A Public-Private Partnership (PPP)
infrastructural development law is currently being drafted and is expected to
be passed by Parliament by the end of the year.
The law will support the implementation of the national
PPP policy that was launched by the government last year. It will also give
confidence to both local and international investors who would want to
participate in PPPs with the government.
Under the law, Parliament shall be the final
approving authority for PPP projects -- subject to the provisions of the policy
to ensure the protection of the public interest.
The National Development Planning Commission
(NDPC) has been mandated to prepare a national infrastructure plan for Ghana,
and every PPP project initiated by contracting authorities shall emanate from
this plan.
The Attorney-General’s Department, with the
assistance and advice of the Legal Division of the Ministry of Finance and
Economic Planning (MoFEP), shall ensure the conformity of all project
agreements with Ghanaian law.
The country’s development partners, including the
World Bank and DFID, will support a project to move the PPP process forward
with a total of US$30 million over a five-year period. This is to assist in the
improvement of legislative, institutional, financial, fiduciary and technical
frameworks for PPPs and develop bankable projects.
The focus of the project is to build capacity in
the various government agencies and assist them in developing and delivering
PPP projects in the various sectors, making them bankable and sustainable.
The country is presently faced with a huge infrastructure
gap averaging US$1.5 billion per annum for the next decade. This is required to
bring the nation’s infrastructure to the recommended status of a middle-income
country.
“The constraint of available resources provides
the government with the ability to look for other innovative means of financing
and procuring these projects and thereby expediting the delivery of the
required infrastructure,” Mr. Paul Victor Obeng, Chairman of the National
Development Planning Commission (NDPC), told journalists at a workshop on PPPs
in Accra.
Mr. Obeng said over the years, governments have
been unable to provide adequate infrastructure due to lack of resources, technology
and entrepreneurship.
“The PPP policy is expected to encourage and
facilitate investment by the private sector by creating an enabling environment
for PPPs -- where value for money could be clearly demonstrated -- as well as
to increase availability of public infrastructure and services and improve
service quality and efficiency of projects. It is also to encourage and promote
indigenous Ghanaian private sector participation in the delivery of public
infrastructure and services.”
He was confident that there would be continuity
and commitment to roll-out PPP infrastructure projects for socio-economic
development.
Mrs. Magdalene Apenteng, Director of the Public
Investment Division of MOFEP, said: “PPPs have become one of the important
tools to facilitate the implementation of the nation’s critical investment
programmes.
“The adoption of a PPP framework therefore
reflects the government’s desire to improve the quality, cost-effectiveness and
timely provision of public infrastructure and services in the country.
“The government is mindful that PPPs are not a
panacea for all public infrastructure investment needs and therefore the PPP
framework should be viewed as a complement to, and not a substitute for, the
government’s continued commitment to open up key services markets to
competition.
“PPPs should only be considered where they can
provide greater value for money than other fully-private or fully-public
service delivery options.”
She added that the private provision of public
infrastructure and services has the potential to offer enhanced value for money
and enables the government to use the private sector’s delivery and project
completion expertise and capabilities for the benefit of the people.
It also
helps the government better understand the whole life-cycle cost of investments
and enables more rigorous project assessment.
A PPP is a contractual arrangement between a
public entity and a private sector party with clear agreement on shared
objectives for the provision of public infrastructure and services
traditionally provided by the public sector.
It is to provide a means of leveraging public
resources with private sector resources and expertise in order to close the
infrastructure gap and deliver efficient public infrastructure and services.
Ghana’s first attempt at PPPs was in 2004.
However, some inadequacies, including the absence of a policy framework, led to
difficulties in carrying the idea forward.
After a comprehensive diagnostic study in
2009-2010, the national PPP policy was launched in 2011 to create and foster an
enabling environment for PPPs.
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