desired.
11
Natural Monopoly
A single provider in the market. Absence
of competition may result of significant
economies of scale, technological
superiorities, and/or asymmetric
information that over time eliminated all
competitors. Entry of new competitors
to increase supply and thereby lower
prices is usually infeasible. Gov’t
intervention is
12
Natural Monopoly (cont.)
Is aimed to control prices through regulation. Examples
include local utilities. Improved technology increase
availability of close substitutes and leads to
elimination of the need to regulate.
Natural monopoly results of economies of scale,
technological superiority, asymmetric information.
Overtime, one provider prevails. Consumers’ surplus
in the case of a monopoly is smaller than that results
in perfect competition. Government regulation sets
the price to be lower and as close as possible to that
of perfect competition. Action could be on the
quantity.
13
Asymmetric Information
Food contents, medicine, Enron,
corporate corruption
Here the consumers have no knowledge
on the contents of their products while
learning about it requires very high
cost. Government needs to protect the
consumers.
14
Equity
Requires government intervention.
Efficiency VS. Equity. Shortcomings of
perfect competition. Voluntary activities
to reduce inequity. Progressive
taxation.
15
History of Privatization
Peter Drucker suggested contracting out.
Milton Friedman.
Thatcher elected 1979. BP (79), British
Aerospace (81), National Freight Corp (82),
Cable and Wireless (83), Jaguar (84), British
Telecom (84), British Aerospace-final portion
of holdings (85), British Gas (86), British
Airways (87), Rolls Royce (87), British Airport
Authority (87), water utilities (89), electric
utilities (90), mandatory compulsory
tendering (compet bidding) of local gov’t
16
services (89).
History of Privatization
US: little privatization by sale by Fed.
Few state owned enterprise.
Contracting out: data processing, food
services, building maintenance, guard
services. Local: waste collection, street
cleaning, ambulance service, park
maintenance.
17
History of Privatization
World: Late 1980’s: Mexico, Brazil, Chile,
Argentina elected presidents who
adopted strong privat. Policies.
China: Agriculture (78), eliminating state
owned and collective farms and
allowing private farming. In the 80’s:
private sector industrial and retail
operations, multi ownership, joint
ventures.
89: Collapse of socialist block.
18
Political historical Discussion
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Rise of Communism and greater state
involvement in marketplace: Eastern block
Rise of Socialism in Western Europe
Rise of Fascist regimes in South and Central
America
Change of trend: Thatcher and Reagan
Collapse of Eastern European block
Liberalism in Western Europe and Americas
The role of privatization
19
Forms of Privatization
I. By
Divestment
A. Sale
B. Free Transfer
C. Liquidation
II. By
Delegation
A.Contract
B.Franchise
C.Grant
D.Voucher
E.Mandate
III. By
Displaceme
nt
A.Default
B.Withdraw
C.Deregulation
1.To Private Sector
2.To the Public
3.To Employees
4.To Users or Consumers
5.To Employees
6.To the Public
7.To Users or Consumers
8.To Prior Owner
1.Public Domain
(Concession)
2.Public Assets (Lease)
20
Forms of Privatization
I. By Divestment
A. Sale
B. Free Transfer
C. Liquidation
II. By Delegation
A.Contract
B.Franchise
C.Grant
D.Voucher
E.Mandate
III. By Displacement
A.Default
B.Withdraw
C.Deregulation
1.To Private Sector
2.To the Public
3.To Employees
4.To Users or Consumers
5.To Employees
6.To the Public
7.To Users or Consumers
8.To Prior Owner
1.Public Domain
(Concession)
2.Public Assets (Lease)
21
Forms of Privatization

Divestment: Shedding an enterprise or
an asset. One time affair. Sold or given
away.


Free transfer: Given away to employees,
users, customers, previous owners, or the
public at large
Sale: to joint venture, private buyer, the
public, employees, users or customers.
22
Forms of Privatization

Delegation: Requires a continuing active role
for gov’t. Remains responsible for overseeing
the results.


Contract: for part of service, for total
management. Solid waste collection, street repair,
street cleaning, snow removal, tree maintenance,
loan processing, data processing, audio visual
services, food, mail and filing services.
Franchise (concession): exclusive right to sell a
service or product to the public.
1. Use of the public domain in the course of
carrying out their commercial activities– airwaves,
air space, underground space. Examples,
broadcasting, airlines, bus and taxi co’s, electric, 23
gas, water, telephone.
Forms of Privatization
(Delegation forms cont.)
2. A lease. Government owned tangible property is
used by a private lessee to engage in a commercial
enterprise
 Grant: private entity does the work-subsidy, grants
for public transit, low income housing, maritime
shipping. To run a bus service, to do research, to
promote the arts. Contracts are more specific.
 Mandate: Gov’t requires private companies to provide
services at their expense. Ex. Unemployment
Compensation. Replacing Gov’t by mandatory indiv
retirement accts.
24
Forms of Privatization

Displacement: Passive process as markets
develop to satisfy needs.

