This is a thorough and useful report, full of interesting examples of international good practice. As the authors freely admit, the recommendations for boosting productivity in the infrastructure sector are nothing new:
'By scaling up best practice in selecting and delivering new infrastructure projects, and getting more out of existing infrastructure, nations could obtain the same amount of infrastructure for 40% less...Achieving these productivity gains will not require groundbreaking innovation, but merely the application of established and proven practices from across the globe.
'The potential to boost productivity is so large because of failings in addressing inefficiencies and stagnant productivity in systematic way. On the whole, countries continue to invest in poorly conceived projects, take a long time to approve them, and then don't make the most of existing assets before opting to build expensive new capacity.'
The main opportunities for achieving increases in productivity are identified as:
1) Improving project selection and optimising infrastructure portfolios using transparent, fact-based decision making, and not always looking for solutions in physical infrastructure to meet clearly defined needs.
2) Streamlining delivery, including: speeding up approval and land acquisition; investing more heavily in early stage project planning and design; and adopting design-to-cost principles where these can be applied.
3) Making the most of existing infrastructure assets by boosting asset utilisation, optimising maintenance planning and expanding the use of demand-management measures.
The interesting question is why these well known approaches are not more ingrained in country systems. The report goes on to identify governance systems as critical to exploiting these opportunities, identifying 6 common characteristics of effective infrastructure governance systems:
* Close coordination between infrastructure institutions
* Clear separation of political and technical responsibilities - getting the balance between politicians and technocrats right.
* Effective engagement between the public and private sectors
* Trust-based stakeholder engagement
* Robust information upon which to base decision making
* Strong capabilities across the infrastructure value chain.
Creating effective governance systems with these characteristics is the real challenge!