v Where Does the Public Sector End and the Private Sector Begin?
Abstract:-
The boundary between the public and private sectors can be defined on the basis of ownership
of institutional units. Nonmarket government-owned entities and corporations that are owned
or controlled by government units belong to the public sector. “Economic ownership” is more
important than majority ownership. Joint ventures, public-private partnerships, and social
insurance funds (including for public employees) can be unambiguously allocated to the
public or private sector on the basis of international public sector accounting standards.
Boundary problems within the public sector are just as acute as those between the public and
private sectors, mainly because of ambiguities in distinguishing “market” from “nonmarket”
activities.
Contents
I. Introduction II. Conceptual Issues for Defining the Public and Private Sectors ...
A. Can the Public Sector Be Classified According to its Functions?
B. The Concept of Ownership
C. The Concept of Control
D. Could the Boundary Be Defined by Law?
III. A Framework for Defining More Precisely the Public Sector
A. Economic Sectors and Institutional Units ..
B. The Public Sector: Public Corporations and General Government
IV. Specific Boundary Problems Related to the Public and Private Sectors.
A. Joint Ventures Involving Private Companies and Public Entities
B. Public Sector Leasing from the Private Sector
C. Public-Private Partnerships
D. Social Insurance Schemes
V. The Boundary Between the Public Sector and General Government
A. Extrabudgetary Funds
B. Autonomous Government Agencies
VI. Conclusions.
Tables
1. Conceptual Splitting of Private and Public Sectors.
2. Different Types of Autonomous Public Bodies
Figures
1. Establishing Control of Another Entity for Financial Reporting Purposes .
2. The Public Sector
Boxes
1. When Does Government Control Exist?
2. Senegal: Provisions of the 1990 Law Relating to Public Sector Enterprises
3. Market Output and Economically Significant Prices
4. Distinguishing Between a Public Corporation and General Government
6. Operating Leases and Financial Leases
7. Public-Private Partnerships—What Are They?
8. Risks in PPP Projects
9. IPSASB Proposals for Accounting for PPPs
10. The European Union’s 50 Percent Rule
11. New Zealand: Categories of Government Agencies
I. INTRODUCTION
Effective fiscal policy requires a clear definition of the public sector. In recent years, the use
of private sector management techniques in the public sector, as well as private sector
provision of public goods, has blossomed. Governments in many countries participate in
public-private partnerships (PPPs), outsource or contract out to private sector suppliers, or
use publicly-funded vouchers for supplying public goods (Blöndal, 2005, IMF, 2006).
Certain functions and monopolistic-type activities, which were previously thought to be
reserved for public sector provision, are now either furnished by the private sector, though
funded publicly, or have been transferred to the private sector, through partial or full
disengagement of the government from state-owned enterprises. In addition, private sector
financial accounting standards have influenced changes in public sector accounting
methodologies, with increasing use of accrual accounting for preparing government financial
statements (Chan, 2002; OECD, 2003). More generally, the private sector is being looked at
as the “model” for good budget and public financial management practice.
With increasing use by governments of market mechanisms and private sector provision of
public services, has the borderline between the public and private sectors become blurred? Is
it still possible to define the public and private sectors in black and white terms? If not, is
there now a third “gray zone”, which is “semi-private” and “semi-public”, and whose
activities belong neither to the traditional public sector, nor to the profit-driven private
sector? If yes, could law be used to demarcate such a gray zone, clarify its conceptual basis,
and offer a standard for defining the gray zone consistently across all countries?
This paper discusses these questions. It is argued that, to the extent that a gray zone exists, it
is possible to allocate component parts to the public and private sectors. In Part II, conceptual
issues—especially two key defining characteristics of the public and private sector, namely
ownership and control—are discussed. The extent to which laws could be helpful for
defining more clearly the public and private sectors is also investigated. Part III elaborates on
a conceptual framework for defining the public sector. This is based on the IMF’s
Government Financial Statistics Manual (GFSM2001) (see IMF, 2001). The application of
this framework to joint ventures, leasing, PPPs and social security funds involving private
and public companies or entities is examined in Section IV. Within the public sector, the
difficulties of demarcating the boundary between public corporations and “general
government”, as defined in GFSM2001, is discussed in Section V, prior to the concluding
remarks of Section VI.
. The Concept of Ownership
The concept of ownership is crucial for defining the public and private sectors.
Fundamentally, ownership relates to the possession of property, where the owner exercises
rights and control over the property. “Property” may be land, real estate, intellectual
property, and other assets, either financial or nonfinancial. Ownership implies responsibility
for actions regarding the property, whose rights are usually protected under law. For example, in Haiti, whose army was abolished in 1994, the defense function is provided in part by the national police and in part by UN forces. Concerning the private sector, defense logistics is increasingly being contracted out to private companies which, in some cases, have assumed responsibility for protection of sensitive buildings or important persons.
The private sector could be defined as those entities of the economy that are owned by the
private sector. Many private sector entities—notably privately-owned enterprises
private enterprise sector, enterprises that are owned by the government would be part of the
public sector. Privately-owned nonprofit organizations and households (appropriately
defined) would also need to be included in private sector.
If ownership were the sole criterion for allocating between the two sectors, a four-way
division of the economy would result. In Table 1, the first two boxes represent the private
sector and the second two, the public sector (shaded).
Table 1. Conceptual Splitting of Private and Public Sectors
For Profit
Not For Profit
Privately Owned
(private sector)
Private Enterprises
Private Nonprofit
Organizations and
Households
Publicly Owned
(public sector)
Public Enterprises
“Government”
Public Sector
The Concept of Control
If there are unclear or differing notions of control, especially of corporations, then the
borderline between the private and public sectors would be blurred. For example, an
enterprise that is owned mainly be the private sector could have its internal policies set by
government, if the latter is a minority shareholding. Economic ownership, in contrast to legal
ownership, would need to be distinguished. It is, therefore, necessary to elaborate on
understandings of “control”.
Statisticians and accountants have differing notions of government control:
•
Statisticians. A government exercises control of a corporation if the government has
the ability to determine the general corporate policy (for a fuller discussion, see
Section 4.30 of the System of National Accounts (SNA)—see UN 1993). This
concept relates essentially to policy control.
•
Accountants. According to the International Public Sector Accounting Standards
Board (IPSASB) of the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC), a
government controls a corporation if it has the power to govern its financial and
operating policies so as to benefit from its activities (see IFAC, 2008a, and Box 1).
This definition focuses particularly on financial control.
Statisticians have recognized limitations of the SNA’s definition of control (Pitzer and
Dupuis, 2005). In 2005, it was agreed that the SNA be further elaborated along the lines of
the definition of the IPSASB (TFHPSA, 2005). The successive steps for determining control
are shown in Figure 1.
