Tag Archives: Privatization

Pakistan Railways – the route ahead


A train passing Tawinda Saway Khan station near Rahim Yar Khan, Pakistan (Image: www.pakrail.com)

In the past two years, Pakistan Railways has shut down as many as 120 trains. For an entity losing Rs3 million every hour, this is perhaps not such a bad strategy although the swarms of commuters who travel by train will decry otherwise.

Earlier estimates of revenue at Rs28 billion and expenditure of Rs50 billion have been revised, and the gap widened. The projected budgetary subsidy of Rs21.9 billion has jumped to almost Rs44 billion with the recent bailout of Rs11.1 billion for repairing and upgrading of locomotives and tracks.

The bailout package, as economists like to put it, is a day late and a dollar short. From 2005-2010, budgetary expenditure on railways was only Rs45.5 billion compared to Rs155 billion on the national highways, while the motorway cost us three times as much as it would have cost to restructure and upgrade the entire rail network.

Bad governance, as prevalent in many other state-owned enterprises, has also plagued the railways. Now with reshuffling of the cabinet, the incoming minister instead of initiating another study must take immediate measures for implementation of recommendations already made to the ministry of railways.

One option, as many experts have advocated, is to privatize it. In 1980’s Japan National Railways had many of the same problems as Pakistan Railways has today. The Japanese government split the country into six operational regions to be run by six separate private passenger-rail companies.

Companies operating in rural areas on less profitable routes were eligible for a yearly operating-deficit subsidy while all companies were responsible for both rail operations and infrastructure management. Since privatization, JNR is in profit with increased passengers, stable fares, and less accidents.

However, when discussing privatization, one must keep in mind that almost all economies with privatized railways play a central role in financing infrastructure investment and continue to subsidize operating deficits. In a developing economy, the railway’s goal is not just provide a transit system to transport commuters and cargo but it also carries a socio-economic responsibility.

It has to connect the country and reduce a sense of distance, provide a cheaper and safer alternative to cars, act as a tool for traffic management, contribute towards reducing carbon emissions and provide concessions to students, senior-citizens, and the handicapped. While private owners might share some of these goals as a means to a sustainable business, their ultimate goal is profit maximization.

The other option is to follow the Indian model of modernization rather than privatization, which turned Indian Railways from bankruptcy to billions in profit, in less than five years, while remaining under government control. Through remarkable management, downsizing, outsourcing, retrenchment, product innovation, an ingenious advertisement approach, and booking of online tickets, Indian Railways has become India’s second most profitable state-run enterprise.

From 2007-2010 it made a whopping Rs346 billion in profits without increasing passenger fares or freight charges. Employing over 1.6 million people, carrying over 20 million passengers, and two million tons of freight every day, IR is a major catalyst for India’s economic growth. In Pakistan, there is no dearth of knowledge, skills, or technical expertise. The only impediment seems to be the lack of political will of the men at the helm of affairs.

Yet another option is to partially privatize or engage in a number of public private partnerships. The whole operational cycle can be broken down into segments and then outsourced to private parties.

Ticket sales, station management, logistics parks, cargo aggregation warehouses, construction, maintenance, and operation by regions or lines can definitely be accomplished by involving private sector enterprise.

In another strategic scenario, the government could lease rights to bidders who can invest, construct, operate, and then eventually transfer the infrastructure to the government. In fact, earlier last year, the Cabinet Committee on Restructuring on Public Sector Enterprises proposed a four-way split into passenger, freight, infrastructure and management businesses under a reform and privatization strategy.

To date, committees are formed, suggestions presented, policy statements are issued but there has never been any tangible outcome which could qualify as an action in the right direction.

If the government shows political will and prudence in turning Pakistan Railways around, the options are many, what is not an option is to thimblerig policy statements without any action.

This text originally appeared in Dawn, the largest newspaper in Pakistan. The author is CIPE’s Pakistan Country Director.

Financial hemorrhage goes unabated

State-owned enterprises (SOEs) are among the serious and chronic ailments of Pakistan’s wobbling economy. They are responsible for hemorrhaging around $3 billion in the fiscal year 2010. The amount is two-thirds of annual defense budget and double the promised annual Kerry-Lugar-Berman assistance to Pakistan. SOEs are the major drain on Pakistan’s budget and devour public resources without any remorse and compunction. The corporate behemoths in the form of SOEs have been maintained by successive governments to fulfill their own political agendas. Governments have bald-facedly resorted to granting excessive and out-of-merit employment at all levels, causing acute inefficiencies, terrible public service, and deep-rooted corruption.

