The PPP Facility of German Development Cooperation
In order to promote the role of the private sector in development
cooperation, the German Government has introduced a facility for
development partnerships with the private sector - the so-called PPP
facility. This facility promotes project implementation in cooperation
countries through partnerships of private businesses and sectoral
agencies with proven development-policy and private-sector know-how -
among them the German Investment and Development Company (DEG), Deutsche
Gesellschaft für Technische Zusammenarbeit (GTZ) GmbH (German Technical
Cooperation), Kreditanstalt für Wiederaufbau (KfW) (German Financial
Cooperation), and the Foundation for Economic Development and Vocational
Training (SEQUA).
The aim of PPP measures is to implement projects that make good
development and business sense as a contribution to economic and social
development in the partner countries. The public involvement aims to
enhance the positive external effects that arise as a result of private
business initiative. Through examples of successful partnerships,
private firms and development-cooperation executing agencies demonstrate
that the effectiveness and sustainability of PPP measures can exceed
that of purely public measures. At the same time, firms should come to
realize that extensive consideration of the social and ecological
aspects of their activities also makes business sense, at least in the
medium to long term, and should be an integral part of their business
policy. Development partnerships with the private sector are to be an
integral part of German development cooperation.
Quality Assurance
Four Criteria must be met, before a partnership can be started:
- The project must be in line with the development-policy goals set
by the German Federal Government.
- The interests of both partners must be compatible.
- The private partner must make a key contribution to the project,
as a rule, 50% of the project costs.
- The public partner (agency) provides only those services to a
project that the partner firm would not itself in any case render.
PPP projects must be oriented to the basic principles of the German
Federal Government's development policy: respect for human rights,
participation of the population in political decision-making, the rule
of law and guarantee of legal security, the introduction of a social
market economy, and the development orientation of government action.
This catalogue of criteria is supplemented by the following points,
which ensure that the interests of all parties are represented in the
planned project:
Compatibility with development-policy objectives
Projects must fundamentally correspond to the promotional focuses of
the country concepts and the basic principles of the sectoral promotion
policies (especially the multisectoral concept for the promotion of the
private sector). Projects outside the list of priority countries or
outside the sectoral priority areas of the BMZ country concepts in their
respective current forms, may only be carried out in well-founded cases
and after previous consent of BMZ Section 410. All projects must
demonstrate clear development relevance and be environmentally and
socially compatible. Cooperation with firms in the areas of tobacco and
alcohol production and other sensitive areas is not possible in the
framework of the PPP program.
Complementarity
The public and private contributions must so complement each other
that both partners achieve their objectives at a lower cost, more
effectively, and more quickly as a result of the cooperation. PPP
measures must be concluded within a maximum of three years in order to
be continued subsequently by the private partner alone. If the contract
term is over one year, the public share must decline and in the third
year may not exceed a maximum of 50% of the total sum of the first year.
Subsidiarity
A public PPP contribution shall be made only when the private partner
would not undertake the PPP measure without the public partner and the
PPP measure is not required by law. The private partner's PPP share
includes only that part which would not have to be financed in any case
in the framework of the original investment. Projects that are already
being implemented cannot be subsequently co-financed as PPP measures.
Fair competition
The PPP measure shall not lead to the case that a private partner
selected as the result of a non-transparent and incomprehensible process
gains a competitive advantage over competitors from its own industry,
with the result that competition is distorted or potentially threatened.
Therefore, the organizations must be open to cooperation with all firms,
with no barriers to access. The possibility of PPP cooperation and the
individual PPP measures must be made public and brought to the attention
of as many companies as possible. The process of selecting the private
partner must be clearly understood. The choice of private firm must be
carried out on the basis of uniform criteria. Enterprises are not
entitled to PPP cooperation.
The contribution of the private sector
The private firm must provide a key financial and/or human resources
contribution to the PPP measure. It must be ensured that the greatest
possible contribution to the solution of problems in the partner country
is made with the least possible public expense.
The organizations are required to evaluate the projects proposed by
private partners, to promptly inform the private partner of its
decision, and to clearly document the entire process. Furthermore, in
the framework of their core competencies, the organizations actively
develop projects that are not oriented to the corporate proposals, but
to the development-policy priority areas of the BMZ.
Download of the full
text of the Guidelines for Development Partnerships with the Private
Sector (Public Private Partnerships - PPP) (english, pdf, 29kb, 8pp)
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