Figure 1. Establishing Control of Another Entity for Financial Reporting
Purposes
Source: p. 191, IFAC, 2008a.
The notion of control by government is not necessarily determined by the share held by the
government. If the government’s shareholding in an enterprise exceeds 50 percent, it would
be logical to classify it as a public enterprise and include it in the public sector. However, an
enterprise in which the government has a minority shareholding but which is controlled, for
example, by the government’s representation on its board of directors, or through government instructions requiring that it implement specific policy decisions, would be under government control. Such an enterprise would also be included in the public enterprise sector. To clarify further the different aspects associated with the notion of “control,” the Is the power to govern the financial and operating policies presently exercisable? Does the entity have the power to govern the financial and operating policies of the other entity?
Yes
Entity controls other
entity.
Control does not
appear to exist.
Does the entity benefit from
the activities of the other
entity?
Yes
Yes
No
No
No
IPSASB has identified various “power” and “benefit” criteria (Box 1). According to IFAC,
government control of the entity exists when at least one of the power conditions and one of
benefit conditions is exercised. This definition allows the public and private enterprises—
and, hence, the public and private sectors—to be clearly defined.
Box 1. When Does Government Control Exist?
The following guidance is provided by the international accounting profession for defining government control for financial reporting purposes. Control depends on the nature of the relationship between two entities. Two elements are important for the definition of control: the power element and the benefit element.
Power conditions—the power to govern the financial and operating policies of another entity:
• Majority voting interest. The entity has, directly or indirectly through controlled entities,
ownership of a majority voting interest in the other entity.
• Power to appoint or remove members. The entity has the power to appoint or remove a
majority of the members of the board of directors (or equivalent).
• Majority vote. The entity has the power to cast, or regulate the casting of, a majority of the
votes at general meetings or meetings of the board of directors, of the entity.
• Other power indicators—including those relating to entities’ veto powers of budgets,
decisions, and the legal mandates of other entities.
Benefit conditions—the ability of the controlling entity to benefit from the activities of the other entity.
These include:
• Power to dissolve. The entity has the power to dissolve the other entity and obtain a significant
level of the residual economic benefits or bear significant obligations, e.g., an entity has
responsibility for the residual liabilities of another entity.
• Control over asset distributions or liabilities. The entity has the power to extract distributions
of assets from the other entity, and/or may be liable for certain obligations of the other entity.
• Government can direct the entity to cooperate with it in achieving its objectives.
• Other benefit indicators—including holding direct or indirect title to the net assets/equity of
the other entity, should also be examined.
For further details, see pp. 185–190 of IFAC, 2008a.
Could the Boundary Be Defined by Law?
If the demarcation between the public and private sectors is made by defining control
carefully, as proposed above, what role, if any, could be assigned to law in defining, or
clarifying the definition of, the public and private sectors? Could a law be adopted to resolve
definitional issues in a decisive way? If adopted, would such a law be subject to varying
interpretations, still leaving the door open to ambiguities and a perpetuation of a blurred
frontier between the public and private sectors? There are arguments in favor of a legal approach. Laws usually define terms and concepts. When statutes are written, these are made as clear as possible, particularly when there are thorough legal review processes prior to the promulgation of a new law, which help to clarify the law’s intentions. When the main criterion distinguishing the public and private sectors is that of control of an institutional unit by another unit—either public or private—a national law could define the meaning of an “institutional unit” and elaborate on the notion of control. It is particularly for corporations where the frontier between the public and private sectors can be blurred—where economic, but not legal, control exists. Special legislation could be adopted to create a specific public enterprise. As with general legislation (see next paragraph), laws for specific State-owned companies usually include
provisions that indicate the government’s legal rights to appoint directors and exercise control of the enterprise. State Enterprise Laws provide a generic framework for all public enterprises. These often specify the prerogatives of the State. In some cases, all public enterprises covered by the law are listed.3 State Enterprise Laws may spell out the conditions under which control by the State can be exercised, even if shareholding is less than 50 percent. For example, in Senegal this is done by including the shareholding of any intermediate public entity on a pro rata basis. Also, a financial controller of the Ministry of Finance (MoF) is assigned to the enterprise to ensure that any instructions are followed up (Box 2). A similar provision is in Cambodia’s General Statute on Public Enterprises, 1996, where the enterprise’s controlling ministry is stated to assure the economic control of the enterprise;4 the financial controller is authorized by law to “oppose measures that are against the objectives of the enterprise”. In contrast, Djibouti’s 1998 Public Enterprise Law defines public enterprises as companies in which the State or other legal entities defined in public law hold more than 50 percent of the shareholding. Although the law states that public enterprises are attached to a ministry that defines the general sector policies, the law makes clear that the enterprises’ policies are decided by the governing board, not the State’s representative. Thus, in Djibouti, the legal definition of public enterprises—and, hence, the public sector—appears to be unambiguous. However, the law also states that the prerogatives of the State are specified in the law’s implementing decree. Thus, for understanding whether the State exercises economic control of public enterprises where it holds less than 50 percent equity, it is necessary to review the dispositions of the implementing decree and how the legal framework is applied in practice.
3 See, for example, Djibouti’s 1998 law on National Companies, Public-Private Companies, and Commercial Public Establishments, whose annex lists 15 public enterprises, mostly utility, transport- and food-related companies, and also a development bank. Source: a website with public enterprise laws for various francophone
4 See article 20 of Loi portant statut général des entreprises publiques, available on website of footnote 3,
Box 2. Senegal: Provisions of the 1990 Law Relating to Public Sector Enterprises
Coverage of “para-public” sector:
Included: (1) public companies of an industrial and commercial character (these are regulated by government decree); (2) nationalized companies (these are created by special laws); and (3) companies with majority public shareholding (regulated by private Company Law). Excluded: Administrative public establishments.
Governance.
The Governing Board of the enterprise is composed of up to 12 members; the State
nominates two board members for their professional expertise; the number of State-appointed Board members is limited to three (“in order to avoid abuse”). Voting is by majority.
Majority ownership.
Public participation in the shareholding is calculated as: (1) if the direct public
ownership is at least 50 percent, any public share of a parent organization is ignored from calculations of total State shareholding; (2) if the direct public ownership is less than 50 percent, then the public ownership of any additional controlling entity is added, on a pro rata basis, to determine the total State shareholding.
State representatives.
Government appointees are not allowed to directly or indirectly intervene in
company operations. However, exceptionally, the President of the Republic of Senegal can override these requirements.
Control.
