World Bank urges region to improve spending efficiency
WASHINGTON, United States (CMC) — The World Bank Friday said Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) can dramatically improve its infrastructure by better assessing priorities and improving spending efficiency.
In a new study released in Washington, the Washington-based financial institution notes that although the region trails others in infrastructure investment, it should focus on spending better before thinking of spending more.
It said while Latin America and the Caribbean spend three per cent of gross domestic product (GDP) on average, compared to 7.7 per cent in East Asia and Pacific for instance, many countries spend more than four per cent.
“Infrastructure investment can be a powerful engine for growth in Latin America and the Caribbean as the region emerges from six years of slowdown, including two of recession,” said Jorge Familiar, World Bank Vice President for Latin America and the Caribbean.
“In today’s tight fiscal context, it is essential that investments are as efficient as possible, and that the full potential of the private sector be tapped.”
The study, titled “Rethinking Infrastructure in Latin America and the Caribbean – Spending Better to Achieve More” notes that rather than focusing on often poorly defined financing gaps, it advocates for addressing “service gaps,” according to countries’ development priorities.
This means putting in place efficient ways of addressing these needs, and developing clear rules for deciding when taxpayers should finance services, instead of users.
The study states that improving performance in a constrained fiscal environment will require well-identified priorities.
The report singles out sanitation and transport, in which LAC lags behind other middle-income regions, as potential focus areas. In addition, the region should also factor concerns such as climate change, urbanisation and its changing socioeconomic profile, in particular a larger middle class, which are changing infrastructure service demands –especially on energy and transport.
“Latin America and the Caribbean has long been an innovator in infrastructure,” said Marianne Fay, Chief Economist for the World Bank’s Sustainable Development Vice-Presidency, and one of the authors of the report.
“With its expertise in sophisticated regulations and its experience with public-private partnerships, the region has the means to improve its infrastructure services by spending better and on the right things.”
The World Bank says spending more efficiently could have enormous benefits. In the case of the energy sector, where transmission and distribution losses are high, LAC would need US$23 billion per year if it were to follow the same investment path of the past. Costs would at least halve under an approach that favours efficiency, climate resiliency and renewable energy solutions.
According to the report, many of the causes for inefficient infrastructure investment have roots beyond the sector, including lack of institutional capacity for planning, regulatory uncertainty, and budgeting and implementation issues in many countries. Inefficient procurement processes, for instance, contribute to excess costs.
Adequate pricing for infrastructure services is another important potential area for increased efficiency. The report argues that pricing should go beyond simple cost recovery and take into account issues like social acceptability, quality, equity and attraction of commercial financing. In order to preserve tax-payers money, the report says that public and concessional resources should only be deployed where commercial financing is not viable or cost-effective.
Finally, the report concludes that allowing infrastructure operators to diversify their revenue can contribute to easing the fiscal cost. Water treatment plants, for instance, can generate electricity for self-consumption and even sale, and sanitised sludge can be sold as fertiliser, instead of having to be disposed at high cost in sanitary landfills, options not currently available.
