Source: Islamic Development Bank. Participants at the event. |
Dr Bandar Hajjar, President of the Islamic Development Bank Group, said that the group is putting every resource available at the disposal of its 57 member countries so they can gain experience in building successful partnerships between the public and private sectors in every field, especially with the gap between the two in the funding they provide for these partnerships.
“We all know that laws and regulations alone are no guarantee for a successful partnership,” said Dr Hajjar. “Both parties must work hard to create successful, ties that actually work. Each one of the two sectors have multifaceted administrative, economic, judicial, legal, and social aspects that need to intertwine and hook up at just the right points, and all stakeholders must share a common understanding of the principles of transparency, disclosure, accountability, and equal rights, as well
as a clear determination of responsibilities for the efficient use of resources, boosting competitiveness, finding new sources of funding, expanding projects, creating new job opportunities, and solidifying economic stability in our member countries.”
At the forum, water desalination and housing came up as the two sectors set to see the strongest interest from PPPs, particularly in KSA's Kingdom Vision 2030. Challenges for PPPs that were identified included inadequate funding. Participants also stressed that these partnerships need support at the highest levels of government to succeed, as well as teams of specialists in place that are dedicated only to this model. Also, universally recognised procedures and contracts need to be adopted, so as to encourage funding and attract the global talent which will ultimately build capabilities and expertise in the private sectors of respective member states.
More than 300 government figures and private-sector business leaders from the member countries participated in the forum, set to be the first of many that are scheduled to be held successively in member states.
The IsDB launched the forums after the major changes witnessed in the economies of many of the bank’s member states, mostly due to weak oil prices, at a time of immense pressure for infrastructure projects to continue in member countries especially now that the traditional model of the government-funded infrastructure projects has proven to be inadequate, with the huge disparities between national budgets and the funds actually needed to keep projects on track.