By default: Gradually the public looks for the
private sector. Ex. Municipal tennis courts and
other rec. facilities. Commercial ventures,
voluntary groups like charitable, social,
philanthropic and community org. Ex. Police is
replaced by private guards. IN trans. gypsy cabs,
commuter vans, minibus systems and other
unofficial or technically illegal trans. Providers
emerge as public means are inadequate. Private
co’s finance, build, operating, owning roads,
25
Forms of Privatization


By Withdrawal: Gov’t shuts down failing
public enterprise or accommodates private
sector private sector expansion.
By deregulation: State monopoly vs.
competition. Privatization if the private sector
challenges a gov’t monopoly and even
displaces it. Packages and express mail.
26
Delegation: Contracting Out
Most common in the US (28% of all services). Mandatory for municipal services in the UK.
Managed competition: bidding for contracting out that includes the gov’t agency. Goldsmith: “A
city could run with its mayor, a police chief, a planning director, a purchasing agent, and
a handful of contract monitors”. Steps in contracting for service:
1.
Consider the idea of contracting out.
2.
Select the service
3.
Conduct a feasibility study
4.
Foster competition
5.
Request expression of interest or qualifications
6.
Plan the employee transition
7.
Prepare bid specifications
8.
Initiate a public relations campaign
9.
Engage in “managed competition”
10.
Conduct a fair bidding process
11.
Evaluate the bids and award a contract
12.
Monitor, evaluate, and enforce contract performance
27
Contracting Out
Success in waste management: collection, disposal, extracting
energy and recyclables from the waste stream, and to treat
hazardous wastes. Principal-agent problem: The principal bears
1. the cost of providing incentives to encourage the agent to
pursue the goals of the principal. 2. the cost of obtaining
information and monitoring the agent to reduce opportunistic
behavior. 3. the cost of any residual opportunistic behavior by
the agent. A gov’t with budget problems is a good candidate for
contracting out. Loss of hospital accreditation by the State,
court’s order the closure of a municipal landfill, sudden need for
a large public facility-- all necessitate contracting out.
28
Contracting Out: Actual
Process
Wastewater treatment plants in Indianapolis, 1993.
1.
Mayor creates Review Committee (6 mayoral appointees, and 2 from City
Council)
2.
Review Committee issues RFQ to 28 Cos.
3.
7 Responses are received including one from the current managers of plant
4.
Committee reviews and cuts down to 5
5.
City provides $15K for consultants to help existing managers: Cost estimate
and preparation of RFP
6.
RFP are issued to 5 qualified teams
7.
Teams of all 5 qualifiers visit separately the plant
8.
5 qualifiers submit proposals and prices
9.
A technical and financial consultants are hired to help the Committee
10.
3 of 5 including existing management are rejected
11.
Each finalist briefs the Review Committee
12.
Review Committee visits plants operated under contract by 2 finalists
13.
Review Committee picks the winner
14.
Winner starts contract operation
29
Contracting Out:
2. Select the Service Criteria

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Service with no legal or contractual impediments to contracting
Easy to carry out competitive contracting
Hard services for which easy to write enforceable specifications
Stand-alone service
Can be segmented by location into 2+ contracts
Services that have been successfully contracted out elsewhere
“Yellow pages test”. Enough, responsible and experienced bidders
Services for which part timers can be used. Significant savings since
gov’t cannot readily employ part timers
Services where gov’t operation is overstaffed, poorly managed or could
be re-engineered.
Services that are subject to public complains
Services where employees and union resistance can be overcome
Services where overpowering political opposition will not result
Services where in-house monitoring expertise is available.
30
Contracting Out:
3. Feasibility Study

