Abstract

In general, the process and outcomes of privatization have been studied from the point of view of efficiency. In this article, we consider issues in the course of contract design, implementation, management and enforcement in privatized public services and utilities. The study is based on two case studies, involving several water concessions in Argentina and a management contract in the urban water sector in Ghana. Three key arguments are presented on the basis of these case studies. The first is that an individualistic analytical framework is often utilized by the mainstream economic perspectives, but these are inadequate for a comparative assessment of private versus public provision in public services where there are distinct collective or group interests and hence a wider socio-economic context and representation of different interests becomes highly important. Instead, the article proposes a political economy perspective, which pays due attention to distributional issues, group interests, ideology of states and power relations for the assessment of privatization contracts. Second, the administrative capacity of states and their resources play a key role for the outcomes of privatization. Finally, while some contractual issues could be resolved through resourcing and experience over time, others are inherent to the contractual relations with little prospect of remedy.

Highlights

  • Since the early 1980s the privatisation of economic activities across the world has taken place in three phases

  • At a more abstract level, various elements of the case studies discussed in this paper reveal the relevance and importance of a political economy perspective in understanding the consequences of privatisation of public services like water and sanitation

  • Social conflicts over service supply or charges inevitably lead to politicisation of service delivery in countries with a relatively democratic tradition, and reversal of private model is likely if social and distributional context is not carefully considered as in Ghana and Argentina where social discontent with the outcomes of privatisation led to termination or non-renewal of the private contracts

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Summary

A Political Economy of Privatisation Contracts

The process and outcomes of privatisation has been studied from the point of view of efficiency. We consider issues in the course of contract design, implementation, management and enforcement in privatised public services and utilities. The study is based on two case studies, involving several water concessions in Argentina and a management contract in urban water sector in Ghana. Three key arguments are presented on the basis of these case studies. The paper proposes a political economy perspective, which pays due attention to distributional issues, group interests, ideology of states and power relations for the assessment of privatisation contracts. The administrative capacity of states and their resources play a key role for the outcomes of privatisation. KEYWORDS privatisation, public services, contracts, water and sanitation sector, Argentina, Ghana

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