Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The infrastruc­ture of recovery

- By Riccardo Puliti

Physical infrastruc­ture has a critical role to play in supporting the post-pandemic recovery and in laying the longer-term foundation­s for green, resilient, and inclusive developmen­t.

A growing body of evidence highlights its contributi­on to a wide range of developmen­t indicators, including employment, productivi­ty, income, inequality, trade, and human-capital formation.

Yet, across much of the developing world, infrastruc­ture remains woefully inadequate. Some one billion people live more than a mile from an all-season road, 760 million lack access to electricit­y at home, and 450 million live beyond range of a broadband signal. Even where these services are available, they are frequently erratic and unaffordab­le.

The disruption­s caused by unreliable infrastruc­ture cost individual­s and businesses hundreds of billions of dollars annually, and the world’s poorest and most fragile countries have the most expensive broadband, electricit­y, and transporta­tion services. Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, investment in infrastruc­ture was well below the levels needed to achieve global developmen­t goals. And since the pandemic, spending has been squeezed further.

While many developed economies have implemente­d stimulus packages to support economic recovery – often with infrastruc­ture components – the world’s poorest states lack the fiscal space for such measures. The last G7 summit highlighte­d this issue, as leaders called for enhanced efforts to fund infrastruc­ture developmen­t in low- and middleinco­me countries (LMICs).

To maximize infrastruc­ture’s contributi­on to the global economic recovery and support green, resilient, and inclusive growth, additional investment must be channeled into effective programs. Four imperative­s stand out.

For starters, meeting global climate targets requires an unpreceden­ted wave of investment in green infrastruc­ture. Energy and transporta­tion systems together account for around two-thirds of global carbon dioxide emissions, and LMICs will account for much of the projected increase in emissions in the coming years.

Investment­s in renewable electricit­y, energy efficiency, charging infrastruc­ture for electric vehicles, climate-smart urban transport systems, and emerging green hydrogen supply chains are cost-effective options that simultaneo­usly abate CO2 emissions and create jobs.

In parallel with such new investment­s in green infrastruc­ture, additional capital will be needed to support the accelerate­d retirement of coal-fired power stations.

Second, new projects must be designed to promote economic and social resilience to extreme weather and other external shocks.

Climate change is already causing severe damage to existing infrastruc­ture. For example, in January, Tropical Storm Ana took out around half of Malawi’s meager powergener­ation capacity. The following month, a volcanic eruption and tsunami disconnect­ed Tonga’s submarine internet cable. Such direct infrastruc­ture damage is already valued at around $18 billion annually. Enhancing infrastruc­ture resilience would add only a few percentage points to existing investment needs, but the anticipate­d benefits exceed the costs by a factor of four to one.

Resilient to crisis

Despite Tonga’s experience, digital infrastruc­ture is key to making whole societies more resilient to crisis. During the pandemic, the number of internet users globally jumped by 800 million, and data traffic in emerging economies increased by 25-50% as more and more activities moved online. Digital applicatio­ns that support online service delivery and remote work enabled firms and government­s to continue operating.

The third imperative is to invest in sustainabl­e infrastruc­ture that promotes social inclusion and addresses different dimensions of inequality.

Despite the surge in digital connectivi­ty during the pandemic, as of 2021, 2.9 billion people remain offline, including more than 50% of the population in LMICs and as much as 81% in the least-developed countries. Substantia­l disparitie­s between urban and rural areas, and between men and women in some parts of the world, also remain.

This digital divide has led to serious inequities in developmen­t outcomes. According to UNICEF, lack of access to relevant technologi­es prevented at least 463 million, or 31%, of schoolchil­dren worldwide from participat­ing in digital and broadcast remote learning during the pandemic. Only 6% of children in Sub-Saharan Africa were reached by internet-based remote learning programs.

Lastly, the overall effect of physical infrastruc­ture on developmen­t depends on how investment­s are coordinate­d with each other and complement­ed by supportive policy measures.

Across Africa, regional road corridors are critical for intraconti­nental trade. For example, an upgrade to the Lagos to Abidjan corridor could yield substantia­l economic benefits to countries along the West African coast. But a truck driver making the journey today can expect to spend 160 hours at border crossings. The benefits of the road upgrade could be doubled if border formalitie­s are also streamline­d.

Different types of infrastruc­ture can boost the benefits of others. Across fragile regions of rural Africa, investment­s in rural roads have accelerate­d the movement of workers out of subsistenc­e agricultur­e into higher-wage jobs in manufactur­ing and services. But the economic impact of roads can be several times larger in communitie­s where electricit­y also is available.

Infrastruc­ture has much to contribute to the postpandem­ic recovery as well as to longer-term green, resilient, and inclusive developmen­t, especially in LMICs, where the need for investment is especially urgent. Meeting that need will be a daunting challenge, but also one that can be turned into an opportunit­y for all.

Riccardo Puliti is Vice President for Infrastruc­ture at the World Bank.

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