|





AsiaTODAY
latest news stories
AskASIA
educational resource
AsiaFOOD
Asian food resource
AsiaSTORE
online bookstore
AsiaPROFILES
maps & statistics
AsiaVIEWS
articles & speeches
AsiaLINKS
related links
AsiaEXPERTS
specialists database
AsiaEVENTS
worldwide calendar
AsiainNYC
cultural travel guide
AsiaBULLETIN
email updates



Information on the Asia Society, its programs, publications,
exhibitions, regional centers, membership, and more.
|
|
Stay informed of Asia Society events with free weekly updates.
|
|
Become an Asia Society Member
and receive: invitations to member-only receptions, discounts on
tickets to performances, films and lectures, and purchases at
Asia Store; and much more.
|
|
| | |
Ashok Khosla: Beyond Public-Private Partnerships
Ashok Khosla: Beyond Public-Private Partnerships
Ashok Khosla is President, Development Alternatives and a member of the ASIP Advisory Committee.
This editorial was originally published in the July 2001 edition of the newsletter of Development Alternatives, a non-profit development organization established in 1983 to promote sustainable development in India. AsiaSource gratefully acknowledges premission to reprint.
If the twenty-year journey of Development Alternatives in search of a more equitable and sustainable world has clearly
demonstrated anything, it is that the technologies, institutions and resource
management methods of today need to be replaced by very different ones. For the
world to be a livable place for the 10 billion or so human beings expected to
inhabit it in this Century, our consumption patterns and production systems will
have to be totally transformed - and this means that the way we innovate and
deliver the products and services people need will have to be changed radically.
Such a view is common in civil society and some academic circles.
Mainstream, conventional thinking
does not feel the need for such radical or structural change. Most thinkers and
policy makers today feel that, with a little tinkering here and fine-tuning
there, business as usual should be adequate to bring about an acceptable world.
However, even in the international community, national governments and business,
some policy makers are beginning to notice the dangers of the present direction
in which society is headed and the need for change - hence the growing
legitimacy of such uncomfortable ideas as gender equality, empowerment and
participative decision making. The concept that most vividly expresses this
change is embedded in the talk of "public-private partnerships".
|
 |
 |
|
The views represented on the ASIP website are not necessarily
those of Asia Society or its funders.
|
 |
|
|
|

|
|
Wherever the public systems break down and the
government finds itself incapable of delivering the services it has taken
responsibility for, it seeks to devolve this responsibility to private or
independent organizations, in some cases by paying for the services from the
public exchequer but mostly by privatizing the service altogether. This is
happening in India in a whole range of services that were in the public
domain — housing, water, energy, transportation, and communication. From an
"efficiency" point of view, this is all to the good. But from an
environmental or social equity point of view, it can be disastrous. Even the
most die-hard neo-classical economists who seem to have a monopoly on advising
governments recognize this: and so we have the concept of public-private
partnerships. Such partnerships are, indeed, crucial and necessary to bring
about the separation of responsibilities among the different sectors of
society and, therefore, generally desirable. But without care they can become
another means for the private sector to internalize the benefits and externalize
the costs.
What we really need is a totally
new sector, which could perhaps be termed the "Independent Sector"
which combines public sector objectives with private sector strategies.
To reorient the economy’s path
to sustainability, we need to accelerate the processes of innovation and scaling
up, both of which require the incentives and motivations that make the private
sector so successful. To ensure that public goods are delivered on a large
scale, we need to internalize the public good as the overall goal of
development.
Unfortunately, the legal
frameworks and practical institutional frameworks that exist today do not
encourage such integration, which goes well beyond the concept of
"partnership".
Development Alternatives has
tried to achieve such integration through the establishment of Technology and
Action for Rural Advancement (TARA) and its subsidiaries, DESI Power Pvt Ltd to
generate and deliver power, TARA Nirman Kendra (TNK) to deliver cost-effective
building systems, TARA BKF Pvt. Ltd. to support franchises, and most recently
TARAhaat to provide communities with the information they need through the
Internet.
TARAhaat is a business entity. It
sells its services on a commercial basis. However, it is a business with a
heart. Where it has services to offer that are in the nature of public goods
from which clients, communities or society as a whole stand to benefit but for
which they are not willing or able to pay, TARAhaat mobilizes financing from
donors or other sources that wish to see these services provided. Occasionally,
particularly where other business objectives are also met, for example, by
enlarging the customer base, TARAhaat is also prepared to cross-subsidize its
products and work in alliance with partners who stand to benefit from supplying
their own services to the same customers.
To ensure this, more than 50% of the equity of
TARAhaat is owned by not-for-profit, philanthropic shareholders, primarily
within the Development Alternatives Group.
Copyright © . Asia Society. All rights reserved. Please click here for legal restrictions and terms of use applicable to this site and Asia Society's Privacy Policy.
|
|