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ACCELERATED INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICA (AIDA). PROMOTING PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS (PPP) APPROACH IN AFRICA: ASSESSMENT FOR THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENTS AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN SME DEVELOPMENT. Presented by: DR. OSEI BOEH-OCANSEY DIRECTOR-GENERAL PRIVATE ENTERPRISE FOUNDATION - GHANA.
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ACCELERATED INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT OF AFRICA (AIDA) PROMOTING PUBLIC PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS (PPP) APPROACH IN AFRICA: ASSESSMENT FOR THE ROLE OF GOVERNMENTS AND THE PRIVATE SECTOR IN SME DEVELOPMENT Presented by: DR. OSEI BOEH-OCANSEY DIRECTOR-GENERAL PRIVATE ENTERPRISE FOUNDATION - GHANA
Background • Under a democratic political system which followed promulgation of Fourth Republican Constitution of Ghana in 1992, the partnership between public sector and private sector has been enhanced
Background (Cont’d) • Public partnership with the private sector was articulated in Article 36 (2) (b) of the 1992 Constitution • “The State shall, in particular, take all necessary steps to establish a sound and healthy economy whose underlying principles shall include affording ample opportunity for individual initiative and creativity in economic activities and fostering an enabling environment for a pronounced role of the private sector in the economy.”
Background (Cont’d) • Guidelines for partnerships exist in many different policies, documents and institutions eg. Private Sector Development Strategy I and II, National Trade Policy, etc. • In 2004, Ghana developed PPP policy guidelines. This was never operationalised. • Ghana is now developing a comprehensive policy and legislative framework for partnerships
Background (Cont’d) • PPP started with liberalization of the economy • Privatization is not PPP • Collaboration in Promotion Branding/Growth Strategy/Investment • Collaboration in R&D Innovation • Continuous improvement/productivity • Firm – Industry – Country Competitiveness
Ranking by WEF Global Competitiveness Index (Cont’d) • Zambia • Cape Verde • Uganda • Madagascar • Malawi • Swaziland • Nigeria • Lesotho • Cote d’Ivoire
PPP Approach • Approach to PPP in Ghana begins with Public-Private Dialogue (PPD) with either party initiating the approach • Both public and private sectors have shown commitment to this process • Public connotes • Central Gov’t: Executive – Legislature – Judiciary and their MDAs • Local Gov’t: MMDAs/Provincial • REC: ECOWAS/ECCAS/SADC/COMESA • AUC
Public Private Dialogue • The Private Enterprise Foundation (PEF) was founded in 1994 to provide a platform to discuss issues of concern to private sector associations • Since the establishment of PEF as a national centre for policy advocacy and promotion of the private sector, many other Trade and Business Associations (TBAs) have also taken up policy advocacy and dialogue
Public Private Dialogue (Cont’d) • Launch of Business Sector Advocacy Challenge (BUSAC) Fund in Ghana in 2004, funded by DANIDA, USAID and DFID and other programs by DPs stimulated a remarkable increase in policy advocacy actions of many business associations • It is on record that more than a 1000 policy advocacy actions have been initiated by 360 beneficiaries (2005-2010) totaling US$8.5 million
Public Private Dialogue (Cont’d) • PEF has been engaged in programmes by researching into policies and using the outcomes as tools for evidence-based advocacy campaign. • As part of its mandate, the Foundation engages Government through policy advocacy and dialogue.
Public Private Dialogue (Cont’d) • A number of such activities have taken place among which are the following: • Dialogue with Government on the need to establish an Agricultural Development Fund. (MOFA and MOFEP) • Annual Retreat with Parliamentary Select-Committee on Trade, Industry and Tourism and private sector practitioners to discuss pertinent issues of concern to the private sector. • Inputs into Government’s Economic Policy and Budget Statements (MOFEP) and the medium-term Growth and Poverty Reduction Strategy. (NDPC) • Private Sector Development Strategy (PSDS) I & II
Case Study – Services Export Strategy • PEF works to strengthen the capacity of trade and business associations • The Foundation also identifies growth poles of the economy which can be taken advantage of by SMEs • Through these two functions, PEF identified services export as a potential growth pole for the economy
Services Export Strategy (Cont’d) • PEF in collaboration with GEPC and SPEED Ghana organised three retreats on Services Export for stakeholders • Health and Education • Finance and ICT • Trade, Construction and Tourism Cf. Trinidad & Tobago, St. Lucia, Barbados EU-ACP cde, Pro-Invest; ITC/WTO/UNCTAD
Services Export Strategy (Cont’d) • The general recommendation from the stakeholder meetings was the development of Services Export Strategy • As part of consultations with government towards 2007 Budget, PEF proposed to promote the export of professional and technical services by SMEs to the West Africa sub-region and beyond
Services Export Strategy (Cont’d) • This was included in the 2007 Budget Statement and Economic Policy under Global Services Delivery • PEF and other stakeholders are currently working on the formation of a Coalition of Service Industries with collaboration from International Lawyers and Economists Against Poverty (ILEAP)-Canada and Ghana Association of Consultants.
