Public Sector Economics, Vol. 42 No. 2, 2018.
Conference paper
https://doi.org/10.3326/pse.42.2.4
Financing public sector investment
Matthias Kollatz-Ahnen
; Berlin Senate for Finance, Berlin, Germany
Markus J. Roick
orcid.org/0000-0001-8189-2271
; Berlin Senate for Finance, Berlin, Germany
Abstract
Globally, there is a massive shortfall in infrastructure investment. This is the result of a combination of several factors: (i) the continued rise in the global population; (ii) the ongoing process of urbanisation; (iii) a shortage of public spending on infrastructures due to the legacy effects of the Great Recession and the need to consolidate public budgets; and (iv) new challenges such as climate change and the IT revolution that require additional investments. The infrastructure gap is felt in developed countries as much as in emerging market and developing countries. In Europe, public investment at the municipal level has been hit particularly hard. In spite of substantial interest from the private sector, shortages of funding continue to be a major (though not the only) bottleneck on the path towards higher investment volumes. Using the example of Berlin, this article looks at some trends in urban infrastructure policies and discusses alternative sources of financing.
Keywords
Hrčak ID:
200985
URI
Publication date:
5.6.2018.
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