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Module 13: Financing (cost recovery)
13.6. What are the
key issues relating pro-poor PPPs?
For a municipality focused on improving services
to the poor, the first stage is to develop an understanding of the livelihoods
of the poor, and to develop links into poor communities that enable information
to be channelled and institutional knowledge to be developed. Poverty
assessment information is essential in cost-recovery policymaking.
Knowledge about gaps in supply mechanisms is crucial to an
understanding of the impacts of change in tariff structure, subsidy policy,
service delivery and service expansion. The core of this stage, in common
with all pro-poor PPPs, comprises the principles of sustainable livelihoods:
◊ What are the implications for the poor?
◊ Are tariffs affordable?
◊ Are the poor willing to pay?
◊ Are there effects on livelihoods?
◊ How are tariffs and collection mechanisms adapted to meet the needs
of the poor?
◊ How are negative impacts mitigated?
The concepts of affordability and willingness to pay are
at the core of the debate over pro-poor tariffs. Affordability studies
on tariffs should be closely linked to poverty assessments that place
these costs in a range of household expenditure profiles.
The poor must either be able to pay for connections, related
hardware and tariffs, or receive a subsidy for them, directly or indirectly.
In fact, any tariff or subsidy should be targeted at the poor and should
focus on increasing access to the service and improving of the service
quality.
Low-income households should be given the freedom to decide
their level of water consumption and expenditure, rather than being required
to pay for amounts that they would not otherwise choose to consume.
Detailed understanding of how different poor households will
behave is an essential part of the decision-making process.
Subsidies
When private provision is conceived primarily as a strategy
to improve and expand an existing service, there is a
greater likelihood that it will be implemented in a manner consistent
with poverty reduction goals. However, the more a private provider
is expected to serve the interests of poor or excluded users, the
less attractive will become the opportunity to invest in the sector.
The only way to turn such a disincentive into an incentive is to
provide public subsidies to the private provider. However, subsidies
increase the incentive of private providers to exaggerate levels
of poverty or the costs of reaching the poor, thereby meriting a
greater subsidy, or simply pocketing the public resources without
passing the benefits along to poor users.
The larger point is not that subsidies should never be
attempted, but rather that there is nothing intrinsic in PPP that
overcomes the limitations on using them to address the needs of the
poor, especially in countries with weak administrative capacity.
Indeed, to the extent that subsidies are channelled through a private
provider, monitoring and regulatory oversight may impose additional
costs.
Connection costs
The greatest constraint on the poor is the lump sum payment
required for service connections.
While it is certainly possible that private providers may
be able to outperform government, making utility services
available to the poor presents a basic market constraint that any provider
must confront. In many countries, the poor represent “unprofitable” populations,
either because they lack cash income needed to pay tariffs, or because
they cannot afford to pay the sunk costs of connections (for example,,
for water pipes or connection to the electrical grid) needed to gain
access to formal infrastructure. Indeed, because the poor tend to live
in outlying urban and remote rural areas, the costs of providing them
with utility services may be much higher than those for wealthier people
living in major cities.
Moreover, it is not enough to simply obtain a household (or
village) water connection. The sanitation benefits of water
require internal plumbing, toilets, drains, sinks and so on.
End of Module 13

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