Financing for Sustainable Urbanization

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Place Date here Financing for Sustainable Urbanization Rana Hasan* Asian Development Bank The 4th Asian Think Tank Development Forum New Delhi, India October 27 2016 This presentation has benefited from detailed discussions with Sekhar Bonu and inputs from Christine Ablaza.

Outline 1. Infrastructure needs 2. Managing urban infrastructure needs 2

Infrastructure Needs 3

Infrastructure Needs in Developing Asia The situation: 427 million people in the region lack access to electricity. 700 million people still do not have access to clean water. 1.7 billion people lack access to basic sanitation. 360 million lack access to safe drinking water. About 523 million people live in urban slums across the region. In Metro Manila, severe traffic congestion problems cost the economy an estimated $52 million per day in lost productivity. The challenge: How do we step up the quantum of infrastructure investment while ensuring that these support sustainable and shared growth? 4

Infrastructure Needs: The Numbers ~$10.0 trillion (5-6% of GDP) x2.5 in real terms Social Infrastructure Water & Sanitation ~$2.6 trillion (5% of GDP) ~$4.0 trillion (4% of GDP) Transport Telecommunications Energy (Electricity) 1990-2000 2000-2010 2010-2020 Source: ADB, Infrastructure for a Seamless Asia, 2009; ADB s estimates (Asia ex-japan, all data in 2008 US$)

Infrastructure Investment in Developing Asia 8% 7% 6% 5% 4% 3% 2% 1% 0% Developing Asia: Public and Private Infrastructure Investment, 2011 (Percent of GDP) 0.45% 5.85% 1.86% 2.91% 0.12% 6.56% Total DMCs South Asia East & Southeast Asia Budget PPI 0.43% 1.68% East & Southeast Asia exc. PRC Notes: Total DMCs includes Armenia, Bangladesh, Bhutan, Fiji, Georgia, India, Indonesia, Malaysia, Maldives, Mongolia, Nepal, Pakistan, Philippines, PRC, Singapore, Sri Lanka, Thailand, and Viet Nam. South Asia includes Bangladesh, Bhutan, India, Maldives, Nepal, Pakistan, Sri Lanka. East & Southeast Asia includes Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, Philippines, PRC, Thailand, and Viet Nam. Public is obtained from Government Budget; Private is obtained from PPI, covering projects with at least 50 percent of private financing. Government Budget data are authors calculations based on national budget for expenditures from national sources. PPI data from World Bank PPI database. Current GDP inlcuandinus$fromworldbankwdidatabase. 6 Sources: World Bank Private Participation in Infrastructure (PPI) Database; country budget offices; staff calculations.

Scope to Expand Fiscal Space for Infrastructure Investments Depending on country circumstances, several possibilities are available: Increase government revenues through tax and other reforms Reorient public spending toward infrastructure Expand spending while keeping public debt sustainable Other issues: User charges Land value capture 7

Scope to Improve Planning and Implementation of Projects 8

Scope to Improve Regulatory and Institutional Framework to Attract Private Participation Identified pipeline of wellprepared projects Fair return for risk taken Parties able to manage construction and O&M risks Investment grade contractual agreements Enforceable dispute resolution Regulator that ensures competition and rational user charges Deepen capital markets PPP Readiness Index, 2014 (EIU) Korea, Rep. of India Philippines China, People's Rep. of Indonesia Thailand Bangladesh Kazakhstan Pakistan Mongolia Armenia Papua New Guinea Viet Nam Kyrgyz Republic Tajikistan Georgia 0 20 40 60 80 100 9

Managing Urban Infrastructure Needs 10

Urbanization: A Snapshot More than 80 percent of global GDP is generated in cities, creating significant jobs and tax revenue. Cities also consume two-thirds of the world s energy and account for more than 70% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Cities are key in tackling climate change and generating jobs! Source: ADB staff estimates based on UN-Habitat. 2016. State of the World's Cities 2016: Urbanization and Development. Nairobi. 11

Urbanization in Asia Projected urbanization rates for selected Asian countries Urban Population (thousands) Urbanization Rate (%) 2030 2050 2030 2050 PRC 998,925 1,049,948 68.7 75.8 India 583,038 814,399 39.5 50.3 Brunei Darussalam 403 458 80.7 84.0 Cambodia 4,900 8,167 25.6 36.2 Indonesia 184,912 227,770 63.0 70.9 Lao PDR 4,479 6,435 50.9 60.8 Malaysia 30,182 36,163 81.9 85.9 Myanmar 25,095 32,206 42.8 54.9 Philippines 59,220 88,381 46.3 56.3 Singapore 6,578 7,065 100.0 100.0 Thailand 43,135 44,335 63.9 71.8 Timor-Leste 638 1,007 41.0 48.3 Viet Nam 43,743 55,739 43.0 53.8 Greater urbanization will increase the demand for key infrastructure in areas such as transport, water and sanitation, power, and telecoms. Source: World Urbanization Prospects: The 2014 Revision

The Indian Context Urban population share of 31.2% 60 in 2011 and comparatively low 55 Ahluwalia et al (2014): 50 Urbanization has been slow 45 and largely unplanned 40 Underinvestment in urban 35 infrastructure and public 30 service delivery 25 These are taking a toll on 20 urban agglomerations ability to play their engine of growth 15 and prosperity function 10 Urban population (% of total) Urban share, 1960-2015 PRC INO THA VIE IND Source: World Development Indicators Database.