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
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Establish current cost to establish a baseline against which to compare prices
Assess quality of current operation—complaints, measuring performance,
conducting surveys
Public cost relies on published budget. Need for ABC accounting which
includes:
Capital expenditures which often are not included in operating budgets
Interest costs on capital expenditures
Costs of supplies- fuel for vehicles that appear in a different category of
budget
Fringe benefits
Budgetary pensions
Cost of labor borrowed from other agencies or hired seasonally and are not
included in the analyzed budget. E.g. hierarchical and hidden costs. Or,
many attorneys budgeted by the DOJ work full time defending the Bureau of
Prisons against suits brought by litigating prisoners.
Foregone property tax and OC of building and land used by the activity
Cost of premiums paid for liability and fire insurance
31
Contracting Out:
4. Foster Competition
It is best to have multiple competitors. However, when there are marginal competitors it is best to negotiate
bids with handful of clearly eligible contractors after the qualifying round. Best for contractors of hospitals,
prisons, social and professional services. Often due to bureaucratic behavior of gov’t there are only few
bidders and/or high bids to compensate for it.
To foster competition–
1.
divide the geographical area to smaller units as long as econ of scale are not adversely affected.
2.
give a long lead time to bidders
3.
publicize and use the web for the bidding
4.
provide sufficient information
5.
award enough contracts and permit a large number of bidders to get contracts.
6.
Minimize “incumbent advantage” to encourage new contractors to bid. Philadelphia did just that by
including in the bid for the maintenance of street lighting detailed information on equipment and practices
used by the incumbent contractor
7.
Avoid request for sensitive non-essential business information to the procurement like profits, wages of
managers/employees
8.
Avoid restricted contracts for nonprofit organizations but keep it open for all. Such restrictions are often
used for local political patronage (e.g. social foster care agencies)
9.
When service is site based like center for homeless, the owner of the facility has an advantage in such a
bidding. It is suggested to separate the rent from the operation to encourage companies that could
provide the service however do not own the (a) facility.
32
Contracting Out:
5. Express Interest or
Qualifications (RFEI)
When initially considering privatization,
gov’t may be unsure about the exact
nature of the proposed contract. So, it
announces RFEI to prospective bidders,
pre-bid conference to discuss the
issues, checking the submission of the
firms, prepare a list of firms to which
RFP or an invitation to bid is issues.
33
Contracting Out:
6. Plan the Employee Transition
Biggest problem is how to handle with
redundant workers and the prospect of
labor unrest. Surveys showed that
most workers are hired by the private
contractor, followed by early retirement,
severance pay, attrition, redeployment
in other public agencies. Only few are
fired.
34
Contracting Out:
7. Prepare bid specifications
Contract wording should be in ordinary language,
accurate and unambiguously. The contract should
not specify exactly how the work should be done but
merely the output quantitative specifications. Gov’t
should allow freedom of contractor to employ the
people at salaries and in procedures that achieve the
contract specified outputs. “Hard” services that
involve tangible and visible physical results are easier
to write specifications in output and lend themselves
to contracting out. “Soft” services that involve social
workers are more amenable for contracting out.
35
Contracting Out:
8. Initiating Public Relations
Campaign
Strong opposition is almost certain to surface
by public employee unions, private firms that
want to avoid competition, or special interest
groups. Aggressive campaign in support of
privatization should include a coalition of civic
associations for better gov’t, neighborhood
groups dissatisfied with poor services,
minority businesses that see opportunity in
providing such services etc.
36
Contracting Out:
9. Managed Competition
Effective for short term contract or where capital expenditures are
required
2.
Allows the management to work with its labor force
3.
Improves employees’ morale and builds community support
4.
Reduces the possibility of collusion among private providers
5.
Induces private firms to submit better bids
Mandatory competitive bidding by gov’t agencies for routine functions was
introduced in the UK. Also, requirement of gov’t agencies to
maintain separate accounts of income and expenditures and to
achieve a prescribed rate of return on the capital equipment they
employ. (Local Gov’t Act, 1988). Included refuse collection, street
cleaning, cleaning of public buildings, vehicle and ground
maintenance, and food services. Result: Many services were won by
in-house departments with savings of 20% and reduction in
manpower of 20-30%.
1.
37
Contracting Out:
10. Fair Bidding Process
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Widely advertise the RFP
Allow enough time between announcement and due
date
Hold a bidders’ conference to address questions
Use internal team and an outside consultant to
evaluate proposals using clear criteria and an agreed
upon score system
Avoid asking for too many bid prices. (e.g. price for
year 1, year 2…) This will create favoritism.
38
Reasons for Privatization
Political Science view)

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Pragmatic: Greater efficiency in the
production of G & S. Dissatisfaction with
gov’t performance.
Ideology: Less gov’t. Gov’t plays a smaller
role than the private sector.
Commercial: To do more work at profit.
Populist: Better society by giving people
greater power through the marketplace while
diminishing the power of large public
bureaucracies.
39
Reasons for Privatization (The
Economist View)
1. Improve economic efficiency
2. Strengthen the share of the private sector in the
economy
3. Reducing the role of government in the marketplace
4. Improve the financial stance of the public sector
5. Develop better capital markets
6. Use the revenues generated by the privatization for
other social, security or infrastructure purposes.
40
Reasons for privatization
varies by economies
The relative importance of the reasons depends
upon the characteristics of the economy in
question. In a nation where capital markets
are weak– reason 5 dominates. In a nation
that changes its structure (from Communism)
then reasons 2, 3, and 5 are central. In a
developed economy where the private sector
is strong and so are capital markets then
reason 1 applies.
41
Keys for Success (in Declining
Importance)
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Having committed political leader (s) to champion the initiative.
E.g. a governor, mayor, or several legislators. Flexibility in
adjusting strategies when problems arise in the implementation.
Maintenance of momentum.
Establishing an organizational and analytical structure to
implement the initiative.
Enacting legislative changes and/or reducing available resources
to encourage greater exposure to competition. Signaling
managers and employees that the restructuring efforts are real.
Developing reliable Activity Based Costing (ABC) accounting to
determine performance of the gov’t agency and the feasibility of
private sector provision of service. Cost data on individual
activity and not the traditional agency wide accounting system.
42
Keys for Success (Conti.)


