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COMCEC Transport and Communications

Outlook 2018

46

advantages of PPP-type procurement arise by regarding cost of services provided and risks

assumed by the government. It is generally expected that private sector can achieve more cost

savings during implementation of investments and provide cheaper services than public sector

can. In addition, during PPP-type procurement, private sector assumes that some of risks, such

as construction, availability, and demand risks associated with projects which public sector

assumes in traditional procurement. For a PPP model to be eligible, value of money must be

achieved, which means that sum of benefits- from cost savings for services provided and risks

transferred from public sector to private one -should exceed costs associated with higher cost

of capital of private sector.

Initially and substantially adopted by the United Kingdom, within the last couple of decades,

public-private partnerships (PPPs) - including private participation in infrastructure (PPIs) -

today play an important role in provision of public infrastructure and services. It doesn’t matter

if the country is developed, developing or a least-developed one, governments use various PPP

models, ranging from management contracts to Build-Own-Operate model and divestitures,

mainly; (1) to attract private finance to their infrastructure projects in face of large budget

deficits, (2) to improve efficiency and quality of services provided, and (3) to liberalize their

economy.

In fact, the OIC geography has been quite familiar with private participation in large transport

infrastructure projects. Opened in 1869, Suez Canal was a typical Build-Operate-Transfer

project for which the private operator had obtained a concession to operate the canal for 99

years. Other transportation concessions during the Ottoman Empire era included the Port of

Istanbul, Port of Izmir, Istanbul Rail Tunnel, and Istanbul Streetcar (Yılmaz, 1996). Some sources

(Tiong, 1990; Handley, 1997; Özdoğan and Birgönül, 2000) cite that even the term Build-

Operate-Transfer was coined by Turgut Özal, the former prime minister and the president of

Turkey. In the 20

th

century, the first transport PPI project in the OIC geography was

implemented in Indonesia in 1990 and it was followed by a second PPI project in Malaysia in

1991. The first PPI project in OIC-Sub-Saharan Africa and OIC-MENA were implemented in

Mozambique in 1993 and in Turkey in 1994. Figure 25 presents the timeline of the initial

transport PPI projects in the OIC regions.