Securing the Gains from Urbanization Funding and financing issues are critical But, urbanization itself must be underpinned by: Integrated land policy Improved connectivity Improved delivery of infrastructure services Coordinated economic and spatial planning

Coordinated Planning Seoul: variations in FSI are linked to the location of metro stations and to the network of main streets Source: Bertaud (2008)

Challenge: Translate Revenue Flows into Finance for Urban Infrastructure TAXES GRANTS USER CHARGES LEASE INCOME Property taxes License fees Entertainment tax Sales tax, etc. From national, provincial, or state governments Water Sewerage and drainage Tolls Fares, etc. Lease rental from land Lease rental from markets Lease rental from projects, etc. Source: KPMG Analysis, Linking Cities to Finance: Overcoming Bottlenecks to Financing Strategic Urban Infrastructure Investments

Underutilized Source of Funds: Land Value Capture? Land value capture monetizes the expected land appreciation from infrastructure investments. Net private sector profit retained Value of Land and/or Structures Value transferred to public sector using VC mechanism to pay down cost of infrastructure Pre-infrastructure investment land/structure ex-ante value before planning approval Pre-infrastructure investment land/structure poten al value following planning approval Post-infrastructure investment land/structure actual value over me Time Source: Accelerating Infrastructure Delivery: New Evidence from International Finance Institutions, World Economic Forum (2014).

Infrastructure funding in urban India Primary sources of funding for infrastructure: o Annuity o User charges or tariffs o Land value capture or land monetization Infrastructure funding faces significant challenges: o Inadequate revenue sources for cities o Unpredictable nature of state transfers o Extremely low user charges/tariffs o Land value capture promising, but most opportunities lie outside cities jurisdiction 18

Areas of reform and way forward Improving the sources of infrastructure funding will entail hard reforms such as: o Increasing user charges through better targeting of subsidies o Implementing rule-based revenue transfers from states to cities o Improving cities revenue sources Moving forward, the following principles need to be considered: o Keep the cost of borrowing competitive. o Keep it simple: avoid the project finance route for now. o Keep it local: work with local banks on financing. o Reduce financial intermediation. 19

Thank you! 20

The Challenge of Sustainability 21

Risks from Climate Change Are Evident Recent significant disasters Source: ADB. 2016. Asian Development Outlook Update. 22

A 2-fold Role for Infrastructure 1. Adaptation: Managing risks To infrastructure Evaluate designs against worst-case scenarios Seek robust rather than optimal designs Build back better after disasters Design for safe-to-fail Through infrastructure Flood protection, irrigation, coastal protection 2. Mitigating the effects of climate change 23

Asia Is Critical to Achieving the 2 C Goal Developing Asia s share in global greenhouse gas emissions Developing Asia = 25% Share in 1990 1999 Share in 2012 Developing Asia = 40% Rest of the world = 75% Rest of the world = 60% Source: ADB. 2016. Asian Development Outlook Update. 24

Substantial Investment Needed for Energy Transition Trillion US$2005 20 15 10 5 0-5 Additional 2015 2050 energy supply investments in developing Asia under INDC to 2 o C mitigation Research, 0.15 Renewables, 6.66 Nuclear, 0.28 Grid and Storage, 5.53 Fossils with CCS, 4.57 Fossil Fuels, -4.39 Oil Extraction, -2.55-10 INDC = intended nationally determined contribution Source: ADB. 2016. Asian Development Outlook Update and Reis et al., 2016 25

The Joint Challenges of Infrastructure Infrastructure funding Funding and Financing commonly refers to the revenues collected over the life of the project, which are then used to pay for the costs of the infrastructure Infrastructure financing turns the revenue inflows into financial capital which can be used to construct and develop the infrastructure Without predictable sources of funding, financing infrastructure will be difficult. Source: World Economic Forum (2014)

Types of value capture instruments One-time charges on land value gains Land value tax Betterment tax Project-related land sales Negotiated exactions Development impact fees Joint development or PPPs Long-term revenue sources Tax increment financing Special or benefit assessment districts Land asset management Air rights Transportation utility fees Source: Accelerating Infrastructure Delivery: Evidence from International Finance Institutions, World Economic Forum (2014).

Infrastructure financing in urban India Existing players in the infrastructure financing sector are able to: o Provide short-term loan products to high investment grade borrowers o Provide short-term but relatively high cost loans to investment grade borrowers o Invest in bonds of high investment grade borrowers o Finance projects with private sector participation A clear gap exists in terms of providing a costcompetitive, long tenure loan product for low investment grade borrowers. 28