Involving employees and local unions in the privatization process. Unions concerns and
political influence led to legislation that made privatization in MA more difficult. In
Indianapolis, employees are involved from early stage. Workers trained in ABC and
allowed to compete. Front line workers were given decision-making power. Some
supervisory jobs were eliminated, training to workers responding to RFP, safety net for
displaced workers.
A 1989 National Commission on Employment Policy survey showed that 24% of
contracted out public services were transferred to other gov’t jobs. 58% went to work for
the private contractor, 7% retired, and only 3% laid off.
A monitoring body should be established by gov’t to assure compliance with the
designated contractual terms.
43
Problems with traditional Contract
Out Model
Infrastructure controlled by gov’t:
1. Separate contracts with private agencies
2. Labor disputes
3. Disputes between the planners and the
contractor
4. Lowest bidder contractor performs lowquality workmanship
5. Concealed or unforeseen conditions
6. Huge task of renewing the public
infrastructures, and insufficient funds.
44
Public Private Partnerships (PPP)
Definition: PPP is an arrangement of roles and relationships in which 2+ public
and private entities coordinate in a complementary way to achieve their
separate objectives through the pursuit of common objectives (s).
Private design, finance, construction, maintenance and operation of a project for
public use for a specific period of time. When time expires, title reverts to gov’t.
The private sector aids gov’t in identifying new private financed profit-making
facilities, and seek out new projects that otherwise have to wait until public
funding becomes available.
The public sector investigates feasibility of project, execute the contract, choose the
private partner, regulate prices, establish and monitor performance standards.
BOT is a general term for PPP. A concession is granted to a contractor to design,
finance, operate and maintain for 10-30 years. Contractor charges tolls for the
use of the facility.
45
Forms of PPP

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From mostly Public to mostly private
Fully public
DB: Design Build
DBFO: Design, Build, Finance, Operate
BOT: Build. Operate, Transfer
BTO: Build, Transfer, Operate
BOOT: Build, Own, Operate, Transfer
BOO: Build, Own, Operate
Fully Private
46
Forms of PPP

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DB: A contract with a private contractor to provide architecture/engineering
design and construction services
DBFO: Contractor responsible for these services and is compensated by specific
service payment by gov’t during life of project. No actual tolls are collected by
private contractor. Here payments by gov’t—cost to taxpayer. Still efficient
since construction & operation by a private entity
BOT: A concession is granted to a contractor to design, finance, operate, and
maintain for 10-30 years. Contractor charges tolls for the use of facility.
BTO: Build, Transfer, Operate. The gov’t then leases the facility back to
developer under a long term lease.
BOOT: Build, Own, Operate, Transfer. Ownership with the contractor until the
end of the concession period and is transferred free to the gov’t.
BOO: Outright privatization without a transfer of ownership to gov’t. At the end
of the concession, the original agreement can be renegotiated.
Wraparound addition: The private developer constructs an addition to an
existing public facility and then operates the entire facility for a fixed period of
time or until the developer recovers costs plus a reasonable return on
investment.
47
Reasons for PPP



Greater efficiency in the use of public
resources. State and local gov’ts save
10-40 percent
PPP are means of increasing investment
in infrastructure particularly utilities and
transportation
Needs for social infrastructure–
hospitals, prisons, schools, housing
48
Advantages for Gov’t of PPP

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





Profit oriented businesses identify new projects that otherwise wait till
gov’t funds are available
Private sponsors and commercial lenders assure financial and tech
feasibility of project
Private sector can access private capital markets to substitute hard to
get gov’t sources
Private sector builds faster and more cost effective than gov’t. Less
bureaucracy and procurement rules
Private sector operates facilities more efficiently due to profit motives
Private firms provide more tax revenues
Private sector shares or accepts risks otherwise borne by public sector
Private sector transfers technology and provides training to gov’t
workers
49
BOT Model
Usually a large project requiring consortium of
designers, builders, financiers and more.
Contractor enters into 4 agreements:
1.
A concession agreement with host gov’t
2.
A construction contract usually DB type. It may be
a member of the bidding consortium
3.
An operation and maintenance agreement with
operator of facility. It may be a member of the
bidding consortium
4.
Loan agreements. Funds flow through concession
co.
50
BOT Concession Agreement
Establishes concession rules and contractual rights of parties.
Issues Included:
1.
Nature, length, scope of work, operation of completed facility
2.
Specification of what is provided
3.
Extent of permitted variations to specification
4.
Performance standards
5.
Tolls, prices, payments to be charged
6.
Concessionaire's rights if enabling legislation changes
7.
Provisions for termination of contract
8.
Circumstances where grantor takes over the concession.
51
BOT: Gov’t support
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Creating appropriate legislation that enables
effective operation
Setting tolls to allow reasonable IRR given
level of risk
Protecting concession Co’s from competition
at early years
Helping concession co. to overcome
bureaucratic opposition
Develop a clear and effective program to
allow public participation in the planning.
52
BOT: Advantages
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
No or little cost to taxpayers
Little risk for gov’t. Sufficient bonds and letters of credit that
ensure completion if private sponsor defaults
Private sector can move pre and construction more rapidly
than gov’t
Sponsors must operate and maintain facility for 20+ years
General taxes are unaffected and revenue bonds are
unnecessary
Only users of BOT facilities pay tolls. Thus, costs are borne
by beneficiaries and not by public at large
53
BOT: Risks