Para-public enterprises are dispensed of all ex ante controls by the MoF. Nonetheless, a MoF
controller oversees financial management, especially procurement operations, of each company. He also expresses views on the company’s planned investments. The controller is obliged to prepare periodic reports for the President of the Republic of Senegal, the MoF, the president of the Commission for Verifying and Auditing the Accounts of the Public Enterprise, the Inspection Générale des Finances (a high-level inspectorate under the MoF), and the company’s Chief Executive Officer. The controller must ensure that any Presidential directives to the enterprise’s managers are applied.
III. A FRAMEWORK FOR DEFINING MORE PRECISELY THE PUBLIC SECTOR
At a conceptual level, the GFSM2001 framework provides an adequate framework for
distinguishing the public and private sectors
In GFSM2001, the public sector is defined as the sum of units comprising “government” and public enterprises. This section examines “government” more carefully and elaborates on the various components of public sector, especially “general government”. Specific boundary issues, where interpretation of GFSM2001 is needed, are discussed more fully in section IV.
6 Although the GFS Manual is not accompanied by an implementation manual that would elaborate further on conceptual issues, there are nonetheless a number of notes on specific issues, including on the coverage and sectorization of the public sector; compilation and consolidation; and reclassification of GFSM 1986 data. See
A. Economic Sectors and Institutional Units
In the SNA and GFSM2001, the resident economy is divided into five mutually exclusive
sectors: households; the nonfinancial corporations sector; the financial corporations sector;
their primary activity); and nonprofit institutions serving households sector.
Institutional units in each sector have similar objectives, and these objectives are, in turn,
different from those of units in other sectors.
In the GFSM2001, an institutional unit shows the following characteristics:
•
It is capable in its own right of owning goods and assets; it is able to exchange its
ownership of goods and undertake asset transactions with other institutional units.
•
It is able to take economic decisions and engage in economic activities for which it is
held directly responsible and accountable by law.
•
It is able to incur liabilities on its own behalf, to take on other obligations or future
commitments, and to enter into contracts.
•
A complete set of accounts, including a balance sheet of assets, liabilities, and net
worth, exists for an institutional unit. If such balance sheet does not exist, it should be
possible, from both an economic and legal viewpoint, to compile a complete set of
accounts if these were to be required.
There are two main types of institutional units: (1) persons or groups of persons in the form
of households; and (2) legal or social entities whose existence is recognized by law or society
independently of the persons or other entities that may own or control them.
The Public Sector: Public Corporations and General Government
In GFSM2001, the public sector is comprised, at the broadest level, of public corporations
and “general government” (Figure 2). Since public corporations may be either financial or
nonfinancial, the public sector therefore encompasses three broad economic sectors:
government, financial and nonfinancial.
Public Corporations
A corporation is a legal entity created to produce goods and services for the market.
Corporations are collectively owned by shareholders who have the authority to appoint
directors responsible for its general management. A corporation may be a source of profit or
other financial gain to its owners. The profit motive is often the principal reason for
establishing a corporation, although this may not necessarily be the case.
7 Paragraph 2.1 of GFSM2001 specifies the generic economic functions of a government, namely to: (1) provide
goods and services to the community on a nonmarket basis; and (2) redistribute income and wealth.
government units. The division between financial and nonfinancial public corporations is
inconsequential for this paper (a country’s central bank and State-owned banks are clearly
part of the public sector).
Figure 2. The Public Sector
Source: Figure 2.2, IMF, 2001.
General Government
“General government” produces goods and services on a nonmarket basis, while public
corporations are created for the purpose of producing goods and services for the market. The
notion of “economically significant prices” is used for distinguishing between market
production and nonmarket production (Box 3). The general government sector has two parts:
(1) all general government units; and (2) all nonmarket nonprofit institutions (NPIs) that are
both controlled and mainly financed by government units.
8 This paper does not discuss differences in treatment of nonresident public enterprises between GFS and IPSAS. Foreign subsidiaries of public corporations are not part of the public sector in SNA, whereas they are included in the IPSASs (see Pitzer, 2004).
Public Sector
General
Government
Public
Corporations
Central
Government
State
Government
Local
Government
Financial Public
Corporations
Nonfinancial Public
Corporations
Monetary Public
Corporations, including
the central Bank
Nonmonetary Financial
Public Corporations
Box 3. Market Output and Economically Significant Price
Market output consists of goods and services that are sold at economically significant prices or intended for sale or otherwise disposed of on the market.
Nonmarket output consists of goods and services that are supplied free or at prices that are not
economically significant to other institutional units or the community as a whole.
Economically significant prices are prices that have a significant influence on the amounts the
producers are willing to supply and on the amounts purchasers wish to buy. An economically significant price does not have to be so high that all costs of production are covered.
A price that is not economically significant is one that is not quantitatively significant from the point of view of either supply or demand. Noneconomically significant prices may be nonzero. This is the case, for example, for prices charged to raise some revenue or achieve some reduction in the excess demand that occurs when services are provided completely free, but do not completely eliminate excess demand.
Source: IMF, 2001 pp. 10–11.
General government units are institutional units through which government authorities carry
out their functions. They have legislative, judicial, or executive authority over other
institutional units. General government units are distinguished from public corporations
(see Box 4).
Distinguishing Between a Public Corporation and General Government
Three criteria are used for making the distinction:
1) If a unit sells most or all of its output and its prices are economically significant, then the unit is a public corporation.
2) If none of the unit’s prices are economically significant, then the unit is a part of general
government.
3) If only some of the prices are economically significant or if the unit sells only some of its output, it is first possible to identify whether a quasi-corporation9 exists within the unit? If yes, then the organizational component that sells its output at economically significant prices and has a complete set of accounts should be treated as a quasi-corporation. The remaining components would be treated as a general government unit. If it is not possible to identify a quasi-corporation, then the components selling their output at economically significant prices remain an integral part of the general government unit, and the proceeds of their sales are part of the unit's revenue.
Source: IMF, 2001, paragraph 2.35.
A quasi-corporation is defined as entities that are not incorporated or otherwise legally established, but which function as if they were corporations. In the GFS system, they are institutional units separate from the units to which they legally belong.
All general government units are part of the general government sector and they assume
responsibility for: providing goods and services to the community as a whole or to individual
households on a nonmarket basis;
•
making transfer payments to redistribute income and wealth; and
•
financing their activities, directly or indirectly, mainly by means of taxes and other
compulsory transfers from units in other sectors.
Public sector NPIs are legal or social entities created for the purpose of producing goods and
services, but which cannot be a source of income, profit, or other financial gain for the units
that established, control, or finance them. If a NPI engages in market production, then the
NPI must either retain any surplus earned from its productive activities to support its future
operations or distribute it to institutional units other than the units that established, control, or
finance it. Market NPIs are classified as public corporations sector if they are owned or
controlled by government units. Nonmarket NPIs are part of the general government sector if
general government units control and mainly finance them.
