How governments fund major infrastructure projects is one of the most significant policy issues Australia faces, and one of the most difficult.
Infrastructure advocates, engineering groups and business want to see more spent on infrastructure. There’s an infrastructure backlog, they say, and it’s affecting productivity. So do voters in areas like western Sydney; the Prime Minister has acknowledged that issues such as commuting times are a major problem even when the economy is performing well. But governments say they lack the money to ramp up investment; the states are worried about their credit ratings, and the Commonwealth, which has a gold-plated rating and can access funds at very low rates, is politically paralysed by a fear of debt. Politicians want the private sector to pick up more of the funding burden.
Today, according to The Australian Financial Review, New South Wales Treasurer Mike Baird will unveil the latest attempt to address the problem, with a plan to construct the Westconnex toll road via a state-owned company, the debt and revenues of which will be off-budget. Tony Boyd has an excellent discussion of the proposal and some of the history of toll road funding in The AFR.
Governments have been wrestling with the issue for decades. As a young graduate in the Department of Transport in the early 1990s, I noticed it was still common to include in ministers’ talking points reference to the success of allowing private contractors, rather than government agencies, to build roads. The advent of the Howard government, which slashed infrastructure spending and then had to face a backlash over its treatment of regional Australia, focused minds on how to fund them, not just build them. It became fashionable to laud public-private partnerships as the way of the future; as a speechwriter for John Anderson, I shoehorned acronyms like BOOT and BOT (Build-Own-Operate-Transfer models) into speeches about building stuff.
Early attempts at partnerships were marked by extraordinary government generosity. The Keating government had tried infrastructure bonds, a tax arrangement so absurdly generous it continued to generate windfalls for holders years after the program was closed or projects fell over. Individual projects saw big private sector windfalls as inexperienced bureaucrats sat down to negotiate deals with financial magicians from the likes of Macquarie Bank. After a time, however, the BOOT ended up being on the other foot (sorry). Burnt repeatedly, governments began insisting the private sector take more risk. The balance swung the other way, and the result was debacles like the Cross City Tunnel in Sydney and BrisConnections in Brisbane.
“The federal Coalition’s plan for infrastructure funding is understood to centre on retaining Andrew Robb’s 2010 election proposal to leverage private sector funding with a limited amount of Commonwealth funding …”
The irrational behaviour of motorists was partly to blame. For economists, the case for toll roads is obvious: unless the toll is ludicrously high, the time saving even for someone on average weekly earnings from using a toll road versus sitting on congested streets is worth more than the cost. But motorists don’t see it that way: toll payment is far more visible than time saved from not sitting in congestion. Instead, many motorists resentfully stick with existing, congested routes. Private operators, in turn, often demand that existing routes be blocked off — the private sector always prefers to minimise competition, particularly free competition. That in turn angers motorists, who resort to rat-running through ever more convoluted and inefficient routes to avoid both toll roads and blockages.
Good luck modelling patronage for your toll road in that environment.
Baird’s plan for Westconnex addresses that by waiting to establish the revenue case based on actual numbers before seeking funding from the private sector. In a way it’s a reversal of BOOT and BOT: the government, via a state-owned company, will build, own and operate, before approaching the private sector for off-budget funding.
The model, however, relies on government having seed money for the initial stage of the project.
The federal Coalition’s plan for infrastructure funding is understood to centre on retaining Andrew Robb’s 2010 election proposal to leverage private sector funding with a limited amount of Commonwealth funding, a kind of intelligent, capped version of infrastructure bonds. But the Coalition is also far less enthusiastic about urban public transport investment than Labor.
And neither side of politics is prepared to accept the logic of infrastructure advocates and even business peak bodies, that the federal government should be using its gold-plated credit rating to raise debt for infrastructure investment. While business would love to see more transport and logistics infrastructure, even a Commonwealth investment in urban transport solutions to reduce the cost of urban congestion — calculated to be around $20 billion per annum in coming years — would generate a significant return.
The experience of both Infrastructure NSW and Infrastructure Australia also suggests there is value in having an alternative centre of advice about infrastructure from existing ones within the bureaucracy. The quality of infrastructure debate has improved in recent years, albeit stymied by, for instance, the federal government’s reluctance to have full transparency about IA’s analyses of projects. A model in which independent bodies have more power and profile on infrastructure decision-making may be worth considering, on the basis that the issue is too important to be left to politicians (desalination plants, anyone?).
In NSW, at least, there’s some innovative thinking on the issue. But as the recent history of infrastructure investment shows, we won’t know the success of Baird’s model for many years.
Howard’s legacy of an infrastructure deficit comes home to roost but it is Gillard that feels the political pain
Yet another case of the logical disconnect that infects Australia’s politics these days.
And the solution?
Abbott who says railways are not in the LNP DNA.
Well we can tell that by the white elephant of a railway that the Howard govt did build.
Your comments about Infrastructure Bonds show that the private secor is not the answer and just reinforces the basis for the govt to do the NBN.
Nation building is the govt activity now. Capitalism is to greedy and fearful. Remember the original railways were built by the private sector.not now.
The workd is change and the old free enterprise model is broken not quite as badly as the Communist/Socialsit model but it is broken.
Unfortunately there is little chance of a rational debate on how we should model our society
Here’s a stupid idea from left field. How about we use public money for public infrastructure?
We’ve arrived at a situation where our taxes only seem to pay for the act of governing itself. Unless we’re unemployed, unemployable, aboriginal, sick, disabled, illegally immigrating or a criminal, we don’t get anything for the tax we pay. Every public service I want, whether from local, state or federal government comes at a personal cost additional to the tax I already pay.
I reckon less for the squeaky wheels and their squeakier advocates and more for the average Aussie – including decent public roads & other infrastructure.
Governments can borrow significantly cheaper than the private sector so rather than constructing ever more elaborate ways to get infrastructure funded more expensively from the private sector, governments should develop ways of making government borrowing for infrastructure more acceptable, probably by distinguishing it clearly from borrowing to fund recurrent or operating expenditure.
I think there is an answer. See my article in Business Spectator at http://www.businessspectator.com.au/article/2013/5/20/infrastructure/debt-steps-infrastructure-renaissance
Pav: The first railway in NSW, and I presume Australia, (Sydney to Parramatta) was built by the NSW Government. It was started by a private corporation, but they were unable to get very far, and the government took over. I have a contemporary description of it in a book published in 1911, in my possession, but not available to me at this moment.
As for the Sydney Cross City Tunnel, the sheer stupidity of building a tunnel to take traffic away from city streets and then to charge people to use it boggles my poor little brain. The obvious thing would have been to charge people NOT to use it, ie congestion charging in CBD streets. But, that would probably have required the government to own the tunnel and all those bankers would have not made so much money financing it. As for motorist’s current behaviour, I would call it quite rational and the numbskull economists quite irrational. I am sure Alan Davies has visited this topic.