000 01389pab a2200181 454500
008 180718b2008 xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
100 _aThandavan, R.
245 _aPublic private partnership within policy framework
260 _c2008
300 _ap.436-454.
362 _aJul-Sep
520 _aRapid economic growth, growing urban population, increasing rural urban migration, and all-round social and economic development have compounded the pressure on the existing infrastructure, and increased the demand-supply gap in most of the developing world. The political economy of infrastructure shortages, constrained public resources, and rising pressure from citizens and civil society have combined to push governments and policy-makers to explore new ways of financing and managing these services. Governments have been pushed to explore new and innovative financing methods in which private sector investment can be attracted through a mutually beneficial arrangement. Since neither the public sector nor the private sector can meet the financial requirements for infrastructure in isolation, the PPP model has come to represent a logical, viable, and necessary option for them to work together. - Reproduced.
650 _aPublic private partnership
700 _aSivaraman, Kalaichelvi
773 _aIndian Journal of Public Administration
908 _aN
909 _a79855
999 _c79855
_d79855