In GFSM2001, statistical recording is for three levels of government: central; state, provincial, or regional; and local. The central government typically dominates “general government” as central governments provide collective services for the country as a whole, such as foreign affairs, national defense, and national economic management. In some countries, the decentralization of some government functions to lower levels is extensive. Government entities that are financed fully by budgets adopted by national legislatures make up budgetary central government. A single unit usually encompasses the fundamental activities of the national executive, legislative and judiciary powers. No component is a separate institutional unit if it does not have the authority to own assets, incur liabilities, or engage in transactions in its own right. Budgetary central government holds the authority to exercise control over other, less important, government institutional units. These include
autonomous institutional units and extrabudgetary units (those whose transactions are not
included in the central government budget). The borderline between “nonmarket” and “market” is far from distinct in many autonomous government agencies, which are authorized to own assets, incur liabilities, or engage in transactions in their own right, e.g., public hospitals, universities, research institutes. The problem of defining subsectors within the public sector, rather than a public-private boundary definitional issue, is discussed below.
Social security administrations constitute general government units of a particular kind. A social security administration must satisfy the general requirements of an institutional unit, i.e., it must be separately organized from the other activities of government units, hold its assets and liabilities separately, and engage in financial transactions on its own account. There are two possible methods of GFS presentation: either by classifying social security administrations according to the level of government that operates them and combining them with other general government units at that level, or by combining all social security administrations into a separate subsector of general government. Employer social insurance
funds need to be examined carefully to decide on their attribution to the public or private
sector (discussed in Subsection IV.D below).
IV. SPECIFIC BOUNDARY PROBLEMS RELATED TO THE PUBLIC AND PRIVATE SECTORS
This section examines the application of the above framework to specific arrangements
between institutional units of the private and public sectors—joint ventures, leasing, PPPs,
and employer social insurance.
A. Joint Ventures Involving Private Companies and Public Entities
The IFAC has defined and published financial reporting standards for three types of joint
ventures (Box 5).
Box 5. Types of Joint Ventures Between Public and Private Entities
• Jointly controlled operations. Each venturer uses its own property, plant, equipment, and
inventories, incurs its own expenses and liabilities and raises it own finance, which represent its
own obligations. A new corporation is not formed. The joint venture agreement usually provides a means by which the revenue from sales or the provision of a joint product and expenses incurred are shared among the venturers, e.g., a State-owned aircraft manufacturer and private sector parts suppliers. The joint venture is not required to prepare its own financial statements; each venture usually prepares management accounts concerning its interests in the joint venture.
• Jointly controlled assets. This is similar to above, except that one or more of the venturer’s assets a new corporation (institutional unit) is not established. Nor is there a requirement to prepare financial statements for the joint venture itself. Rather, each venturer recognizes in its own financial statements the share of jointly controlled assets and jointly shared revenues.
• Jointly controlled entities. A key difference in this case is that the joint venture involves the
establishment of a corporation or a partnership in which each venturer has an interest. The jointly
controlled entity controls its own assets, incurs its own liabilities or expenses and earns its own
revenues. It may enter into contracts in its own name, including raising finance for the joint
venture’s activity. It maintains its own accounting records and reports it financial statements, as for similar legal entities. Each venturer is encouraged to recognize its interest in such joint venturers.
Source: IFAC, 2008b.
For joint ventures in which operations and/or assets are controlled jointly by public and
private partners, but where a new institutional unit is not created, only minimal demarcation
issues arise. For the first two types of joint ventures of Box 5, most of the operations and
assets would be attributed to the units that undertake and own them. When sharing of assets
and revenues takes place, these can be allocated to the public or private sector on the basis of
the accounting conventions for sharing and reporting to the management of each entity. The
public sector entity would also recognize its share of any liabilities and expenses incurred
jointly in respect of its activities or its jointly controlled asset.
The third type of joint venture shown above has serious implications for the private/public
sector frontier: when a joint venture involves the establishment of a new institutional unit, a
single set of consolidated accounting statements needs to be prepared by the new entity.
However, for reporting to its shareholders, participating private companies can report its
involvement in joint ventures, based on its shares in the financial statements of the new
entity, which include the proportionate shares of revenues, expenses, assets, liabilities, and
cash flows. To allocate the operations and balance sheet items of jointly controlled entities to
the public or private sectors, the IFAC recommends using the proportionate method, as it
reflects the substance and economic reality of a venturer’s interest in a jointly controlled
entity. The equity method, although allowed, is not preferred (see Sections 35 to 46 of
IPSAS 8 for details, IFAC, 2008b).
Public Sector Leasing from the Private Sector
A government can lease a privately-owned asset in two ways. First, it can take an operating
lease (see Box 6 for a definition), under which payments by the government for services
provided by the private operator would be recorded as a government operating expense. Any
fees, lease payments, or other payments by private operators of concessions entered into with
the government would be recorded as government operating revenue. The asset would be
recorded on the private partner’s balance sheet. The second method is for the government to
enter a financial lease arrangement with the private partner, under which the government
acquires an asset. In this case, both the asset and the lease liability to the private sector would
be recorded on the government balance sheet. Subsequent depreciation and any interest
would be recorded in the government’s operating statement (assuming that the government
has moved to an accrual basis for accounting).
Financial leases are sometimes used by governments to obtain major capital equipment such as airplanes (PPPs—discussed in next subsection—also resemble financial leases in several respects). However, operating leasing arrangements are much more common. In the United States, for example, over 10 percent of all office space of federal agencies is leased, under operating leasing arrangements. The private sector is the owner10 of the office building from which the federal government rents space. There is no ambiguity concerning the public-
private sector ownership of the underlying asset, even though such operating leases are quite
costly compared with the alternatives of construction or lease-purchase.11
10 Exceptions occur if a federal agency rents space from a government business enterprise that owns rental buildings. In such cases, the leasing arrangement would resemble a public-public partnership. 11See GAO, 2005, which cites the Patent and Trademark Office’s operating lease for long-term space needs costing $48 million more than construction and $38 million more than lease-purchase. Under cash accounting,
operating leases look cheaper than the ownership option, which would be recorded fully upfront in the budget. This has resulted in an over-reliance on operating leases for federal agencies’ long-term space needs. GAO also notes that many assets have alarmingly deteriorated; restoration and repairs would require billions of dollars.
. Operating Leases and Financial Leases
Operating leasing is a productive activity that involves renting fixed assets for periods of time less than the expected service lives of the assets. It is a form of production in which the lessor provides a service to the lessee in exchange for lease payments. The lessor is typically responsible for the maintenance and repair of the equipment as part of the service provided to the lessee. When the government is the lessee, for accounting purposes, the lease payments are treated as a government expense.