LDC: Long term political instability
Cost overruns. Project could come to
halt
Currency devaluations causing payback
loans with devalued revenue
Drastic changes in demographics over
the concession period may affect
revenues.
54
PPP in Highways
Problem: Maintenance is short $20B than
Federal, State and Local spending.
Accommodating expected economics
growth is short $40B than public
budgeting.
55
PPP: Highways

Impetus: Intermodal Surface
Transportation Efficiency Act (ISTEA),
1991. Expanded toll facilities eligibility
for Federal aid for construction (re),
resurfacing, rehabilitation, conversion to
toll roads. Allowed also State funding
and shared responsibility with private
sector. Exception: Interstate system.
56
PPP Highways: Principles


Always PPP where ownership shifts to
public entities
Always existence of non-toll alternative
road
57
Rt. 91 in Ca.
Description: 10 miles 91 express 4-lanes
within the median area of SR 91.
Connecting 55 Freeway near Anaheim
to run east-west to the border of
Riverside County. Affluent local
population, 8% increase in traffic—high
congestion.
58
Rt. 91: Ca. Nature of PPP,
Operation
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BTO. CPTC built, cedes ownership to State in
exchange for 35 years lease to operate the road.
Toll free and then 50% discount for 3+ people in car.
Demand sensitive pricing by time of day and
distance.
Guaranteed 65 MPH otherwise money back
Fully automated operation
Immediate removal of non-operating vehicles.
Results: Profitable from first year. Average
occupancy 1.65 where 20% of which are carpoolers
(3+)
59
Dulles Greenway




Built as BOT in 1995 in Virginia. 15 miles from Dullas Intern’l
Airport to Leesburg. 4 lanes and 250 ft right of way. Private
consortium financed, built, and operates it. Connecting the
Beltway near D.C. (I 495) with Dulles Airport.
Special legislation to establish prerequisites for construction &
operation of a private toll road
A commission was set up to regulate applicants, supervise,
control operators, and approve/revise prices.
Total estimated cost $326M. $68M initial investment by
partners; of which $22 equity and $46M guarantee against
project risk. $202M by consortium of 10 lending institutions.

http://americancityandcounty.com/mag/government_making_inroads_private/

http://americancityandcounty.com/mag/government_making_inroads_private/
60
Greenway: Features


BOT. Transferred to State (VI) after 40
years. Subjected to utility style regulation.
Targeted return 21%.
Prices fixed for all day and all 7 interchanges.
In 1995 price $1.75 ridership 10K vs.
anticipated 30K. In 1996, price lowered to
$1– ridership grew to 17K. In 1997, price
increased to $1.15. Toll collection below
anticipation.
61
Lessons learned





Drivers are reluctant of paying tolls that do not vary by distance and
time of day. Demand sensitive pricing (discriminatory prices) also
assure higher revenues, and avoidance of congestion.
Private toll road companies face difficulties in land acquisition and
managing environmental concerns. Rt. 91 had no land acquisition
while the Greenway suffered additional cost related to delay in land
purchase. DOT enjoys eminent domain provision in assembling land.
Timely land acquisition added to the cost of the Greenway.
Private companies unlike public entities cannot finance using tax
exempt securities. Thus, private companies pay higher interest.
Private companies unlike public entities do not enjoy sovereign
immunity. Full liabilities for accidents adding in case of BOT additional
operating cost.
Toll roads should enjoy existing demand and not be subjected to
induced development that will produce travel demand. The initial cost
of toll roads includes high land acquisition and construction while
revenues are low extending for a long period of time.
62
Lessons learned (Continued)





Metropolitan roads that serve peak time traffic (e.g.
Rt. 91) are more financially viable than intercity roads
(e.g. the Greenway).
Most private investments have alternative use in case
of failure. No alternative use for failed toll road
which raises uncertainty and higher financial costs.
Success requires one company to build and operate
the toll road for a long period of time.
Success requires no simple and immediate land
acquisition
Success requires a committed political champion
63
Problems with Dulles
Greenway







