National Perspective on How to Integrate Transport Infrastructure in Development Strategies UGANDA...
-
Upload
shanon-morgan -
Category
Documents
-
view
214 -
download
0
Transcript of National Perspective on How to Integrate Transport Infrastructure in Development Strategies UGANDA...
National Perspective on How to Integrate Transport Infrastructure in
Development Strategies
UGANDA
Mrs. Rosetti Nabbumba NayengaPolicy Analyst
Poverty Monitoring and Analysis UnitMinistry of Finance, Planning and Economic
DevelopmentUganda
256-41-235055
2
Uganda
Policy issues in OECD paper highly relevantLow income: per capita income US$ 324Landlocked80% depend on agriculture in rural areasPoverty eradication is the central objective3rd fastest population growth rate in world – pressure on infrastructure and services
3
Uganda’s population continues Uganda’s population continues to grow rapidlyto grow rapidly……
2 2.5 2.8 3.6 5 6.5 9.5 12.6 16.722.0 24.7
36.8
51.9
81.4
118.3
0
20
40
60
80
100
120
140
Year
Po
pu
lati
on
(m
illi
on
s)
4
The Economy
Growth rate averaging 6% pa in 1990s; now slowing down to 5.6% p.a;Population below poverty line declined from 56% in 1992 to 34% in 2000; rose to 38% in 2003.Low revenue to GDP ratio at 12.6%Large aid inflows channeled mainly to the social sectors.Expansion in social service provision
5
Emerging policy concerns
Structure reforms are complete – enhancing growth, reducing poverty further and achieving some of the MDGs will be more difficult.
Social sectors alone cannot lead to poverty reduction.
Increased investments are needed in the productive sectors that support agriculture and rural development and private sector development.
Inadequate infrastructure – transport, energy, telecommunications - 3rd priority constraint to private investment in Uganda.
6
Transport infrastructure
Roads: most dominant transport mode
80% of national roads, 60% of district roads and 20% of urban roads have been rehabilitated.
Community access roads in poor state
Maintenance backlog – 18% of entire network in poor condition; 62% in warning condition.
7
Transport infrastructure
Railways: Very old lines; only 260km of 1,350km is operational. Substantial investments needed. Joint Concession initiated.
Water Transport: Under-developed sector. Poor enforcement of regulations.
8
Transport infrastructure
Air transport: responsible for export of perishable products; tourism; delivery of relief
Increase in cargo volumes in recent years
Less competitive due to high cost of aviation fuel; limited storage facilities; inefficient airport handling, high indebtness and outdated regulations.
9
The challenge
The demand to reform institutions and regulations and invest in all 4 modes of transport is enormous.The national resource envelop is not expanding.Uganda has just entered multiparty democracy – balancing political and economic aspirations is a challenge. The plus – transport infrastructure is a priority both under the political strategy as well as the poverty reduction strategy.
10
Integrating transport infrastructure into
development strategyAll public expenditures are guided by the PEAP/PRSP.
Transport infrastructure concerns have been integrated into the PRSP in a phased manner depending on the economic objectives and desired outcomes of Uganda.
11
PEAP/PRSP 1997
• Main obj: To reduce mass poverty in rural areas.
– Rural roads prioritized - opening villages, improving prices and access to markets, social services, extension….
– 10 year RSDP (1996/97-2005/06 at US$1.5 billion).
– Road Agency Formation Unit formed to strengthen road management capability.
12
PEAP/PSRP 2000
• Main obj: Enhance growth, structural transformation, incomes and private sector development.
– More infrastructure needed by private sector– Emphasis still on roads, but with some investments
in water and rail transport.– RDSPII (2001/02-2010/11 at US $ 2.3 billion)– Involvement of private sector in maintenance and
financing air, water and railway transport infrastructure promoted.
13
PEAP/PRSP 2004
• Main obj: increase rural incomes, enhance human development, more manufacturing and trade, export…
– Emphasis is on all 4 modes of transport– Roads key to market integration; railway for
moving bulky goods; air transport for perishable exports and water transport for linking communities to growth centres.
– Promotion of public-private partnerships.
14
Key issues in moving forward
Financing for road sector mainly from donors; other modes of transport under-financed.
Public private partnerships not easily forthcoming due to low returns, poor regulatory environment and disincentives.
Ways are being explored to step up public resources to transport infrastructure within the LTEF. Not easy because of recent political pronouncements – education, health, security.
15
Long-term Expenditure Framework (Provisional sector shares in Shs billions)
Sector 2003/04 2013/14
Security 336 (10.4%) 674 (9.2%)
Roads and Works 303 (9.4%) 915 (12.4%)
Agriculture 97 (3.0%) 326 (4.4%)
Education 575 (17.8%) 1474 (20%)
Health 375 (11.6%) 1169 (15.9%)
Water 89 (2.7%) 327 (4.4%)
Public Administrati 382 (11.9%) 273 (3.7%)
Source: PEAP, 2004.
16
Moving forward
• 15 year multi-modal transport master plan for all 4 modes of transport.
• Restructuring of the institutional and regulatory framework to suit current needs and partnerships.
• Road Fund to be established to cater for road maintenance
• Harnessing resources from regional transport initiatives
17
Lessons
1. National planning and budgeting framework useful entry point for integrating investment needs for transport infrastructure. All development partners need to work within this framework, with Government leading.
2. Public private partnerships should be nurtured. But they work best where other infrastructures and services exist – energy, water, telcom. A holistic approach to infrastructure devt needed.
18
Lessons
3. Budget discipline essential4. Rethinking transport infrastructure needs
in urban areas5. Community involvement – labor intensive
works6. More focus on quality issues – efficiency,
reliability, usability – rather than infrastructure expansion
19
Lessons
7. Transport infrastructure should be handled with transport services
8. Promoting long-term planning in transport infrastructure development could help in addressing the sustainability concerns.
9. Politics matters10. Regional projects critical for enhancing connectivity
between African countries.
……..Thanks for listening to me………