Financial leasing is an arrangement for financing acquisitions of fixed assets. A contract is concluded between a lessor and a lessee whereby the lessor owns a fixed asset and puts it at the disposal of the lessee, and the lessee contracts to pay rentals that permit the lessor to recover all or almost all of its costs, including interest. As a result, several risks of ownership pass from the lessor to the lessee. To capture the economic reality, under accrual accounting, a change of ownership from the lessor to the lessee is deemed to take place, even though the leased good legally remains the property of the lessor until the termination of the lease, at which time the legal ownership is usually transferred to the lessee. In GFSM2001, which is based on accrual accounting, the private lessor is treated as having sold the asset to the government lessee and financed the sale with a loan.
Source: IMF, 2001, Appendix 2.
More generally, when the private sector is the owner of the asset from which the government
obtains benefits and the government controls the operation under an operating lease, there is
a strong risk that some financial commitments of the government are excluded in the annual
budget and accounts. Operating leasing contracts (under cash accounting) give rise to a
perception that they are low- or zero-cost arrangements, since the annual charges are
recognized and paid over time, rather than up-front.
Public-Private Partnerships
PPPs have become a popular method of financing large-scale infrastructure projects (Box 7).
In an increasing number of countries (see IMF, 2006, for a selective review), PPP contracts
have been drawn up in economic sectors (e.g., transportation—roads, railways, tunnels),
social sectors (e.g., education and health), and general public administration (e.g., prisons).
When contemplating infrastructure projects and their related services, governments face a
trade-off between quality and efficiency. The theory of ownership and contracting can
provide an analytical justification for PPPs (see IMF, 2006, for a review). The main
argument in favor of PPPs relates to their potential efficiency gains. It is perceived that the
government can benefit from private sector management and obtain better value for money
than by embarking on an infrastructure project by itself, using traditional public ownership
and procurement methods (Grimsey and Lewis, 2004; OECD, 2008). However, successful
PPPs require efficiency gains to be large enough to cover the additional private sector
borrowing and transaction costs.
Box 7. Public-Private Partnerships—What Are They?
PPPs often refer to arrangements where the private sector supplies infrastructure assets and services. In traditional acquisition of government assets or provision of services, the government provides financing, and retains all risks and responsibilities related to the infrastructure project. Under PPPs, the financing, risks and responsibilities are shared between the public and private sectors. Detailed contracts specify PPP arrangements.
Most PPPs include the following characteristics:
• Private execution and financing of public investment.
• The private sector is the legal owner of the infrastructure asset.
• The service provision from the infrastructure asset is provided by the private sector.
• Some risks of the infrastructure project are transferred to the government.
PPPs are often quite complex and the risks associated with PPP projects are numerous
(Box 8). The degree of private sector involvement and risk-sharing in PPPs varies: from
service contracts or management contracts (low private sector involvement), design-build-
finance-operate-maintain arrangements (intermediate private involvement), and build-own-
operate-(transfer) arrangements (high private involvement) (see Chart A of IFAC 2008c).
Risks for the government are particularly high for PPPs that are poorly-planned or executed.
Box 8. Risks in PPP Projects
Seven PPP project-related risks can be identified, some of which overlap:
•
Construction Risk: related to design problems, building cost overruns and project delays.
•
Financial Risk: related to project financing problems, for instance due to interest and exchange
rate variability.
•
Availability Risk: related to the continuity of quality service provision, which in turn depends
on the availability of a well-maintained PPP asset.
•
Demand Risk: related to the ongoing demand for the project’s services.
•
Political Risk: where government action could impair the private partner’s earnings potential.
•
Residual Value Risk: uncertainty regarding the market price of the infrastructure asset at the end
of the contract period (when private asset ownership reverts the public sector).
•
Force majeure: risks beyond the control of PPP partners (e.g., natural disasters).
Source: IMF, 2006.
In many PPPs, capital investment is financed by a private sector entity, which is the legal
owner of the asset, at least for a predetermined time period. If the PPP takes the form of an
operating lease, the PPP asset would be recorded on the private partner’s balance sheet. If the
PPP is in the nature of a financial lease, the government’s acquires an asset. Both the asset
and the lease liability to the private sector would be recorded on the government balance
sheet. Most PPPs are set up as operating leases, not as financial leases. For infrastructure projects under typical PPPs, the assets are often built and legally owned by the private operator. However, the government, rather than the private owner, bears many of the risks associated with ownership. This raises the question as to whether the government, although not the legal owner, is the de facto economic owner. If yes, then should the associated asset be recorded on the government’s balance sheet, in full or in part? If so, when: once the PPP project becomes operational? Or at the end of the contractual period, when the private sector’s depreciated asset is transferred to the public sector? These questions raise complex accounting issues, which are in the course of being resolved.
In 2004, Eurostat issued a decision classifying the assets of PPP projects as public or private, based on which risks are borne by the private sector. According to Eurostat, the assets of PPP projects are classified as private assets and recorded in the balance sheets of the private partner if the private partner bears: (i) the construction risk; and (ii) either the availability or the demand risk (Eurostat, 2004). Since the private sector typically bears the construction and availability risks, under the Eurostat guideline, there is a strong incentive for governments to design PPPs to meet the two criteria, resulting in PPPs not being recorded in governments’ financial statements. This is despite a strong risk (for some projects) that the government is the economic owner of the asset: once the PPP project becomes operational, the government may begin bearing some of the nonconstruction risks listed in Box 8. This is likely for PPP projects in which the government guarantees the private partner against the risk of default. A more general question is: should risks be used as the key criterion for PPP accounting
purposes? To begin addressing these issues, the IPSASB of IFAC issued a consultation paper
in March 2008. Once finalized after August 2008, an internationally-agreed standard for
treating specific PPP asset ownership and other accounting issues will be established. A
summary of the paper and the key proposals put forward by IPSASB are shown in Box 9.
The IPSASB paper focuses on accounting issues related to PPPs that combine a construction
element with an operations concession element—termed “service concession arrangements”
(SCAs). The accounting for SCAs is particularly difficult because these arrangements
involve a relatively even sharing between the government and the private constructor-
operator of the various risks, responsibilities, benefits, control of the underlying
infrastructure, and delivery of the associated services. The IPSASB aims to clarify which
party should report the underlying infrastructure as an asset in their financial statements.
The key proposal of IPSASB is that the government should include the underlying asset in its
financial statements if it is considered to control the property. The criteria for determining
“control” are crucial. Two criteria are proposed for public sector control, notably if the public
sector entity:
Controls or regulateswhat services the operator must provide with the underlying
property, to whom it must provide them, and the price ranges or rates that can be
charged for services; and
•
Controls—through ownership, beneficial entitlement or otherwise—the residual
interest in the property at the end of the arrangement.
