Research and Experiences on Financing Urban Infrastructure
in Indonesia
Ibnu SyabriResearch Center for Environment, Regional
Development, and InfrastrucureInstitut Teknologi Bandung, Indonesia
International Conference on Sustainability Science in AsiaNovember 23-24, 2009AIT Conference Center
ICSS-ASIA AIT-Bangkok 23-25 Nov 2009
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Outline
• Rationale and Context, and Objectives of the study• Challange for Financing Urban Infrastructure In
Indonesia • The Framework: Role of Infrastructure in Poverty
Reduction and Property Value Rise• (Research) and Experinces on Financing Urban
Infrastructure in Indonesia• Value Capture as an Alternative Source of Funding• Some Examples• Conclusion
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Rationale and Context, and Objectives
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Rationale and Context
• Major Infrastructure Problems:– Roads in and around major cities are heavily
congested, public transport underdeveloped, and water supply networks are in poor condition (Syabri et al., 2007).
– New urban developments have remained limited to restricted areas or only profitable land-uses such as real estate development, high-income apartments and shopping malls.
– Pro-poor land-uses such as decent water supply, public transport or low-income housing are underdeveloped.
– At the same time, essential funding capacities to deal with these problems are limited.
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Rationale and Context (2)• Indonesia is lacking stable funding and capacities for
infrastructure projects such as urban public transportation and water supply.
• Now, at a time when investment capacities in the private sector have slowly recovered from the financial crisis at the end of the 1990s, a unique possibility comes to light here, aimed at anticipating land-value increase from infrastructure development to actually finance, through value-capturing, a range of developments, including public transport.
• The problem is, however, that the application of value capturing is constrained by a lack of knowledge, ability, and institutional support.
• The study project examines how largely unexplored instrument in Indonesia can help raise revenues for the finance of infrastructure investments in Indonesia, particularly in the field of public transportation.
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Objectives
• explores – based on evidence of various international empirical studies and on some information of recent research in Indonesian cities – the relation between infrastructure development and land values, answering the question ‘how much value, in principle, can be captured?’
• investigates possible policy instruments for value capturing. It will be argued that the legal instruments for value capturing that are used in mostly developed countries (e.g, UK, particularly in the USA) hasn’t been used in the Indonesian context.
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Challange for Financing Urban Infrastructure In Indonesia
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Urban Sector in Indonesia
• Agglomeration Benefits• Economic Opportunity
– Absorbs rural-urban migration
• Catalysts/ Innovators/ Incubators
• 50+% of the total population resides in Urban areas (2008)• Cities: engines of productivity and growth; urban sector
contributes to ~70% of Indonesia’s non-petroleum GDP
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Global Infrastructure Needs are Tremendous
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%%
of
Develo
pin
g C
ou
ntr
y P
op
ula
tio
n
AllSeason
RoadAccess
CleanWater
Sani-tation
ModernEnergy
PhoneAccess
Access Needs
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Investment Needs for Infrastructure in Indonesia
Government’s ability has been limited by budgetary constraints.
Current economic circumstances dictate the need to resort to private sector participation
Infrastructure Annual Investment Needs 2005-2010
Average Annual Investment Needs (US$ 22 billion)
7 – 8 %
of
GDP
Average Central and Local Government Budget Allocation (US$ 4.2 billion)
Annual Funding Gap (US$ 17.8 billion and expected to be sought from Private Sector)
4 – 5 %Of
GDP
3 %Of GDP
Source: Minister for Infrastructure and Regional Development, Indonesia
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Challanges for Urban Management (1)1. Population pressures – poverty & slums
– Urban Poverty: Roughly, there are 33 million poor in Indonesia. About 35 per cent of them live in urban areas.
– Rural to urban ‘migration’ (non-permanent migrants) especially to the fringe areas. e.g., rate of annual population growth Jakarta City was only 0.16% over the period of 2000-2005, but rate of population growth in cities in the adjacent areas was much higher. (doughnut phenomenon, mega-urbanization)
2. Urban infrastructure service provision: Lack of urban infrastructure and public services, including clean water, shelters, drainage, public transportation, electricity.
1. Water & sanitation: >100 million Indonesians (33% urban households) don’t have access to piped water and adequate sanitation (2008)
2. Solid waste management: only 2% of waste is recycled; only 40% transported to disposal site (2008)
3. Transport & traffic management: mobile-source pollution; increasing congestion limits economic growth
3. Environmental problems in Indonesia’a large cities: including air pollution, floods, land subsidence, lack of green space, sea water intrusion etc.
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Challanges for Urban Management (2)
4. ‘Social polarization’ (fragmentation) reflected in the settlement patterns in large cities. Disparities between middle and high-income group settlements with ‘slum areas’ of the city poor.
