Oman Daily Observer

Asia must spend $26 tn on infrastruc­ture by 2030: ADB

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MANILA: Asian nations must spend $26 trillion by 2030 on infrastruc­ture to battle poverty, boost economic growth and fight climate change, the Asian Developmen­t Bank warned on Tuesday.

In its “Meeting Asia’s infrastruc­ture needs” report, the lender said government­s in some of the poorest countries in the world should invest in everything from transport, telecommun­ications, power and water and sanitation.

It added that despite dramatic infrastruc­ture growth in recent decades, more than 400 million people have no access to electricit­y, 300 million lack safe drinking water and around 1.5 basic sanitation.

“The demand for infrastruc­ture across Asia and the Pacific far outstrips current supply,” ADB President Takehiko Nakao said in a statement released alongside the report.

“Asia needs new and upgraded infrastruc­ture that will set the standard for quality, encourage economic growth, and respond to the pressing global challenge that is climate change,” Nakao said.

The more than $1.7 trillion needed each year — from 2016 to 2030 — is twice the $881 billion invested at the moment, the bank said.

The Manila-based lender suggested billion are without the bulk of the cash, $14.7 trillion, should go on power, while $8.4 trillion should be spent on transport and $2.3 trillion on telecoms. It indicated $800 billion for water and sanitation.

Its report also said that of the total annual amount, $200 billion should be invested in mitigating climate change,renewable energy and public transport.

But it said a substantia­l infrastruc­ture gap still remains in the 45 countries included in the report.

However, the warning comes as many economies in the region continue to struggle with a global slowdown while there are growing concerns US President Donald Trump could embark on a protection­ist agenda that would batter world trade.

And while several countries around the region have promised hundreds of billions for new building programmes problems such as bureaucrac­y and corruption act as a drag.

Analysts also say government­s should look to private finance for help. “Mobilising private capital flows to fund the financing gap that cannot be met by public financing is still a major challenge,” said Rajiv Biswas, AsiaPacifi­c chief economist at IHS Global Insight in Singapore.

 ?? — Reuters ?? ADB President Takehiko Nakao speaks at a news conference in Beijing.
— Reuters ADB President Takehiko Nakao speaks at a news conference in Beijing.

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