Box 9. IPSASB Proposals for Accounting for PPPs
The IPSASB consultation paper:
• Provides an overview of the various PPP arrangements, of which SCAs are a subset. Lack
of specific guidance for SCAs has caused divergence in how the property in SCAs is reported,
even occasionally resulting in the property not being reported by either the public sector entity
or the private sector entity.
• Notes that governments have used SCAs to fulfill their infrastructure needs while not
recognizing the property and related financing in their financial statements.
• Addresses whether the public sector entity should report the underlying property as an
asset. The main issues relates to the timing of the recognition and measurement of the
underlying property, as well as any associated liabilities.
• Examines three other issues related to SCAs: (1) the recognition of revenue from resource
inflows; (2) guarantees and commitments made by the public sector entity; and (3) financial
statement note disclosures.
Proposals of the IPSASB consultation paper. The government should:
• Report the property underlying an SCA as an asset in its financial statements if it is
considered to control the property.
• Measure the government’s asset and any related liability (obligations to provide
compensation to the operator), based on the fair value of the property, except in cases where
scheduled payments made by the government can be separated into a construction element and
a service element.
• Recognize the SCA’s contractually determined inflows of resources to be received by a
government from an operator as government revenue as they are earned over the life of the
SCA, beginning when the underlying property is fully operational.
Source: IFAC, 2008c.
In making its proposals for accounting for SCAs, the IPSASB considered alternatives, such
as basing financial reporting of the asset on: (1) risks—as recommended by Eurostat in 2004;
(2) the access to the (future economic) benefits and exposure to the associated risks—as used
by the United Kingdom,12
12 See pp. 17–20 of IFAC, 2008c for a discussion of the key elements of accounting standards for reporting
“private finance initiatives” (the U.K.’s term of PPPs that are of the nature of a SCA).
for example; or (3) unbundling of the components—as suggeste by Hemming and others.
13 The third option would require quantification of the risks, rewards and benefits, and a splitting of the value of assets and liabilities to the private and public sector partners. While conceptually appealing compared with the binary approach of attributing assets to only one of the two sectors, this suggestion would be extremely difficult to apply in practice, especially since significant value judgments would be required to allocate a portion of the PPP asset to the private sector and another part to the public sector. Irrespective of how the accounting issues are resolved, given the risk-sharing nature of PPP projects and the long-term commitments of governments under PPP contracts, it is appropriate to assess and quantify the risks borne by the government and to disclose all associated risks, especially those arising from PPPs and government guarantees. In this context, Fiscal Risk Statements are helpful for discussing the future medium-term financial implications of contingent liabilities and any other potential costs of PPP projects to the government (see also Boxes 6 and 7 of the IMF’s Manual on Fiscal Transparency, IMF, 2007). Such statements should identify the principal financial hazards and quantify them if possible. A fiscal risk statement can be prepared and presented to parliament in a document accompanying the draft annual budget law, thereby enhancing the transparency of government financial operations.
D. Social Insurance Schemes
According to the GFSM2001, social protection can be organized as social assistance
schemes, social security schemes, or employer social insurance schemes. Social assistance
schemes are organized and operated by government units; there is no earmarking of revenue
for social assistance benefits, which are treated as an expense in general government
accounts. Social security schemes in GFSM2001 are social insurance schemes that are
imposed, controlled and financed by government. By definition they are organized and
operated only by government units. In many countries, entire institutional units are devoted
to the operation of a social security scheme. Such units—social security funds—are special
types of government units. For a social security fund to exist, it must be separately organized
from other government units, hold its assets and liabilities separately, and engage in financial
transactions on its own account. For social assistance and social security schemes, the
payment of some benefits, e.g., invalidity benefits or retirement benefits, may be spread over
several accounting periods—a liability for future payments has been incurred. Under accrual
accounting, the present value of those benefits should be recorded on the balance sheet of the
government. For this paper, the key point regarding these two types of schemes is that they
unambiguously belong to the public sector. In contrast, the allocation of employer social
insurance schemes to the public or private sectors is less clear, in part because there are
several types of schemes, notably funded and unfunded, and the private sector may be
contracted to manage the scheme. A social insurance scheme is funded if there are identified reserves or accounts assigned for the payment of benefits. Funded employer schemes can be operated by: (1) insurance 13 See pp. 27–28 of IMF, 2006. enterprises; (2) autonomous pension funds; or (3) non-autonomous pension funds. Unfunded social insurance schemes are operated by the employer without assigning specific accounts or creating special reserves for the payment of benefits. Instead, the benefits are paid from the employer’s general resources. If a public sector unit organizes an employer social insurance scheme but contracts with an insurance enterprise for its operation, then the general government unit or public corporation that is the employer will pay the required social contributions to the insurance enterprise on behalf of its employees. All other transactions of the social insurance scheme will be the responsibility of the insurance enterprise. If the insurance enterprise is a private corporation, then its transactions, such as the payment of benefits, administrative expenses, investment of assets, and incurrence and liquidation of retirement and other liabilities, will be recorded in its financial statement—the accounts of the public sector will not be affected. If, on the other hand, the insurance enterprise is a public corporation, then the accounts of the public sector would be affected by the operations of the insurance scheme (although there would be no impact on the accounts of the general government sector).
Thus, when governments, as an employer, set up social insurance schemes for its employees,
and a privately-owned insurance enterprise manages the government’s scheme, all of the
assets and liabilities would be recorded in the accounts of the private financial corporation.
Only the government’s expenses would be recorded in its operating and cash flow
statements. The same would apply if an autonomous pension fund were to operate the
pension scheme for civil servants (and/or military). In contrast, if a non-autonomous (i.e., a
government owned) pension fund operated the scheme, all assets, liabilities, revenues, and
expenses would be recorded on the government unit’s own accounts.
V. THE BOUNDARY BETWEEN THE PUBLIC SECTOR AND GENERAL GOVERNMENT
Applying the principles and definitions shown above in Boxes 3 and 4 to distinguish “general
government” from “public corporations” proves to be difficult in practice. The main
difficulty is in distinguishing “nonmarket” and “market” producers for each government-
controlled entity.
A. Extrabudgetary Funds
In addition to social insurance funds (discussed above), countries establish other
extrabudgetary government entities to carry out specific functions (e.g., road construction;
health services, higher education). These institutional units typically have their own off-
budget revenues and make expenditures that are not necessarily included in the government’s
annual budget appropriations (although these units’ resources are often supplemented by
transfers from the national budget). Managers of extrabudgetary funds often have discretion
over the volume and composition of their spending.
Extrabudgetary entities can be classified to be in the general government sector or in the
public corporations sector. Clearly extrabudgetary entities that they are nonmarket producers
and controlled by another government unit belong to general government, even when legally
established as separate entities and somewhat independent from central government
ministries. Governments may choose to use such nonmarket producers, rather than
government ministries, to carry out certain government policies, since they can be detached,
objective and, in to large degree, free from political pressures, e.g., for research and
development; setting of standards in health, education, safety, and the environment.