Fixed price for tolls. Demand sensitive prices over distance
traveled, time of day, week day-weekend
Excessive regulation by State/lenders for toll restructuring,
change of speed
Real cost of regulation in time and expenses
No tax exempt securities raising developer’s interest payments
Accidents and other liabilities absent for public roads that enjoy
sovereign immunity
No eminent domain provision to acquire necessary land.
Negotiations for land took time and additional resources adding
to cost
Expensive project that is contingent upon stimulation of land
use or induced traffic in the remote future with high risk
64
BOT Tunnel in Hong Kong
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Feb 1988, the HK Gov’t granted a 30 year franchise to a private
consortium. Longest road in HK 4 KM twin tube 4 lanes tunnel and
approaching lanes. Completed 2 months ahead of schedule at TC of
$276.5M
Financed completely by private sector
Shareholders contributed equity 1 to 2.6 debt
Risk for non-completion ran for just 18 months construction period.
Risk was low because the tunnel method used was well known.
Good reputation of contractor, and $400K per day penalty
Cost overrun risk was overcome by several guarantees of
shareholders. To ensure project quality, a 10 year performance
bond to address performance risk was put up by contractor
Post completion risks ran for 12 year loan period. Shareholders
purchased i.r. cap. Cash flow risk was mitigated by HK gov’t
approval to increase tolls.
65
PPP for public schools
PPP adopted to upgrade schools facilities
at lower costs and less time than gov’t.
PPP are unbounded by regulations that
govern public sector bond offering,
voter approval, and review of
competitive bids. A PPP school in Fl
was built in less than 9 months
compared with 5 years by Fl gov’t.
66
PPP for Schools

Nova Scotia 41 schools constructed under BuiltLease-Transfer-Maintain (BLTM). Private sector
designs, finances, and constructs. Leased back to
Gov’t for predetermined period of time at a preagreed rent. When the lease starts, the school is
operational. Advantages: speed of upgrade, and 15
percent savings on lease. The school leases the
facility for 20 years at rent lower than the capitalized
construction and furnishing cost. Developer uses the
facility when not used; other time of the day,
weekends, summer holidays. Activities are
predetermined like vocational education, meeting
space for civic and political groups.
67
PPP for Public school:
Pembroke Pines Charter Fl.
Haskell Educational Services (HES) designed
and built the school between 22 and 34
percent less cost than other public schools in
Fl.
Public tax exempt bonds financed the building,
owns it, and leases it back to HES. HES
operates it as charter school and offers
additionally fee-based after-school programs:
daycare, enrichment, and student services.
68
Conclusions for PPP


The traditional model of Gov’t contracting separately
a construction co (bid) and a designer has not been
successful. Often, the lower bidder uses low quality
material where possible. Also, the fragmented
relationship and responsibilities among the gov’t, the
designer and the construction co is a source of
problems where the gov’t plays a mediation role. In
PPP, the construction co has vested interest in high
quality construction since it will operate the facility
upon completion.
DB is preferred to traditional model since a single
organization exists for both avoiding conflicts.
69
Conclusions for PPP
(Continue)


BOT, and DBFO are used for major infrastructure
projects like roads, and power generators. Attract
new private investment without recourse to gov’t
funding. BOT reduces the common cost overruns
experienced by gov’t. Only the users of BOT facilities
pay tolls and not taxpayers Users’ charges. In DBFO
services charges are paid by public sector; no user
charges.
Hospitals and schools use BLMT (Build, Lease,
Maintain, Transfer). Facility is leased back to gov’t.
PPP can be used to acquire many different types of
facilities with various contractual arrangements.
70
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services: The Problem
Higher incidents of criminal behavior
when growing up without family ties
and lack of permanency. 90% of
Rochester NY who endured 5+ family
transitions became delinquent. 17% of
all local jail inmates are former foster
care children. Annual pubic cost of per
child foster care is $17,500
71
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services: Background








400,000 in foster care in 1991, increasing annually by 4%. 542,000 in 2001.
1.5 million children or 2% of all children
Average age 10.1 in 2001 and the average child remains in fc 44 months
Special subsidy is available for special need children: Emotional and Physical
problems, siblings, age, and ethnic belonging.
International adoption becomes common. 20K in 2002; 40% of50,000 children
adopted in 2002. 50% of int’l adoptions are infants while only 2% from fc. Cost
$7K - 25K.
Private adoptions in the US include expenses for the birth mother, agency and
court, and could exceed $30K.
Minorities in fc and awaiting adoption comprise a greater % than their
respective share in the population. Blacks are 17% of population, 49% of
adopted and 55% of those awaiting adoption.
Number of children is foster care rises, length of time in pipeline is long, and
few children are being adopted.
72
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services: Objectives
Reduce the number of children in fc and
increase permanency
 Reduce the period of time in pipeline
Federal Adoption and Safe Family Act (ASFA)
offers incentive payments to States that
increases adoption from fc above the national
standards. Incentives appeared effective in
raising the rate of adoption.

