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It is top-down governance: Examining environmental public-private partnerships in China

By: Zhang, Liying and Su, Xuhong.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: Asia Pacific Journal of Public Administration Description: 47(1), Mar, 2025: p.28-49.Subject(s): Public–private partnerships, Top-down governance, Efficiency gains In: Asia Pacific Journal of Public AdministrationSummary: Public-private partnerships have been touted as an important governance tool. To what extent efficiency gains are internalized into the governance scheme remains open. This study proposes a nested model suggesting that the development of PPPs is enabled and constrained by project features, local contexts and (top-down) governance scheme. Based on 325 environmental PPP projects in China, the multilevel models suggest when government payment or subsidy were involved, the development of PPPs was not driven by efficiency gains but empowered by top-down governance. While efficiency gains mattered, user fees also prevailed more when certain governing arrangements were place. PPPs in China serve and are also constrained by top-down governance, raising potential concerns on efficiency and public accountability.- Reproduced https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23276665.2023.2258518
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Articles Articles Indian Institute of Public Administration
47(1), Mar, 2025: p.28-49 Available AR136500

Public-private partnerships have been touted as an important governance tool. To what extent efficiency gains are internalized into the governance scheme remains open. This study proposes a nested model suggesting that the development of PPPs is enabled and constrained by project features, local contexts and (top-down) governance scheme. Based on 325 environmental PPP projects in China, the multilevel models suggest when government payment or subsidy were involved, the development of PPPs was not driven by efficiency gains but empowered by top-down governance. While efficiency gains mattered, user fees also prevailed more when certain governing arrangements were place. PPPs in China serve and are also constrained by top-down governance, raising potential concerns on efficiency and public accountability.- Reproduced

https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/23276665.2023.2258518

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