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Asia-Pacific Countries with Special Needs Development Report 2017
Investing in Infrastructure for an Inclusive and Sustainable Future
Manila, 30 August 2017
Countries with special needs
• Countries with special needs (CSN)
– Least developed country (LDC)• Cambodia, Lao PDR, Myanmar
– Landlocked developing country (LLDC) • Lao PDR
– Small island developing State (SIDS)
• CSN face unique challenges
– LDC: limited productive capacity, high poverty rate
– LLDC: limited access to markets
– SIDS: small market scale, natural disaster risks
CSN Development Report 2017
• “Investing in infrastructure for an inclusive and sustainable future”
• Report structure– Chapter 1: The current state of infrastructure
– Chapter 2: Potential economic impact of infrastructure
– Chapter 3: Possible financing sources
• Focusing on 4 types of “physical” infrastructure– Transport
– Energy
– ICT
– Water supply and sanitation
Current state of physical
infrastructure in countries with special needs
Chapter 1
Transport infrastructure
Road density (km per 1,000 km2 of land area), 2013-2015
Rail density (km per 1,000 km2 of land area), 2013-2015
0 500 1 000 1 500 2 000 2 500
MongoliaKazakhstan
Papua New GuineaSolomon Islands
MyanmarAfghanistan
VanuatuTurkmenistan
NepalFiji
Lao PDRTajikistan
UzbekistanKyrgyzstanCambodia
ArmeniaBhutan
MaldivesMicronesia
TongaAzerbaijan
SamoaBangladesh
Non-CSN
0 10 20 30 40 50
VanuatuTonga
Solomon IslandsSamoa
Papua New GuineaMicronesia
MaldivesBhutan
Lao PDRAfghanistan
NepalMongolia
KyrgyzstanCambodiaTajikistanMyanmar
KazakhstanTurkmenistan
UzbekistanBangladesh
AzerbaijanFiji
Armenia
Non-CSN
Energy infrastructure
Access to electricity (% of population, 2013-2015) Electric power consumption (kWh per capita), 2012-2015
0 20 40 60 80 100
Papua New GuineaSolomon Islands
VanautuCambodia
Timor-LesteAfghanistan
TuvaluMyanmar
American SamoaFiji
French PolynesiaGuam
KiribatiMarshall Islands
MicronesiaNew Caledonia
PalauBangladesh
Lao PDRBhutanNepal
MongoliaTonga
ArmeniaAzerbaijan
KazakhstanKyrgyzstan
MaldivesSamoa
TajikistanTurkmenistan
Uzbekistan
Non-CSN
0 500 1 000 1 500 2 000 2 500 3 000 3 500 4 000 4 500 5 000
NepalAfghanistan
Solomon IslandsMyanmarVanuatu
CambodiaBangladesh
TongaPapua New Guinea
Lao PDRSamoa
FijiMaldives
UzbekistanTajikistanArmenia
KyrgyzstanMicronesia
MongoliaAzerbaijan
BhutanTurkmenistan
Kazakhstan
Non-CSN
ICT infrastructure
Telephone communication subscriptions per 100 population, 2013-2015
Internet users per 100 inhabitants, 2012-2015
0 50 100 150 200
MyanmarMicronesiaAfghanistan
SamoaVanuatu
BangladeshSolomon Islands
BhutanUzbekistan
TongaLao PDRTajikistan
NepalFiji
MongoliaAzerbaijan
ArmeniaKyrgyzstanCambodia
Papua New GuineaTurkmenistan
MaldivesKazakhstan
Non-CSN
0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 80
Papua New GuineaAfghanistan
Solomon IslandsBangladesh
MyanmarTurkmenistan
CambodiaLao PDR
NepalVanuatu
TajikistanMongolia
SamoaKyrgyzstanMicronesia
BhutanUzbekistan
TongaFiji
MaldivesArmenia
KazakhstanAzerbaijan
Non-CSN
Water supply and sanitation infrastructure
Access to improved water supply (left) and sanitation (right) and GDP per capita
ESCAP Access to Physical
Infrastructure Index
Chapter 2
ESCAP Access to Physical Infrastructure Index (APII)
• APII indicators– 8 indicators in total
– 2 indicators for each of the 4 dimensions of infrastructure: transport, energy, ICT, and water supply and sanitation
• Country coverage – 41 Asia-Pacific countries: 23 CSN, 15 developing
countries, and 3 developed countries
• Methodology– Simple average of each of the four sectoral indices based
on the standardized indicators
– Data period: 2013-2015
