Private Sector Participation and Performance of Urban Water Utilities in the People's Republic of China
dc.contributor.author | Yi Jiang | |
dc.contributor.author | Xiaoting Zheng | |
dc.date.accessioned | 2015-01-24T13:14:16Z | |
dc.date.available | 2015-01-24T13:14:16Z | |
dc.date.issued | 2010-12-01 | |
dc.identifier.issn | 1655-5252 | |
dc.identifier.uri | http://hdl.handle.net/11540/1585 | |
dc.description.abstract | "In the early 1990s, the People’s Republic of China opened its urban water sector to nonstate capital to help meet increasing urban water demand under severe water resource constraints. By 2007, more than 30% of urban water utilities had attracted private sector participation (PSP). To understand the factors that drive PSP in urban water supply, and to answer the key policy questions whether PSP has boosted investment and improved the efficiency in water supply, we assembled and analyzed a unique dataset consisting of more than 200 urban water utilities covering 1998–2007. Our estimations indicate that, except for the utility’s profitability and urban road infrastructure in the prior year, the characteristics of the utility or city were not strong drivers of PSP. One interpretation is that private investors participating in this newly opened sector were less concerned with short-term factors. For utility performance, we find that PSP has reduced employment, has lowered managerial expenses relative to sales revenues, and has increased profitability significantly, in both the economic and statistical sense. PSP has positively affected utilities in other ways, although the estimates are not statistically significant. Further analysis indicates that most of the changes occurred in utilities with private shareholders in the majority rather than the minority. " | |
dc.publisher | Asian Development Bank | |
dc.title | Private Sector Participation and Performance of Urban Water Utilities in the People's Republic of China | |
dc.type | Working Papers | |
dc.subject.expert | Public Sector | |
dc.subject.expert | Public Sector Projects | |
dc.subject.expert | Irrigation Water | |
dc.subject.expert | Irrigation Water Management | |
dc.subject.expert | Public Water | |
dc.subject.expert | Surface Water | |
dc.subject.adb | Infrastructure projects | |
dc.subject.adb | Public finance | |
dc.subject.adb | Irrigation development | |
dc.subject.adb | Water storage | |
dc.subject.natural | Administration | |
dc.subject.natural | Authority | |
dc.subject.natural | Delegation of powers | |
dc.subject.natural | Federal aid | |
dc.subject.natural | Government aid | |
dc.subject.natural | Irrigation efficiency | |
dc.subject.natural | Integrated water development | |
dc.title.series | ADB economics working paper series | |
dc.title.volume | No. 237 | |
dc.contributor.imprint | Asian Development Bank | |
oar.theme | Water | |
oar.theme | Public Sector | |
oar.adminregion | East Asia Region | |
oar.country | China, People’s Republic of | |
oar.identifier | OAR-001241 | |
oar.author | Jiang, Yi | |
oar.author | Zheng, Xiaoting | |
oar.import | true | |
oar.googlescholar.linkpresent | true |
Files in this item
This item appears in the following Collection(s)
-
ADB Economics Working Paper Series
ADB Economics Working Paper Series