5. Disparities between large and smaller cities development (Regional Perspective).
• Nearly 60% of direct foreign investment and 30% of domestic investment in Indonesia’s manufacturing sectors are located in Jakarta Metropolitan Area (JMA).
• The proportion of urban population of JMA over the total Indonesia’s urban population have reached more than 20% by 2005.
6. Low level of local government capacity to manage urban development, in terms of institutions and expertise
7. Urban development governance does not work well yet:• lack of stakeholders participation.• weak law enforcement • weak accountability
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Changing Context
From ‘Authoritarian’ Government to Regional Autonomy and Decentralization, What are the impacts?:
1. The local government (Cities / Districts) have more discretion to decide development program (during Suharto’s era, the New Order Regime, the local government simply only implemented the central government instructions).
2. The local government have more sources of revenues (e.g, central government transfers: Block Grant, Revenue Sharing, and Special Grant).
3. Many local government leaders consider their region (Cities / Districts) as their own ‘Kingdom of Authority’ (‘regional egoism’ which make integrated urban and regional infrastructure development even more difficult to do)
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Central and Local Spending on Infrastructure as % of GDP
Central
Local
Decentralization assigned Infrastructure sector functionsto local governments with little experience
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Challenges Ahead (1)
1. Impacts of Global Economic Recession:– Decreasing local governments own income,
resulted in declining public services; maintenance of urban infrastructure; and increasing the urban poor. It might reach its peak in 2010.
– Local governments are often promised revenue transfers from the central government but fail to receive the revenues when national tax revenues are tight.
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Challenges Ahead (2)
2. Impacts of Climate Change (e.g., sea-level rise, changing precipitation pattern) affect:– coastal cities and regions, which are more
vulnerable to disasters, including floods, and storm. It has happened in Jakarta, (40% of landed area of Jakarta City is below sea-level), Semarang, north coast of Java, and coast of Marauke.
– A large number of Indonesia’s poor live in the coastal area. They are vulnerable to disaster, such as Floods.
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The Framework: The Framework: Role of InfrastructureRole of Infrastructure in in Poverty ReductionPoverty Reduction and and
Property Value RiseProperty Value Rise
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The Connecting Role of Infrastructure: The Connecting Role of Infrastructure:
Poverty ReductionPoverty Reduction • IInfrastructure both impacts directly on poverty nfrastructure both impacts directly on poverty
through services, and supports the processes of through services, and supports the processes of growth on which much poverty reduction depends.growth on which much poverty reduction depends.
• And at its best, infrastructure draws poverty reduction, And at its best, infrastructure draws poverty reduction, service provision and growth into a reinforcing cycle: service provision and growth into a reinforcing cycle:
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The Connecting Role of Infrastructure: The Connecting Role of Infrastructure:
Property Value RiseProperty Value Rise • Similarly, infrastructure both impacts directly on
values of property through better services, and supports the processes of growth.
• And at its best, in urban area infrastructure support land development, service provision and growth into a reinforcing cycle:
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Infrastructure Impacts on Urban Area
• High demand can justify economies of scale
• High population density promotes lower unit costs
• Feasibility analysis can use conventional cost-benefit analysis
• Market segmentation is possible• City government can utilize private sector for
urban regeneration
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(Research) and Experienceson Financing Urban Infrastructure
in Indonesia
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Financing Urban Infrastructure
• Financing of urban infrastructure in Indonesia is primarily through budgetary allocations of central, state and local government, grants and loans from multilateral or bilateral agencies or through institutional lending.
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Financing Infrastructure Services
• Governments, donors, and the private sector are funding sources for infrastructure facilities
• Government and internally generated private funding ultimately are drawn from the same domestic resources.
• Donor resources or externally generated private-sector funding come from outside Indonesia.
• These external resources have the greatest economic effect when domestic resources are unavailable.
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Major Infrastructure Problems
• Roads in and around major cities are heavily congested, public transport underdeveloped, and water supply networks are in poor condition (Syabri et al., 2007).
• New urban developments have remained limited to restricted areas or only profitable land-uses such as real estate development, high-income apartments and shopping malls.
• Pro-poor land-uses such as decent water supply, public transport or low-income housing are underdeveloped.
• At the same time, essential funding capacities to deal with these problems are locked in profitable projects.
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Value Capture as an alternative source of funding
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Idea of Value Capture• Public investments in infrastructure for transport are often result in
increased land and property values in nearby areas. • The construction of a railway link, for example, will improve the
attractiveness of surrounding locations. Generally, investments in new infrastructure improve accessibility and property values.
