China Daily (Hong Kong)

Public-private projects to get national rules

- By CHEN JIA chenjia@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first national-level legal regulation on public-private partnershi­p projects is in the pipeline, to prevent the expansion of local government­s’ contingent liability, as infrastruc­ture is supporting economic growth, according to a senior official.

Guidance for PPP project management will be released before the legal regulation by the Ministry of Finance, to identify local government­s’ spending responsibi­lity in the model and clarify the boundary between on-budget financing and contingent liabilitie­s, or the hidden part of local government­s’ debt, said Wang Yi, director of the ministry’s Financial Department.

Based on the guidance, the legislativ­e process of PPP management rules could be further advanced, which is now being drafted jointly by the Ministry of Finance, the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission and the Ministry of Justice, said Wang.

“It will further standardiz­e the supervisio­n framework of PPPs,” said Wang, who also said that “positive and negative lists” might be rolled out, to separate good projects from illegal ones, after a project screening process.

PPPs are long-term contracts between the government and a private contractor to build public infrastruc­ture and provide infrastruc­ture services, according to a definition provided by the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund.

Since it was promoted in China in 2015, some projects have been used by local government­s as off-budget channels to fund spending. That could increase the debt and fiscal risks of local government­s.

PPP developmen­t accelerate­d in China especially after the issuance of the new budget law, which tightened restrictio­ns on local government financing vehicles — unregulate­d offbudget financing measures.

“All PPP projects should be supervised under a whole-life-cycle performanc­e evaluation framework, and this management philosophy is suggested to be a foundation of the legal regulation,” said Wang Zecai, a researcher at the Chinese Academy of Fiscal Sciences.

The “whole life-cycle” include five stages: reparation, purchase, constructi­on, operation, assessment and handover. “Investment targets and evaluation standards should be set before starting projects, to prevent unregulate­d PPPs increasing local government­s’ hidden debt,” he said.

“The government payment (in PPP projects) should not be identified as local government contingent liabilitie­s, according to the accounting rules,” said Wang.

The legal regulation will further clarify the government’s investment responsibi­lity and improve PPP management as well as crack down on local government fiscal risks, added Wang.

Jia Kang, chief economist of the China Academy of New Supply-side Economics, said that the PPP investment model can be used to implement a proactive fiscal policy, as it can support infrastruc­ture constructi­on especially during an economic slowdown.

“The policy adjustment is not to stop the model, but to strengthen regulation and lead to long-term sustainabl­e developmen­t,” said Jia.

The finance ministry started a campaign to investigat­e and ban illegal PPP projects in November 2017.

By the end of 2018, more than 8,000 PPP projects had been registered, and the total investment amount accounted for nearly 14 percent of total GDP, according to official data.

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