1 / 24

Corporatising a Public Water Supply and Sanitation Provider

Corporatising a Public Water Supply and Sanitation Provider. By Dr. William T Muhairwe World Bank Institute. Outline. What is Corporatization? Attributes of Corporatization Why Corporatize? The Corporatization Framework & Process Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework

tuyet
Télécharger la présentation

Corporatising a Public Water Supply and Sanitation Provider

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Corporatising a Public Water Supply and Sanitation Provider By Dr. William T Muhairwe World Bank Institute

  2. Outline • What is Corporatization? • Attributes of Corporatization • Why Corporatize? The Corporatization Framework & Process • Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework • Benefits of Corporatization • Challenges of Corporatization • Key Lessons

  3. What is Corporatisation? Dfn: Corporatisation refers to the transformation of state assets or agencies intostate-owned corporationsin order to introduce corporate management techniques to their administration. • Aim is to bring private sector management style of doing business that allows continuous productive efficiencies • Ownership however is retained wholly by the Central Government or majority ownership • Corporatisation differs from Privatisation

  4. Attributes of Corporatization • Autonomy in conducting operations • Existence of a Board of Directors, Management and Shareholders (Gov’t) • Incentive Structure; to drive innovative performance • Accountability; the Corporation/Utility should be independently accountable for achievements and failures

  5. Why Corporatize? • To improve the efficiency and effectiveness of water and sanitation service delivery • Do away with the menacing inefficiencies in service delivery • Do away with bureaucracy

  6. Why Corporatize? • The guiding principle of corporatization is the intent to capture the advantages of a privately run company — including efficiency, productivity, and financial sustainability— while retaining government accountability.!

  7. The Corporatization Framework and Process

  8. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 1. Legislation • Should provide for justifiable, logical reasons for establishment of a Corporate WSS Utility • Provide Statutory and legal structures to establish and Operationalize the WSS Utility, for example, Acts of Parliament or Statutes • NWSC Case – established by Decree no 34 of 1972 • Water Act • NWSC Act • Establish Mandate of WSS Provider

  9. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 2. Institutional Framework • Choice of whether the Utility should be supervised under a Water Ministry or Independent • Board of Directors • Management – CEO • Clear Reporting Channels • Mandate of WSS provider • Asset Ownership – is by Government

  10. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 3. Regulation • Corporatisation provides for either Government Regulation since assets are held by Government or • An independent Regulator – to minimise conflict of interest by Government

  11. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 4. The Executive Board of Directors • Independent Board highest organ of the utility • Acts independently from the controlling shareholders /Government, in the best interest of ensuring the long term sustainability and value of the company • Provides guidance and oversight to utility management without infringing on management’s autonomy and prerogatives • Vets all key decisions • Represents key stakeholders from different constituents: consumers, city council, unions, NGOs, private sector, etc

  12. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 4. The Executive Board of Directors… • Legislation advocating independence. • Different stakeholders represented. • Transparency, Accountability, Integrity. • Open meetings • Annual Reports typically detail performance against Corporate Plan or indicators, financial performance, and highlight shortcomings.

  13. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 5. Contractualization • Performance Contract with Government to drive performance over a period, outlining roles and obligations of each party • Provides for WSS targets • Provides for an incentive/ penalty structure based on performance

  14. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework • Contractualization • Delegated Management Contracts with Operational Areas • NWSC Case: SEREP, APCs, IDAMCs, PACE Contract • Individual Management Contracts • NWSC Case: One Minute Management Concept

  15. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 6. Commercialisation • Emphasis is put on increasing water production and sales • Minimising NRW • Adopting Private sector principles of Profitability and Revenue Growth • Enhancing Customer Care • Cost reduction • Restoring Customer confidence in the Utility and stakeholder engagement

  16. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 7. Financial Management & Accounting • Adopting International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) • A documented and demonstrated commitment to achieving (long term) financial sustainability. " • Revenue generated through core services as a key source of financing" • Goals defined to recover, at least, O&M and possibly investment costs, depreciation, and debt service. "

  17. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework • Financial Management & Accounting… • Service levels established with consideration of the financial resources available to the utility (including customer revenue, loans, and government subsidies).

  18. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework • Financial Management & Accounting… • Tariff Review & Reforms • Channels to ensure that tariff setting and approval process is appropriate to the overall business, investment, and financing plans. • Ensuring Tariff Pricing principles of Affordability and Efficiency • Reduction of connection and reconnection fees • NWSC Case: Tariff Review & Tariff Indexation • Global Credit Rating; to determine the credit worthiness of a Utility

  19. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 8. Undertaking Reforms • All utilities must be ready to undertake reforms in the Corporatisation Process • Reforms should consider • Technical Performance • Financial Management • Staffing and Human Resource Issues • Behaviour and Attitude Change • Customer care etc • Explore possibility of feasible PPPs

  20. Key Ingredients of a Corporatisation Framework 9. Corporate Governance Principles • WSS Providers ought to embrace principles of Integrity, Accountability, Fairness & Transparency, Stakeholder engagement, Gender etc

  21. Benefits of Corporatisation • Commercial focus and decision-making, especially for investments & pricing. • Effective internal governance structure. • Business-like planning and performance monitoring. • Impetus for cultural change. • Flexibility in employment / remuneration arrangements. • Separation of policy / regulatory functions from (commercial) service delivery.

  22. Challenges of Corporatisation • The process of corporatization can be costly and time consuming. • There can be a negative impact on labor relations. • LG may not have the capacity to properly govern / oversee corporatized water utilities. • High levels of managerial autonomy can lead to over engineering or gold-plating, especially where staff are strongly engineering-oriented. • Utility managers can be captured by political interests. • Depending on the manner in which they are established, this can have a negative impact on access to investment capital.

  23. Key Lessons • Corporatisation is critical for improved performance and service delivery • Follow a sequential process and involve all stakeholders • A hardworking and committed Board of Directors with a good mix of skills is necessary • Committed, transparent, competent top leadership • Tailor made procedures to suit home situation paramount • Laws, decrees are not sufficient, enabling conditions – goodwill agreements are more essential • WSS Providers should be ready to withstand challenges that come with change.

  24. Conclusion We Must Either Find a Way or Make One (Hannibal) Thank You

More Related