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Transparency And Certainty Needed To Close $75B Infrastructure Deficit

The COVID-19 pandemic has led to one of the biggest economic shocks in modern history. Our government is unleashing massive fiscal stimulus to soften the blow, which will lead to significant additional borrowing.

“Investing in high-quality infrastructure will boost economic growth now, ensure we increase future economic growth by removing current infrastructure constraints, and add to the productive capacity of the economy. However, investment alone is not enough. There is also a need for transparency, stability and certainty around infrastructure funding decisions,” ACE New Zealand Chief Executive Paul Evans says.

His comments follow today’s release of a new report ‘Infrastructure for the long haul - A need for transparency and durability.’ The report has been prepared by Sense Partners for ACE New Zealand and aims to unravel the issues that are stifling New Zealand’s infrastructure investments and economic growth, and severely impacting the sustainability of the infrastructure sector.

Paul Evans says “Infrastructure is an enabler of long-term economic growth, especially when coming from a position of deficit. International research shows that an increase in public investment leads to sustained long-term economic gains.”

“Our report reveals that New Zealand severely underinvested in its infrastructure through the 1980s and 1990s. We have not made up for the deficit accumulated in those two decades, nor are we well prepared for the significant demand on our infrastructure due to climate change, ongoing population growth, and the economic challenges of the future.”

The report also found:

Delays are costly

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Short-term job and economic gains are impacted by delays from decision making through to implementation. To overcome these delays, we must prioritise rapid decision making, transparency on process and projects, and focus on more straightforward projects in the sequence of the investment programme.

We risk repeating the last recession

There is a risk that local government, which accounts for a third of public investment, will reduce investment through this recession — amplifying a sharp reduction in private sector investment. As a result, the recession will be deeper and long-term economic gains deferred — a pattern that played out in the last recession, a decade ago.

The infrastructure sector lost around eight per cent of jobs and business in the last recession. Once capacity is lost, it is slow to return. But as demand for infrastructure investment returned, the sector faced high costs to regain capacity and capability. And the purchaser, mostly local and central government, end up paying more ($2.7b over the past decade) for the same infrastructure while suppliers did not see improved profits.

We must learn from history

To sustain capacity and capability in the infrastructure sector, which is required to deliver a massive fiscal boost, we need transparency and certainty of projects and their sequencing. Furthermore, to maximise the economic and social impacts, projects must:

  • be consistent with broader public policy objectives,
  • prioritise high-quality projects,
  • remove obstacles, and
  • ensure high-quality procurement that is not just a race to the lowest cost

Economist Shamubeel Eaqub from Sense Partners says “Infrastructure investment has one of the highest short-term economic returns within the types of investment that the government has significant direct control over, behind only education and health.”

“Economic studies on the long-term economic effects of investment in public capital found that a 1% increase in the public capital stock increases economic activity by 0.1% a year on average. That is, the creation of $100m in public capital increases economic output by $10m a year permanently.”

Paul Evans says “Investing in infrastructure will deliver both short-term and long-term economic gains, but to fully realise this, our investment pipeline, once approved, needs to be secure from political interference.”

“This could be overseen by a more powerful Infrastructure Commission, which would need to have the authority and influence to ensure quality projects are prioritised, and once selected, there is a high certainty that those projects will proceed. In its absence, public investment is volatile and uncertain.”

“We can and must do better for New Zealand. For our people, for our communities, for our sector, and our economy Paul Evans says.”

Read the reports:

You can read the reports here: https://www.acenz.org.nz/transparency

About ACE New Zealand:

The Association of Consulting and Engineering New Zealand (ACE New Zealand) provides leadership, support and advocacy for the consulting and engineering sectors in Aotearoa.

Founded in 1959, we represent over 200 consulting and engineering firms employing more than 13,000 staff. Our members range from large global firms to employee-owned SMEs. They are on the front lines of delivering critical technology, construction and infrastructure and represent the essential expertise that Aotearoa will need as we look to the future.

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