DEFAULT AND RENEGOTIATION IN PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP AUCTIONS

被引:17
|
作者
Menezes, Flavio [1 ]
Ryan, Matthew [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Queensland, Sch Econ, St Lucia, Qld 4072, Australia
[2] Auckland Univ Technol, Dept Econ, Auckland 1142, New Zealand
关键词
CONCESSION CONTRACTS; CAPITAL STRUCTURE; INCENTIVES; COSTS; BIDS;
D O I
10.1111/jpet.12102
中图分类号
F [经济];
学科分类号
02 ;
摘要
The winners of auctions for pubic-private partnership contracts, especially for major infrastructure projects such as highways, often enter financial distress, requiring the concession to be reallocated or renegotiated. We build a simple model to identify the causes and consequences of such problems. In the model, firms bid toll charges for a fixed-term highway concession, with the lowest bid winning the auction. The winner builds and operates the highway for the fixed concession period. Each bidder has a privately known construction cost and there is common uncertainty regarding the level of demand that will result for the completed highway. Because it is costly for the government to reassign the concession, it is exposed to a holdup problem, which bidders can exploit through the strategic use of debt. Each firm chooses its financial structure to provide optimal insurance against downside demand risk: the credible threat of default is used to extort an additional transfer payment from the government. We derive the optimal financial structure and equilibrium bidding behavior and show that (i) the auction remains efficient, but (ii) bids are lower than they would be if all bidders were cash-financed, and (iii) the more efficient the winning firm, the more likely it is to require a government bailout and the higher the expected transfer it extracts from the government. We discuss potential resolutions of this problem, including the use of least-present-value-of-revenue auctions.
引用
收藏
页码:49 / 77
页数:29
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Information Asymmetry in Renegotiation of Public-Private Partnership Projects
    Xiong, Wei
    Zhao, Xianbo
    Wang, Huanming
    [J]. JOURNAL OF COMPUTING IN CIVIL ENGINEERING, 2018, 32 (04)
  • [2] PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP
    Mani, M. K.
    [J]. NATIONAL MEDICAL JOURNAL OF INDIA, 2009, 22 (04): : 207 - 208
  • [3] A Risk Registry for Renegotiation in Public-Private Partnership (PPP) Projects: ICRAM-PPP
    Khallaf, Rana
    Naderpajouh, Nader
    Hastak, Makarand
    [J]. CONSTRUCTION RESEARCH CONGRESS 2016: OLD AND NEW CONSTRUCTION TECHNOLOGIES CONVERGE IN HISTORIC SAN JUAN, 2016, : 2669 - 2678
  • [4] Pennsylvania - Public-private partnership
    Wolfe, GD
    Cole, B
    Emerick, J
    Fogerty, JS
    Olson, L
    Witmer, A
    [J]. LIBRARY HI TECH, 1996, 14 (2-3) : 263 - 267
  • [5] PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP MECHANISM
    Azarenkova, Galyna
    Alieksieiev, Ihor
    Hurkovskyy, Mar'yan
    Oriekhova, Kateryna
    Golovko, Olena
    Kurylo, Oksana
    [J]. FINANCIAL AND CREDIT ACTIVITY-PROBLEMS OF THEORY AND PRACTICE, 2022, 5 (46): : 240 - 248
  • [6] Public-private policy partnership
    Chandler, JA
    [J]. POLITICAL STUDIES, 2001, 49 (04) : 806 - 806
  • [7] PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP IN MICROFINANCE
    Sokrovolska, Nataliya
    Prodius, Oksana
    Zhuk, Olena
    Yamnenko, Galyna
    Fedyna, Vita
    [J]. FINANCIAL AND CREDIT ACTIVITY-PROBLEMS OF THEORY AND PRACTICE, 2022, 4 (45): : 93 - 103
  • [8] Renegotiation Strategy of Public-Private Partnership Projects with Asymmetric Information-An Evolutionary Game Approach
    Xing, Huige
    Li, Yuelin
    Li, Hongyang
    [J]. SUSTAINABILITY, 2020, 12 (07)
  • [9] Renegotiation in Public-Private Partnerships: An Incentive Mechanism Approach
    Russo, Julio Cezar
    Guimaraes Dias, Marco Antonio
    da Silva Rocha, Andre Barreira
    Cyrino Oliveira, Fernando Luiz
    [J]. GROUP DECISION AND NEGOTIATION, 2018, 27 (06) : 949 - 979
  • [10] Optimizing Price of Credit Default Swaps for Dynamic Project System of Public-Private Partnership
    Wu, Ming
    Lv, Wenya
    Sun, Qiuji
    [J]. DISCRETE DYNAMICS IN NATURE AND SOCIETY, 2018, 2018