73
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Michigan





Six months exclusivity for the State agency, family independent
agency or fc provider to place an eligible child in adoption.
Within 3 months, the adopting parents need to be identified. If
not, the child is publicly listed.
Once publicized including on the Internet, the 53 licensed
private agencies can compete. These companies provide both
fc and adoption services.
Fix P’s are paid for placing children based on outcome, time,
and the difficulty of the case.
The State imputes estimated cost for 8 prototype cases and
adds an incentive component. The adoptive family can act as a
fc family for the child for up to 150 days.
Private agencies handle 60% of adoption services and the rest
are managed by the state agency.
74
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Michigan
No obvious success to the privatization efforts:
1.
1991-99: total number of children adopted higher by 83%.
However, number of children available for adoption increased 116%.
Ranked 5 lowest among the 50 states.
2.
Advantages: introduced some competition to the process and
dissemination of information on Internet. Private companies have
an incentive to search for high quality and many adoptive parents.
Greater choice to prospective parents now than before when a state
agency ran the program.
3.
Shortcomings: Prices set by the State and are not market sensitive.
The State provides identical services for the private providers that
compete with it. The cost per child for the State is of no concern;
thus no managed competition features. No justification for the 6
months exclusivity awarded to the company. Immediate
competition of all agencies could reduce time to adoption with no
cost to the child.
75
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Kansas:
Description
Privatization started in 1996 to benefit the children and save resources
following a suit by Civil Liberties Union: Description:
1. The State was divided into 5 regions for fc. Bidding in each for 1
contractor for 4 years period and prices negotiated. Important that the
child remains close to biological parents for possible visitation and
reunification.
2. fc: Fixed amount per child and ranged among regions $12,860 and
$15,504. Over time, prices were changed and adapted for children
with special needs.
3. Adoption: Bidders compete for a statewide contract. Lutheran Social
Services had 12 sub-contractors throughout the State.
4. Kansas Dept. of Social & Rehab Services established performance
standards that will be used for contract renewal or subsequent bidding.
FC Standards include max 3 placement moves and 65% achieve
permanency within 12 months of initial referral.
5. Adoption standards require 70% are placed within 180 days of referral
and 90% of adoptions be intact for 18 months from finalization.
76
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Kansas:
Evaluation






During 4 first years, Kansas paid foster care contractors $105.1M above the
$178.7 contracted, and to adoption providers $31.4M above the $37.4
contracted.
Adoption provider lost $5.5M in the first 2 years
As a result, revision of contracts to $1,958-$2,200 a month per child for 1st year.
The initial contract was unrealistic. Children in foster care more than 6 months
yield loss to contractors since 32% remain in fc 1-2 years.
Privatization led to better data collection of cost and performance for both fc
and adoption. Quality of both services has improved with 178% rise of budget.
Number of adopted children rose on the 1st year by 55% and over the 4 years
by 78%. Ranked lowest 7th among the 50 states.
Improved service: case workers available 24/7 and 71% of fc children were now
in their own or continuous county. % children in fc home rather than group
homes and institutions grew from 67 to 85%. Unsuccessful adoptions were
2.4% compared with 12% nationally. Social workers can spend more time
investigating leading to an increase in finding abused childre.
77
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Kansas:
Conclusions



Fixed fee contract failed due to unknowable medical costs and
delays by judicial procedures outside the contractors’ control.
Changed to a per month fee which lacks incentives for prompt
placement. Performance, however, is still a base for renewal of
contract.
Separation of the many fc providers and the one adoption
provider creates inefficiency in the care of the children that
experience a shift in their contact social worker. Allowing
integration of both services could raise competition.
Longer contracts increase incentives to compete for a contract,
leading to lower bid prices and/or better service. Longer
contracts leads to more resources provided by contractors to
improve efficiency. However, longer contracts enable
contractors to exercise monopolistic power and reduce service.
78
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster
Care Services in Illinois:
Background



Illinois had the highest number and rate
of children in fc. Number of children in
fc per 1,000 was 17.2 compared with
6.9 for the nation as a whole, 1996.
Social worker’s caseload was 60
compared with 25 nationwide.
The median of length of time in fc grew
from 8 months in 1986 to 40 in 1996.
79
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster Care Services in
Illinois: Privatizing Adoption @ Foster Care
Services in Illinois: Description







Contracting started in 1997 to reduce fc population and achieve
permanency.
Case confined to Cook County which comprised 75% of the
state cases.
Private agencies paid $394 per case
The private agency was expected to move 24% to permanency
The 24% standard was aimed to reduce the average stay in fc
from 56 to 48 months; a 25% exit from fc each year
If more than 24% of its cases, paid still the same per child and
receive more children. In non-Cook County, bonus of $2000 for
all children adopted above standard
If placement less than 24%, funding is the same for a larger
number of children under the agency’s care and the State did
not provide the agency additional children
80
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster Care
Services in Illinois: Evaluation



The FC caseload diminished from 51,000 in 97 to
22,000 in 03 (-57%)
Adoptions increased from 1600 in 97 to 3100 in 03
(+94%)
In the 9 years pre 97, 2-4% reached permanency. In
the 5 years post 97, 12-23% reached permanency. In
the first year it grew 200% and reached 300% in the
3rd year. Eventually, the rate declined due to the
“hard core” of the difficult cases.
81
Privatizing Adoption @ Foster Care
Services in Illinois: Evaluation (Cont.)