CSN infrastructure gaps remain wide
APII scores
Country groupings APII score APII rank Country groupings APII score APII rank
Countries with special needs 0.288 Developing countries 0.431
Kazakhstan 0.520 6 Singapore 0.708 2
Azerbaijan 0.476 9 Korea, Republic of 0.664 3
Maldives 0.463 10 Malaysia 0.502 7
Armenia 0.453 11 Russian Federation 0.495 8
Fiji 0.394 17 Turkey 0.440 12
Tonga 0.371 20 Georgia 0.436 13
Kyrgyzstan 0.370 21 Viet Nam 0.419 14
Uzbekistan 0.365 22 Thailand 0.418 15
Samoa 0.350 23 Sri Lanka 0.407 16
Tajikistan 0.309 26 Islamic Republic of Iran 0.394 17
Bangladesh 0.277 28 China 0.391 19
Bhutan 0.269 29 Philippines 0.336 24
Turkmenistan 0.269 29 Pakistan 0.311 25
Mongolia 0.235 32 Indonesia 0.278 27
Micronesia 0.232 33 India 0.260 31
Lao PDR 0.225 34
Nepal 0.217 35
Vanuatu 0.200 36 Developed countries 0.633
Myanmar 0.198 37 Japan 0.712 1
Cambodia 0.186 38 New Zealand 0.605 4
Solomon Islands 0.113 39 Australia 0.582 5
Afghanistan 0.072 40
Papua New Guinea 0.070 41
GDP impact of infrastructure (1): regression analysis
A 1% increase in APII scores is associated
with a 1.2% GDP increase in CSN
GDP impact of infrastructure (2): Computable general equilibrium analysis
0
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Assuming CSN achieve APII score of 15 developing
countries by 2025 , and of developed countries by 2030.
National income of combined CSN could increase by 6% or
$134 billion by 2030.
GDP impact of infrastructure (2): Computable general equilibrium analysis
0
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Financing strategies for overcoming
infrastructure gaps
Chapter 3
Current infrastructure financing
• Sources of finance:
– Public sector (3-5% of GDP)
– Private sector (1% of GDP)
– ODA (0.7% of GDP)
– MDB (0.7% of GDP)
• Concessional financing and bank loans dominate
• Other financing instruments (bond and equity) are limited
Composition of infrastructure financing sources in CSN
Infrastructure financing needs
• Infrastructure financing needs = 10.5% of GDP annually
• 8.3% of GDP will be required to– fill the current infrastructure
gap– Meet the future demand– Cover the cost of maintenance
• 2.2% of GDP will be required for climate change mitigation
Annual infrastructure financing needs, 2016-2030
Infrastructure financing gaps
Filling the funding gap (1): tax collection
Tax-to-GDP ratios in selected Asia-Pacific countries, 2014
Filling the funding gap (2):private sector engagement
• Private sector engagement has been limited
– Political, currency and macroeconomic risks
– Underdeveloped domestic markets
– Small scale: market and population size
• Governments can also
– Partner with multilateral development banks to increase financial viability
– Enhance coordination across Government agencies to establish a infrastructure project pipeline
– Facilitate innovate PPP
Policy messages
The way forward
The way forward
• Short-term policies• Prioritize which sectors are to be developed• Identify priorities, partners, instruments and support
measures, e.g. detailed budget provision
• Medium-term policies:• Mobilize domestic public finance• Develop capital markets• Enhance institutional and technical capacity for planning,
maintaining and managing infrastructure
A holistic policy effort is needed for infrastructure development
0
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Acquiring andtransfer of
Technology
Financialaccessibility
Technicalknow-how
Developmentcooperation
Institutionalcapacity
Effectivegovernance
Most binding challenges for infrastructure development and maintenance
Thank you
www.unescap.org/publications/asia-pacific-countries-special-needs-2017
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