If an extrabudgetary entity is producing market output, it fulfills the GFSM2001 criterion to
be a market establishment. Market establishments that have: (1) complete accounting records
about it production activities, but not (2) a complete balance sheet, nor (3) the ability to
engage in financial transactions in its own name, are deemed to belong to “general
government”. Market establishments that also satisfy the last two qualities are deemed to be
quasi-corporations and, as such, would belong to the public corporation sector. For example,
government-owned universities or public hospitals that are market producers—i.e., charge
fees based on the costs of producing the services or that are sufficiently high to have
a significant impact on the demand for services provided—would be classified as
institutional units of the general government sector, not the nonfinancial corporations sector,
when it has accounting records of its output and costs of production, but does not satisfy
criteria (2) and (3) above. In contrast, a public road authority that receives road tolls in its
own name, affects the demand for usage of the road by the size of its fees, and has full
accounting records including a balance sheet, would be classified in the public nonfinancial
corporations sector (even if unincorporated). In practice, the distinction between “nonmarket” and “market” is difficult to apply. For example, a university that is controlled by the government would be “nonmarket” if it does not charge fees or charges only nominal fees that do not significantly affect demand for its services. Even a modest fee would affect demand coming from students of low-income families. A first question relate to whether it is possible to determine the threshold level of tuition fees, below which the entity would be classified as “nonmarket”. Even if a market establishment is identified, a second set of questions pertain to whether or not the entity can act in its own name and has a complete balance sheet, i.e., would be regarded as a quasi- corporation, not part of general government. To apply the “market” versus “nonmarket” categorization for government entities, Eurostat has established a rule for use in European Union countries (Box 10). In other countries, where reports are prepared for compiling the “general government” statistics (e.g., those published in IMF’s GFS Yearbook), agencies may be categorized according to their legal status, as this is an easier option. The extent of misreporting from this source is not known, although it is generally thought to be low.
Box 10. The European Union’s 50 Percent Rule
In the ESA95, the concept of economically significant prices is implemented on the basis of whether or not production costs covered by sales covers more than 50 percent. In distinguishing market and nonmarket producers by means of the 50 percent criterion, “sales” and
“production costs” are defined as follows:
• “Sales” cover the sales excluding taxes on products but including all payments made by general
government that are linked to the volume or value of output. Payments to cover an overall deficit are excluded.
• “Production costs” are the sum of intermediate consumption, compensation of employees,
consumption of fixed capital and other taxes on production. Other subsidies on production are not deducted. To ensure consistency of the concepts of sales and production costs when applying the 50 percent criterion, the production costs exclude all costs made for own-account capital formation. The 50 percent criterion is applied by looking over a range of years. The criterion is applied when it holds for several years or holds for the present year and is expected to hold for the near future.
Source: Section 5.2, p. 14, Eurostat, 2002.
B. Autonomous Government Agencies
Various types of autonomous agencies have emerged in recent years as instruments of new
public management. The classification of many of these agencies within the “general
government sector” can be problematic. In many cases, such agencies are expected to behave
in a “commercial” manner. For example, they are authorized to raise their own revenues by
charging for the services they provide. In some OECD countries, budgetary appropriations
are voted by parliament on a net basis—ministries’ gross expenditures minus the operating
revenues of the ministries or units they control. By allowing agencies to retain the revenues
they raise—and to spend them—agencies have an incentive to maximize their income, which
also forces users to pay for government-provided services.
In the United Kingdom, for example, public management reforms led to the creation of over
130 executive agencies, established to carry out functions of government within a policy and
resources framework set by the parent department. Executive agencies are required to publish
their corporate and business plans, to prepare annual reports and financial accounts, and
present these to parliament after audit by the National Audit Office. Few executive agencies
have their own legal identity. Although many executive agencies appear to fulfill several of
the criteria for institutional units (described in section III.A above), such agencies are usually
not directly responsible and accountable by law for their outcomes, since the parent
minister/ministry establish agency policies. They are therefore appropriately classified as part
of “budgetary central government.”
A different situation arises for institutional units whose functions and policies are at a greater
distance from ministerial control. Again taking the United Kingdom as an example, a
nondepartment public body (NDPB) is an entity that is not a government department or part
of one, and which operates independently of ministers, even though they are ultimately
responsible to a minister. In contrast to executive agencies, non-advisory NDPBs have their
own legal identity and their own governing boards, although appointments to their boards are
made by ministers (or officials on behalf of ministers). When OECD attempted to classify the diverse arrangements for “autonomous” agencies in member countries, it identified several distinguishing features, including legal status, governance structures, staffing rules, and funding (Table 2).
Table 2. Different Types of Autonomous Public Bodies
Departmental Agencies
Public Law Administrations Private Law Bodies
Legal Status Part of ministries with no separate identity; function under public Law Partially or completely separate from ministries; function under public law Not companies, but have full separate legal identity; function under private law Governance Chief executive, directly appointed by minister who has operational
Control Usually have a governing or advisory board, with minister exerting indirect control Governing board, with minister exerting indirect control Staffing Employed under general civil service rules Usually subject to rules for civil servants; in some cases, subject to general employment rules Usually employed under a general employment law Funding Allocations from state budget Mostly financed by government revenues, but often allowed to retain and spend their own revenues and carry over surpluses Have budget separated from ministry; mostly financed by revenues from sales, can carry forward surpluses, borrow, and lend Source: pp. 13–19, OECD, 2002.
“Autonomous” agencies also differ according to the extent to which the government
exercises policy control over their operations—via general guidelines, representation on
governing boards, and reporting requirements to “parent” ministries and to parliament. To
clarify these issues for the various types of agencies in New Zealand, an agencies (“Crown
Entities”) law was adopted in 2004 (Box 11). Although this law provides a clear framework
for categorizing agencies according to the extent of policy control by government Ministers
(or parent ministries), it is not possible in this law to identify which agencies charge
“economically significantly” prices for their outputs and which do not. For example, a
privately-owned school partly funded by government would, in the GFSM2001 framework,
be classified as a private NPI (if it is deemed to be operating on a nonmarket basis) or a
private quasi-corporation (if it charges “economically significant” prices). In either case, the
ownership criterion would require it to be part of the private sector. In contrast, a public-
owned school would be classified as a public NPI (and hence “general government”) or a
public quasi-enterprise (and hence the public corporations sector) in the GFSM2001. Thus,
for properly allocating schools to the private or public sectors—and, more generally, all
Crown Entities covered under the scope of the law—it would be necessary to distinguish the
entities according to the ownership and control criteria. This case provides another example
of the limitations of law in attributing institutional units to the public or private sectors—as
defined in the GFSM2001 framework.