• This link between infrastructure investments and property values offers a legitimate opportunity for public agencies to negotiate with property developers to finance part of the infrastructure costs or take on added, usually non-profitable projects.
• Value capturing in essence is an approach where land value increments are partly recouped by the public sector (Smolka, 2000).
• Public agencies capture a portion of development profits, or require from the developer to take care of some additional projects.
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Mobilazation of land Value Capture Increment
– Rural-urban conversion– Selling of building rights – Urban infrastructure provision– Land readjustment
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Schema for Structural Relationships of Value Capture
Source: T-IMPROVE Methodology, 2004
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Lesson Learn
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Seoul
Greening Central Seoul: Greening Central Seoul: Thermal Intensity Thermal Intensity in CBDin CBD
Temperature down by Average lowering 2%~5%
Seoul: Freeway Removal-Stream Restoration, Cheong Gye Cheon
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Marginal Effects of Freeway vs Greenway on Commercial Land Price
0%
5%
10%
15%
20%
25%
30%
35%
0~100m 100~200m 200~300m 300~400m 400~500m
Marg
inal
Effec
ts
Distance Interval to Cheonggyecheon
Freeway
Greenway
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Value Capture: Jakarta’s Experience
• Jakarta’s Betterment Tax (Pajak Khusus):– Promotes “equitable” financing– Curb speculation
• Dilemmas:– Land registries incomplete– Lax administration/enforcement– Non-compliance … without sale, no $
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JakartaJakarta Infrastructure Investments as Growth Magnets (Cervero et. Al)
Java SeaJava Sea
Outer Ring Road
Blok M
MONAS
N
Figure 1. Surveyed Office Sites in DKI Jakarta
KotaKota
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Accessibility IndexMetric of “Cumulative Opportunities”
AIj = i [Resi * Dij-.5]
Resi = residents zone i
Dij = Network distance (kilometers)
between centroids of zone i and j
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Figure 2. Accessibility Index for 19 Office Clusters
MONAS
Sunter By pass
Senen
Kemayoran
Menteng
Thamrin
Sudirman
Semanggi
Pd. Indah
TebetMampang
Kota
Tomang
Senayan
N, Kuningan
S, Kuningan
Ring road
G.Subroto
Slipi
N
Java Sea
-3-2-101
1
-3.45
-10123 2.18
-10123 2.51
-10123
0.24
-2-101
-0.78
-2-101
-1.78-2-101
-0.57-2-101
-0.56-3-2-101
-2.94-2-101
-1.92
-2-101
-0.32
-2-101
-0.75
-1012 0.90
-1012
0.30
-1012
-0.68
-2-101
-1.15
-1012 1.49
-10123
0.15
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82%
24%15%
4% 5% 2%0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
0-0.5 0.5 - 1.0 1.0 - 2.0
Distance to Freeway or Rail Stop (Km)
% L
and-
Val
ue P
rem
ium
FreewaysRail Stations
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Bandung Metropolitan Area (BMA)Uplifting Value around Train
Stations
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The Studi Area
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Sustainable FinanceBandung R+P (Retail+Property)
• 17 Km, 8 stations with 1 R+P (Retail and Property) program• 37.3 % of all Public Transport Trips in Bandung• Indonesia’s Densest City ( 30,000 persons/km2)
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Affected Areas
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Land Use Map of Bandung Station
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Project Objectives (1)
• To reduce the number of cars, buses, microbus to downtown Bandung (CBD), thus relieving the downtown area and reducing the total transit time.
• To improve the various means of transportation, so travellers can change modes of transportation easily as an encouragement to use the various means of transportation available and thus take advantage of faster, safer, more comfortable transportation.
• The train, or LRT, will be the preferred means of transportation available to the traveller, as it is fast, comfortable and safe, and capable of carrying a much higher number of people than microlets or buses.
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Project Objectives (2)
• To assess the potential of each station to become a transportation mode exchange which will depend on ease of access, architectural quality, and degree of attractiveness of the environment.
• To rate stations, so as to propose an initial network of the city to which various modes of transportation will connect, with emphasis on the stations best suited for exchanges between train and buses.
• To assess the financial cost of the modification of the stations to permit access to the new trains, the development of the spaces in front of the station to park buses and other modes of transportation, and connections of another mode of transportation with the train.
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Financing Infrastructure in Indonesia: Conclusion
• Infrastructure is one of key tools to economic development
• The other side of decentralization, it provides best opportunities to do this because of closeness of decision makers to consumers – accountability & sensitivity
• To exploit benefit potential, need proper financial and tariff schemes
• “Don’t just fix the pipes, also fix the institutions that fix the pipes “