Abstract

This paper investigates the impact of Social Discount Rate (SDR) choice on intergenerational equity issues caused by Public–Private Partnerships (PPPs) projects. Indeed, more PPPs mean more debt being accumulated for future generations leading to a fiscal deficit crisis. The paper draws on how the SDR level taken today distributes societies on the Social Welfare Function (SWF). This is done by answering two sub-questions: (i) What is the risk of PPPs’ debts being off-balance sheet? (ii) How do public policies, based on the envisaged SDR, position society within different ethical perspectives? The answers are obtained from a discussion of the different SDRs (applied in the UK for examples) according to the merits of the pertinent ethical theories, namely libertarian, egalitarian, utilitarian and Rawlsian. We find that public policymakers can manipulate the SDR to make PPPs looking like a better option than the traditional financing form. However, this antagonises the Value for Money principle. We also point out that public policy is not harmonised with ethical theories. We find that at present (in the UK), the SDR is somewhere between weighted utilitarian and Rawlsian societies in the trade-off curve. Alas, our study finds no evidence that the (UK) government is using a sophisticated system to keep pace with the accumulated off-balance sheet debts. Thus, the exact prediction of the final state is hardly made because of the uncertainty factor. We conclude that our study hopefully provides a good analytical framework for policymakers in order to draw on the merits of ethical theories before initiating public policies like PPPs.

Highlights

  • Private companies may often deal with a government in order to survive, sometimes bringing “expansion arguments” and “employment benefits”

  • How do public policies, based on a chosen Social Discount Rate (SDR), position the society nowadays but for future generations, according to different ethical theories? The answer is obtained in our paper, as we aim to propose a procedure for evaluating the SDR between pertinent ethical theories, namely libertarian, egalitarian, utilitarian and Rawlsian

  • We have discussed the intergenerational equity issues caused by Public–Private Partnerships (PPPs)

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Summary

Introduction

This section discusses the intergenerational equity issues caused by PPPs from the perspective of various ethical theories. The compromise between efficiency and equity distribute societies in the Social Welfare Function (SWF) according to four ethical theories, namely Libertarianism, Egalitarian, Utilitarian and Rawlsian. These issues are addressed by answering the following questions: A. We created several codes based on the intergenerational issues caused by PPPs. The study questions and sub-questions of the impact of SDR on intergenerational equity informed this process. The main concern of the previously used primary data is to set SDR while our study much hinges on the intergenerational equity issues caused by the SDR used in PPPs, whence rather emphasises the secondary data relevance

Social Discount Rate Approaches
Temporal Choice of High or Low SDR Value
Criticality of SDR in PPPs Decision-Making Process
Issues Caused by the SDR Choice
Justice of Resource Distribution between Generations
STPR and SOC from an Ethical Perspective
Merits of an Egalitarian Society
Merits of a Utilitarian Society
Merits of a Rawlsian Society
Trade-Off between STPR and SOC within the Ethical Theories
Sensitivity of Intergenerational Matters to the Level of SDR
Economic Growth
Technological Evolution
Event Uncertainty
UK Application
Findings
Conclusions
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