ADB grants $ 2 mn for infra devp to India
New
Delhi,
Nov
20:
The
Asian
Development
Bank
(ADB)
said
it
is
providing
a
two
million
dollar
grant
to
help
the
Government
of
India
increase
cooperation
between
the
public
and
private
sectors
in
infrastructure
development.
The government is exploring the synergies that a partnership with India's private sector can bring in the area of infrastructure, especially since public financing is not sufficient to generate the levels of investment needed to improve infrastructure facilities.
''India is still at the first stage of public-private partnership development,'' said ADB's South Asia Department financial sector specialist Syed Ali-Mumtaz H Shah in a statement. ''The government realises the capacity of federal ministries needs to be enhanced to mainstream public-private partnerships.'' The ADB assistance will help these ministries develop the capacity to prepare, evaluate and appraise public-private partnerships in infrastructure and improve monitoring the progress of the partnerships through comprehensive databases, ADB said adding the assistance will also integrate best practices garnered from such partnerships.
Public
financing
is
not
sufficient
to
generate
the
levels
of
investment
needed
to
improve
infrastructure
facilities.
This
project
will
help
improve
access
to
basic
infrastructure
services
and
increase
efficiency
in
providing
such
services,
which
are
critical
in
promoting
economic
growth
and
poverty
reduction,
ADB
claimed.
''A widening infrastructure gap lowers productivity, raises transport and logistics costs, reduces competitiveness, and slows growth,'' said Mr Shah.
India achieved a nine per cent growth in gross domestic product in 2006-2007, and over the past five years, the GDP growth rate has averaged 7.2 per cent. A mid-term review of the country's 10th Five-Year Plan showed that inadequate infrastructure is a major factor impeding India's economic growth.
Weak infrastructure is costing India about three to four percentage points of GDP growth annually. Under the 11th Five-Year Plan (2007-2012), the government estimates that the country needs to increase infrastructure spending to eight per cent of GDP from 4.6 per cent to accelerate average GDP growth from per cent to the targeted nine per cent over the next five years.
UNI