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The lack of an appropriate regulatory
environment is a principal factor behind inadequate water
and sanitation services in many parts of Latin America.
Many governm... Mostrar más +ents recognize the need to improve cost recovery
and accountability in services - and increasingly see
private sector participation as a tool for improving
efficiency and attracting commercial sources of investment
finance. Consultants interviewed representatives of private
companies that recently contended for contracts to provide
water and sanitation services in four Latin American cities
(Buenos Aires, Caracas, Mexico City, and Santiago). These
private operators identify the regulatory conditions they
look for deciding whether to participate in a bid. On the
basis of the interviews, the authors identified nine
conditions. (1) Specify key terms and conditions of
regulation in the contract, leaving little discretionary
power to the regulating authority. In particular, specify
the key aspects of regulation (such as price, quantity, and
quality) in the contract. (2) Spell out credible procedures
for the fair resolution of disagreements about contractual
or regulatory matters. (3) Carefully specify credible
technical objectives which the contractor will be expected
to achieve under the contract. (4) See that government
tariff policies support the principle of cost recovery for
water services - and that tariff adjustment formulas
adequately reflect changes in costs, inflation, and the
exchange rate. (5) If historical collection rates do not
indicate consumers' willingness to pay for services
such as tariffs that reflect the cost of service, allow an
adequate period of time to phase in higher tariffs - and
give the operator adequate protection from nonpayers (either
the right to cut off service or recourse to another source
of payment). (6) Review public works law, contract law, and
accounting practices and, if necessary, amend them in
advance to ensure that they accommodate and protect any
long-term investments foreseen under build-own-transfer or
concession-type arrangements. (7) Eliminate unnecessary and
bureaucratic administrative requirements that make bidding
expensive. (8) Make a contract and expected profits big
enough to warrant the high fixed cost of bidding. (9)
Provide the education and outreach needed to inform
consumers and secure the support of labor interests. In
addition, the firms interviewed said that host countries
would be better able to attract private-sector providers if
they: (a) used reputable outside technical, legal, and
financial advisors; (b) allowed local and foreign banks that
finance investments to review and comment on proposed
contracts and participate in negotiations; and (c) reduced
the cost of bidding for small contracts. Mostrar menos -
Fecha: Julio 01, 1994
Tipo:
Documento de trabajo sobre investigaciones relativas a políticas