Box 11. New Zealand: Categories of Government Agencies
The Crown Entities Act, 2004 provides the legal basis for the following categories of agencies:
• Government agent. These are entities whose service delivery is very closely intertwined with
government policy and undertake non-independent executive functions.
• School Boards of Trustees and Tertiary Education Institutions. These are a special category
of “government agent” that have their own governance and accountability regimes, and are not
necessarily government-owned (e.g., private schools that are funded primarily by government).
• Autonomous government entities. These entities are required to give effect to, or have regard
for, the policies of the government, but do not need to be subject to a high degree of ministerial
control.
• Independent government entities. For decision-making, these entities operate with
independence from government ministers. They are not required to give effect to, or have
regard for, the policies of the government.
• Government-owned companies. These are companies registered under the Crown Entities
Act, rather than the general Companies Act, because the company’s objectives are not
exclusively commercial. Examples include Radio/Television New Zealand and New Zealand
Venture Capital Fund Limited.
The regulations accompanying the 2004 law specifies the agencies’ financial reporting requirements,
including any exceptions e.g., with respect to reporting bank accounts; borrowing; government
guarantees; and paying surpluses to the State.
Sources: p. 145, Gill, 2002; New Zealand Treasury, 2006.
VI. CONCLUSIONS
The boundary between the public and private sectors, at a conceptual level, can be defined
unambiguously. After ruling out the impossibility of defining the public sector on the basis of
the functions it undertakes, this paper emphasizes the concept of ownership as the basis for
delineating the two sectors. The notion of an “institutional unit” is also fundamental.
The concept of ownership is critical in defining the institutional units that belong to the
public or private sectors. International accounting standards give precedence to economic
ownership over legal ownership. Economic ownership is exercised by a controlling entity
when it has the power to govern the financial and operating policies of the other entity. Two
conditions are essential for economic control: first, at least one “power” condition, such as
the majority voting interest or the power to appoint or remove governing board members, is
required; second, at least one “benefit” condition, such as the power to dissolve the entity or
to control asset distributions, is also needed.
Laws can elaborate on the notion of control. However, law does not provide an
internationally-acceptable definition of the two sectors. Unlike the accounting profession,
which has established international norms useful for delineating the two sectors, no
international law body has attempted to prepare international legal guidelines for defining the
public and private sectors. For corporations that are perceived to be on the borderline
between the public and private sectors, a review of public enterprise laws and their
implementing decrees is needed for understanding how the legal framework clarifies or blurs
the delineation of the two sectors. If, for example, the law does not explicitly proscribe
political intervention into the operations of a public corporation in which the government has
minority shareholding, it is still possible for the government to exercise economic (or
de facto) control of the enterprise, even when de jure control is by the private sector.
Institutional units engaged in economic activities, take economic decisions in their own
name, own goods and assets, incur liabilities, and are able to compile a complete set of
accounts. In GFMS2001, the central government of a country is one such institutional unit.
The public sector is comprised of “general government”—central and local governments, and
all extrabudgetary funds controlled by them—and all public corporations. The private sector
comprises households, private corporations, and privately-owned nonprofit organizations.
The GFSM2001 provides an adequate conceptual framework for demarcating the public
sector, which is comprised of all nonmarket government-owned entities and corporations
(including quasi-corporations—corporations that are not legally incorporated) that are owned
or controlled by government units.
When it comes to applying the GFSM2001 framework, guidelines are needed. In this context,
the IPSASB of the International Federation of Accountants has issued various guidelines
useful for demarcating the two sectors and measuring them in a mutually exclusive manner.
For joint ventures in which the public and private sector partners establish a jointly-
controlled entity, accounting standards permit the operations and balance sheets of the entity
to be allocated partly to the public sector and partly to the private sector. For PPPs,
accounting norms propose standards for the most difficult-to-categorize PPPs—those that
involve a construction element (usually the private partner constructs an asset on behalf of
the public sector) and a concession element (under which the public sector leases assets from
the private partner). As in public-private financial leasing arrangements, if the public sector
is considered to control the property (even if the private sector is the legal owner) the public
sector should report the underlying property in its financial statements. Thus, accounting
norms enable the transactions, assets and liabilities of institutional units involved in PPPs to
be reported clearly, in the accounts of either the private sector entity or in the public sector.
Social insurance funds can belong to either the public or private sectors. One borderline issue
relates to civil service pension schemes. When a privately-owned insurance enterprise
manages a funded pension scheme of government employees (to which the government
contributes), then all of the assets and liabilities would be on the balance sheet of the private
company. In many countries, however, government employee pension schemes are not
autonomous, not (fully) funded, and are recorded entirely in the government’s accounts.
It could be argued that the risks for the government of some PPPs are extensive and that,
even if the accounting standards appear to delineate the two sectors adequately in the present,
there is still considerable likelihood that a semi-private/semi-public leviathan will emerge
from the grayness of accounting backwaters and record its “rightful” place in the
government’s expense account. This fear for the future is understandable and justified. The
asymmetrical risk-sharing involved in many PPP projects—and the accounting standards for
allocating these risks in the present—may be reversed in the future. This is case especially
for PPPs with risks for the government that are not adequately captured in the accounts of
either the public or private sectors. A government guarantee is one particular contingent
liability that may induce large budgetary payments in the future that is not captured in
today’s government accounts.
The existence of such risks to the government’s future budget and accounts is acknowledged.
However, when the risk eventuates, there will be a transfer of ownership. This will induce a
transfer of the recording of assets and, especially, of liabilities. For example, if the private
sector partner of a PPP defaults on a loan from its commercial bank and the government
assumes the guaranteed loan, then the net worth in the government’s balance sheet would
deteriorate by the amount of the guaranteed loan. This would enlarge the balance sheet of the
public sector, but it would not alter the definition of the two sectors.
Given that governments may lose assets or gain liabilities in the future, it is desirable for the
governments to monitor, disclose and manage all fiscal risks, so as to minimize undesirable
future pressure on its budget and financial statements. In this context, guidelines of good
budget is presented to parliament, of a Statement on Fiscal Risks.
This paper argues that boundary problems within the public sector are particularly acute. This
is because of ambiguities in distinguishing “market” from “nonmarket” activities. However,
as with the delineation of the frontier between the public and private sectors, this problem
also can be overcome by establishing rules such as those of ESA95.
Establishing, then applying, accounting rules is a pragmatic way to unravel the complex
realities induced by joint public-private ownership and de facto government control. What
appears at first sight to be an undefined gray zone between the public and private sectors, can
in fact be split into component parts and measured without ambiguity, admittedly by rules
that, at the detailed level, contain a degree of arbitrariness.
14 See pp. 32–25 of IMF, 2008.
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