Public-Private Partnerships for Infrastructure/ Principles of Policy and Finance
Material type:
TextPublisher: San Diego : Oxford : Butterworth-Heinemann [Imprint] Elsevier Science & Technology Books Elsevier Science & Technology [Distributor] June 2018Edition: 2nd editionDescription: xv, 531 pages : illustrations ; 25 cmContent type: - text
- computer
- online resource
- 9780081007662
- 0081007663
- HD 3871 Y47 2018
| Item type | Current library | Shelving location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Book
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TUP Manila Library | General Circulation Section-GF | HD 3871 Y47 2018 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | P00031023 |
Previous edition: 2010, published under the title Public-private partnerships: principles of policy and finance.
Includes bibliographical references and index
Part I: Introduction 1. Overview 2. What Are Public-Private Partnerships? 3. Cash Flow and Investment Analysis Part II: The Public-Sector Perspective 4. Policy, Legal and Institutional Frameworks 5. The Project Cycle 6. Public-Sector Project Management 7. Assessing Needs, Project Definition and Selection 8. The PPP Decision-Value for Money 9. The PPP Decision-Affordability, Budgeting and Reporting 10. PPP Procurement Part III: PPP Risk Analysis and Allocation 11. Risk Analysis-Theory and Methodologies 12. Risk Allocation-Construction Phase 13. Risk Allocation-Operation Phase 14. The Role of Insurance Part IV: The PPP Contract 15. Service-Fee Payment Mechanism 16. Changes in Circumstances 17. Termination 18. Public-Sector Support for PPP Contracts 19. Public-Sector Contract Management Part V: The Private-Sector Perspective 20. Sponsors and Other Investors 21. Project Finance and PPPs 22. Project-Finance Debt-Sources and Procedures 23. Financial Structuring 24. Macroeconomic Risks and Hedging 25. Lenders' Cash-Flow Controls, Security and Enforcement 26. Debt Refinancing and Equity Sale Part VI: Alternative Models - Summing Up 27. Alternative Models 28. PPPs-For and Against
This text, based on the author's practical experience on the public and private-sector sides of the table, reviews the key policy issues which arise for the public sector in considering whether to adopt the PPP procurement route, and the specific application of this policy approach in PPP contracts.
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