Case Study 2 – Salt Sector Strategy • In 2002, PEF identified the salt sector as a potential growth pole for the economy • It is estimated that Ghana has about 500km coastal front with total production potential of 2.2 million MT per year, >US$1bn, [cf. NTE $1.2bn, Total Exports $6bn] • Actual production is estimated at 250,000 metric tonnes per year, of which about 62,000 MT is exported annually (2007)
Salt Sector Strategy (Cont’d) Destination of export: Niger 24MT, Cote d’Ivoire 14MT, Burkina Faso 20MT, Togo 2MT, Benin, Gabon, etc.Nigeria imports from Australia, Brazil. • However, the most productive area as far as salt production is concerned (a13,000ha Songhor Lagoon basin – 1.44 million metric tonnes per year) was bedevilled with land acquisition issues • The Foundation took the initiative and facilitated the settlement of the land disputes between the Traditional Council and the land owning clans
Salt Sector Strategy (Cont’d) • The result of PEF’s initiative was the incorporation of a Foundation for the majority landowners TCF, a company limited by guarantee and a Salt Development Company (ASDC Limited); a joint venture Special Purpose Vehicle of TCF for investment with international and local companies • TCF (expanded) will serve interests of all landowners (clans)
Salt Sector Strategy (Cont’d) • In 2006, PEF, GEPC and the National Development Planning Commission (NDPC) undertook policy research and presented findings at the ITC Executive Forum in Berlin, Germany • Ghana’s paper was titled: “Export Development, Poverty Reduction and Land Issues: A Case Study of Salt Production for Export in the Dangme East District of Ghana”
Salt Sector Strategy (Cont’d) • Further work and technical assistance from the Commonwealth Secretariat (CFTC) resulted in the preparation of the document “Strategy for Ghana’s Salt Sector” which was launched in November 2009 • The Salt Sector Strategy document outlined an implementation plan for the successful execution of the strategy
Salt Sector Strategy (Cont’d) • PEF working with GEPC, Ministry of Trade and Industry (MOTI) and Ghana Investment Promotion Centre (GIPC) has convened meetings to discuss follow-up activities towards achieving the goals of the implementation plan. Steering Cmtee. • As at now, EOI received from a short list of companies from 1) USA 2)China 3)SA
Observations about Case Studies • Assessing the role of the Private Sector • Which Private Sector? • International – LMEs, MNC, Foreign and Joint Venture • Local – MSMEs and Informal • Over 80 percent but 87 percent employment • Fragmented/Segregated Continuum of enterprises. Missing middle MEs. SPX disfunction • Rise above narrow interests • Private sector must speak with one voice
Observations about Case Studies (Cont’d) • Assessing the role of the Private Sector • Due to the weak capacity of the domestic private sector, it is not able to go ahead with funding the projects • Dialogue aspect • Project aspect • Private sector has to be proactive • Address misconceptions of private sector
Observations about Case Studies (Cont’d) • Assessing the role of Government • Short ‘termism’ of partisan government • 4-5 year election cycles • Funding pot to assist projects • Government must have a defined role and responsibility • Need for a PPP Framework • Address apprehensions of public sector
Major Issues • Government not oriented to assist the indigenous private sector to succeed • There is no post start-up assistance • Acquired culture places more emphasis on theory than practical ability • As academics end actions with paper publication • Government ends action with declaration in policy or legislative document • Private sector action sets up enterprises • Economic units of production or service provision
Major Issues (Cont’d) • Local private sector grows by imitation – Weak R&D • Trust between public/private sectors • Gatekeeper to access gov’t services • Culture of dependence on public sector • Address rent-seeking posture • Patron-client relationship • Special incentives and protection to compensate for market failures and investment climate weakness
Major Issues (Cont’d) • Credibility • Transparency of actions - APRM Corporate Governance component • Public/private sectors to share same vision with mutual accountability
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework • Key Objectives • Leverage public assets and funds with private sector resources to accelerate investments in infrastructure and services • Protect interests of stakeholders • Set up efficient and transparent arrangements for identification, structuring and competitive tendering of PPP projects • Provide framework for developing efficient risk sharing mechanisms
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • Guiding Principles • Value for money • Risk allocation • Affordability • Clear objectives and output requirements • Local content and technology transfer • Safeguarding public interest and consumer rights • Stakeholder consultation process
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • Institutional roles and responsibilities • Government of Ghana shall establish institutional arrangements for the successful implementation of PPP • Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning • National Development Planning Commission • MDAs/MMDAs • Public Procurement Authority • Cabinet • Parliament • Attorney General’s Department
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • Legal and Regulatory • The PPP legal and regulatory frameworks are to be guided by relevant principles including environmental safeguards, predictability and transparency • Risk Sharing and Management Framework • The party best placed to manage the project
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • PPP Process • A systematic and transparent process is recommended for the PPP Process • Project Identification, needs and options analysis • Initial viability analysis and pre-feasibility • Feasibility studies and full appraisal • Procurement process • Contract management • Government of Ghana shall spell out the approval process and applicable thresholds
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • Process for Unsolicited proposals • Shall be entertained only in exceptional cases • Limited to projects that demonstrate genuine and substantial innovation and are supportive of public policy • Subject to value for money, technical, financial and economic assessment
Elements of PPP Policy and Legislative Framework (Cont’d) • Review • Core responsibility of structures managing the development and implementation of PPP • Reviews shall be prepared in an open and transparent manner within an appropriate time frame • APRM NPoA
CONCLUSION 29 Sept. 2010 Meeting with Constitutional Review Commission Private Sector Leaders made submissions indicating dissatisfaction with current state of PP Partnership Asked for better structured , legally compelling working relationship, less dependent on public sector decisions and guidance Independent constitutionally mandated H L Commission responsible for PP Partnership affairs
But Observations (2002 – 8) from Ghana Investors Advisory Council (GIAC) chaired by President suggest • Performance dependent critically on personality of the President of the Republic and • Level of Economic and Political sophistication of the country.
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