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Privatization and rebuilding trust in Iraq

As Iraqi citizens celebrate the formation of a government eight months after elections, broader government stability remains largely untested. There is more at stake than which party will be in control or which faction will have the most power. With electricity and gas prices still costing most people up to half their monthly salaries, the ability of the government to deliver basic services in an affordable manner is still in serious doubt, with serious repercussions for long-term stability. For the new government to mend this damaged relationship, it should privatize those services it can no longer efficiently or affordably deliver, providing space for innovate and cost-effective private sector solutions.

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A game beyond the soccer field

Djezzy ads at Algiers International Airport Houari Boumediene‎

One of Djezzy’s ads at Algiers International Airport Houari Boumediene‎ in the Algerian capital of Algiers. (Photo: CIPE)

Most Algerians — from business to government to families — would agree that the partial privatization of telecommunications in Algeria has widened their choices of service-providers and deals, and has contributed to the development and growth of the communications industry in Algeria. Most Algerians would also agree that and an advanced telecommunications technology is a vital part of Algeria’s infrastructure and development, is essential to the health and competitiveness of the Algerian industry locally, regionally and internationally, and is a key enabler of productivity across the Algerian economy and society.

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Leading Reform through Access to Information

Participants with ERJ in Tunisia

Participants with copies of the Economic Reform Journal at a launch event of the Tunisian center for Corporate Governance. Through the ERJ and other platforms, CIPE's regional partners are leading voices in corporate governance and other reforms throughout the Middle East and North Africa. (Photo: CIPE)

CIPE has recently released the latest Issue of its Arabic-language Economic Reform Journal (ERJ) focusing on privatization in the Middle East and North Africa. The Journal includes articles that tackle the wrong perceptions that many in the MENA region have about privatization due to recent experiences in Egypt, Bahrain and Iraq. The publication also includes an article on how privatization can promote more accountable and effective public and private governance as well as economic reform.

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What matters in privatization is PROCESS – lessons not yet learned by Kyrgyzstan

Since 2008, President Bakiev has embarked on a privatization mission. Lessons from around the world and most recently other former Soviet countries, including Russia, Kazakhstan, and others, clearly illustrate that privatization is not an end to itself. Rather the process of privatization is the key to successful transition from a centralized to a market economy. With this goal in mind, Kyrgyz civil society, with the business community at its helm, continues to sound alarms over speedy privatization that ensues in Kyrgyzstan with little transparency and much public skepticism. Opaqueness in the privatization process, combined with drastic increases in utility costs, undermines the public’s trust in the government and leads to a potential further consolidation of economic power in the hands of the elite. Kyrgyz civil society is rightly concerned regarding today’s decisions that damage tomorrow’s economic prosperity.

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Same old dance

In yet another poorly choreographed move, Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez strikes again. This time around, he has opened negotiations with Spain’s Banco Santander to nationalize the Bank of Venezuela, as part of his plan for “21st Century Socialism.”

Venezuela’s GINI coefficient is .48, and an estimated 37.9 percent of Venezuelans live below the national poverty line. Given Venezuela’s natural resource base and other assets, those numbers could be lower. Up until the 1980s debt crises, those numbers were lower across Latin America; however, such conditions were based on the unsustainable practices of Import-substitution Industrialization (ISI), when the nationalized firms dominated the formal economy.

Gabriel Garcia Marquez brilliantly captured, in One Hundred Years of Solitude, how Latin America is seemingly doomed to repeat past mistakes. But many Latin American countries have in fact learned from those mistakes. From 2001 to 2006, the top 10 percent of Brazilian income earners saw their incomes rise seven percent, while the bottom 10 percent saw their incomes rise 58 percent, all the while Brazil seems to have finally gained the international respect it deserves, all according to this major story from the New York Times:

Long famous for its unequal distribution of wealth, Brazil has shrunk its income gap by six percentage points since 2001, more than any other country in South America this decade, said Francisco Ferreira, a lead economist at the World Bank. Read more….

While Chavez is planning to nationalize the banking system and banish foreign capital, Brazil is decreasing inequality and poverty by doing exactly the opposite - it privatized state-owned banks and invited foreign capital into the country. If only Venezuela would joropo less, and samba more.