Median duration in FC diminished from 40
months in 96 to 25 in 02.
Total nominal funding declined in 03
compared with 96 by 3.5%.
In 97 there were 42 private agencies and 3
state offices, In 03, only 26 private agencies
and one state office: exit of inefficient
providers and more adoptions. Illinois was
ranked near the top states in achieving
permanency.
82
Privatizing Adoption and FC in Illinois: lessons Learned
Effective performance contracting brought good results:

More children achieved permanency

Lower caseload to social workers leading to better services for
children remaining in FC

Growth of better performing private agencies and elimination of
inefficient providers.

Realization of economies of scale.

The system where private agencies provide both FC and
adoption services led to economies of scope, and avoidance of
duplicating services and disruption to children.

Elimination of 2 public agencies and transfer of service to
private providers.
83
Adoption Services: An Economic
Auction Model
Problems:




Lack of resources for adequate FC of older, disabled, minority children.
Shortage of healthy infants leading to black markets and/or queuing for
7 years. Surplus of children with less desired attributes.
Public system is inadequate and inefficient while partial privatization
does not resolve the above two problems.
Gov’t management is inefficient and does not address special needs
due to lack of market signals. Privatization partially improves the
delivery of children. However, still greater efficiency could be achieved
with ubiquity of information, and allowing prices to better match
children and adopting families.
84
Auctioning of Wives: Herodotus in Ancient Greece 5th
Century BC
“In every village once a year all the girls of marriageable age were collected
together in one place, while the men stood around them in circle; an auctioneer
then called each one in turn to stand up and offered her for sale, beginning with
the best looking and going on to the second best as soon as the first had been
sold for a good price. Marriage was the object of the transaction. The rich men
who wanted wives bid against each other for the prettiest girls, while the
humbler folk, who had no use for good looks in a wife, were actually paid to
take the ugly ones. The money came from the sale of the beauties, who in this
way provided dowries for their ugly or misshapen sisters. It was illegal for a
man to marry his daughter to anyone he happened to fancy, and no one could
take home a girl he had bought without first finding a backer to guarantee his
intention of marrying her. In case of disagreement between husband and wife
the law allowed the return of the purchase money. Anyone who wished could
come, even from a different village, to buy a wife”.
85
An Economic Auction Model: Objective



To increase quality of matching
between adopted children and adopting
families.
To produce resources that will improve
quality of life for children that are
difficult to adopt and remain in FC.
Adoption is not a vehicle to improve
equity of adopting families.
86
An Economic Auction Model: Background



The three states that partially privatized the service
introduced economic incentives to private entities
that do nor exist in the public sector to fasten the
service and/or improve the permanency of
placement.
The privatization, however, does not increase the
exposure of the children to more potential families
and retains the excess supply/shortage of children.
Adoption of market forces could improve the
matching of children, increase the number of
participants, and prevent excess supply/shortage.
87
An Economic Auction Model: Method


Auctioning is used by economists as a welfare maximization for
the buyer and seller. It is applied for first time sale, thinly
traded goods and services. Generally auctions are designed to
best match and at the same time to clear the market. A fix
price, like is currently experienced, causes years of waiting for
the most desired children, black markets of children, and losses
for families that withdraw from the process.
Potential parents are attributed by wealth which is observable
and fitness which is only known to the parents. A test needs to
be conducted in order to determine the condition of the baby.
If potential parents have no test results and obtain an unhealthy
baby then potential parents will be reluctant to adopt. The
“market for lemon”.
88
An Economic Auction Model
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Make a health test of each child and make results available to
potential parents.
Make a national market to increase the number of children and
potential parents; improves matching.
Bid all children at one time. Sequential bidding leads to more
conservative bidding at the beginning since the attributes of later
children are unknown. Simultaneous bidding leads to more
aggressive bidding of less desirable units.
Ascending prices bidding. Capped prices induces more participation
of lower income families. Lowe income will bid higher in case of a
capped price.
For the market to be most efficient, it should provide incentives that
will reduce the other markets of private agencies and individual
adoption.
89
Privatization of Adoption:
Lessons Learned




Partial contracting out of adoption service delivery in MI, KS, IL, and FL
increased efficiency compared to Gov’t monopoly. However, the terms
of the contract causes biases in the outcome.
In all 3 states increased the rate of permanency and reduced the time
children spend in FC.
Kansas system of fixed price per child failed because of uncertainty in
court procedure and medical expenses. The revised system of per
month payment led to disincentive for prompt placement. It also
created unnecessary monopolies.
Illinois’ performance contracting was highly successful in achieving
permanency. It reduced time spent in FC, eliminated inefficient
providers, and allowed more efforts in the hard to adopt children. It
also raised competition between the public and private sectors.
90
Privatization of Adoption: Lessons learned


All 3 privatization efforts still allowed large number of hard to
place children to remain in FC.
The auctioning model a-la the ancient bride market in Greece
assures market clearance. It is efficient in preventing
shortage/excess children. It is claimed to be a slave market for
kids; but the end result is preferred to the kids. It reduces
gov’t involvement, simplifies the process by reducing the role of
intermediaries, and generates resources for adoption of the
difficult cases. Since all potential adopting parents are still
screened, the quality of the adoption does not deteriorate.
91