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Processes of Reform

Processes of Reform. Capacity Building Module. Overview. Introduction Key steps in reforms Balancing progress in utility and environment Video interviews with three speakers Triggers and obstacles to reform Key success factors in reform Taking care of the poor in reforms

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Processes of Reform

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  1. Processes of Reform Capacity Building Module

  2. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  3. Planning reforms • Identify what the problems are… • Inefficient planning and project implementation • Water availability, water quality, energy supply • Staff motivation, capacity, efficiency • Tariff level and structure • Corruption • Commercial operation

  4. Key steps for successful reforms • Planning the process of introducing reform • Involving stakeholders • Setting upstream policy • Setting service standards, tariffs, subsidies, and financial arrangement • Developing institutional model • Utility: public or PSP • Non-utility services: small scale providers • ‘Environment’: policy maker; asset holder; regulator • Legal instruments for the arrangement

  5. Involving stakeholders • Politicians: local and national levels • Management and staff of public utility • Consumer associations • NGO: national and int’l (service to the poor, environment, governance…) • Financiers: multi and bi-lateral • Alternative suppliers (tankers, drilling companies…) • Media: national and int’l • Private sector: local and int’l

  6. Sustainable utility reform and reform of the environment have to go hand-in-hand Our goal good Typical reform path environment Possible combinations environment status/utility provider status poor poor good utility

  7. 03 staff performance contracts 02 automatic tariff indexation 00 ext & int performance contracts 98-00 service & revenue enhancement programs 98 new MD 97 new Board 97 corporate plan 95 new statute end 80s & 90s Major rehab mid 80s new government 70s political turmoil How Uganda combisequenced the reforms of NWSC, its national utility Reform of the environment Utility reform

  8. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  9. South Africa Mike Muller Former Director General, South African Department of Water Affairs &Forestry

  10. Total pop - 45.2 Million (2005) Urban pop (% of total) – 59% Surface area - 1,221,037 sq miles Life expectancy – 45 years GDP (US$ billions) – 240.2 Access to water supply – 88% Access to sanitation – 65% Trigger: the end of apartheid Vertical unbundling: bulk utilities and end providers Most utilities are corporatized Subisidies: Free basic water 25 l/p/d Basic water supplies to nearly 15 million people in 10 years; Sanitation much slower ‘applying good old-fashioned public finance principles’ Ongoing decentralization process – after establishment of democratic municipalities in 2001 South Africa

  11. Uganda Dr. William Muhairwe Managing Director, National Water and Sewerage Corporation, Uganda

  12. Total pop - 28.8 Million (2005) Urban pop (% of total) – 13% Surface area - 241,038 sq miles Life expectancy – 49 years GDP (US$ billions) – 8.7 Access to water – 60% Access to sanitation – 43% Reform of the environment Utility reform Uganda

  13. Russia Alexander Bazhenov Vice-Chairman, Eurasian Water Partnership

  14. Total pop - 143.2 Million (2005) Urban pop (% of total) – 73% Surface area - 17,075,200 sq miles Life expectancy – 65 years GDP (US$ billions) – 763.7 Access to water – 97% Access to sanitation – 87% Trigger: the end of communism Subsidies: l’goti and maximum % expenditure WSS part of broader Housing and Communal Services sector – centralized billing and collection Mostly municipal departments with little autonomy History of focus on infra: low efficiency Regulation is regional ‘oblast’ responsibility Boom & bust of PSP in 03/04; now 2nd generation PSP Russia

  15. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  16. The first challenge: how to trigger reform Political shifts & pressures Droughts, floods & epidemics Unacceptable levels of service financial crises

  17. 4 Maintain progress 2 1 The constant challenge to maintain progress…. performance Broad sector reform Pressure to improve 3 Utility reform time

  18. Triggers and Obstacles to ReformClick the button to play a 5 minute video clip.(Windows Media;9,421k)

  19. Owners Policy makers The unserved? Regulators Financiers Customers Maintaining progress: Balancing external accountabilities

  20. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  21. Key Success Factors in ReformClick the button to play a 5 minute video clip.(Windows Media; 9,208k)

  22. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  23. Taking Care of the Poor in ReformsClick the button to play a 10 minute video clip.(Windows Media; 15,619k)

  24. Existing quantity-targeted subsidies are regressive Source: Water, Electricity, and the Poor: Who Benefits from Utility Subsidies? – Komives et al.

  25. Who are the urban poor? Typically use multiple sources and differentiate drinking from other uses - purchase small quantities if a free source is available: • May share a house or yard tap with multiple families – design standards underestimate number of users • May purchase from a neighbor – poor households are often heterogeneous; differentiate demand as slums may have mixed densities, income levels • May use a public standpipe/standpost/kiosk – the level of consumption is constrained by distance traveled, time spent collecting water • May rely on small-scale private sector when services do not meet their needs – choose to have water delivered to house rather than walking to and queuing at the standpipe BUT: poor households do pay for water often at higher rate (per cubic meter) than wealthy households

  26. How to improve services for the poor? • The long term utility solution: a private - house/yard -connection for all • Standpipes – from free to paid service • Augmenting small-scale service providers • How to deal with self provisioning?

  27. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  28. The Role of the Central GovernmentClick the button to play a 4 minute video clip.(Windows Media; 7,526k)

  29. Overview • Introduction • Key steps in reforms • Balancing progress in utility and environment • Video interviews with three speakers • Triggers and obstacles to reform • Key success factors in reform • Taking care of the poor in reforms • Role of central government in reforms • Leadership

  30. The political economy of reform • Reforms must provide returns for the political decision makers who are willing to make the changes…. • Initiate reform where there is a powerful need, and demonstrated demand, for change • Nothing succeeds like success • Best fit rather than best practice • Realistic goals and timeline • Develop a sequenced, prioritized list of reforms… • Match available human, financial and knowledge resources • Take one step at a time, but lock in progress

  31. The Importance of LeadershipClick the button to play a 3 minute video clip.(Windows Media; 3,477k)

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