MBA 870
MANAGEMENT THEORY amp PRACTICE
Group 3
Sheila NasiekuEliud Nzola
Jane MungaiPeterMwaniki
Caroline Wahome
THE ASSIGNMENT
EMERGING ISSUES IN MANAGEMENT
PRIVATIZATION
1
Privatization
Definition
A very broad term--but most simply privatization is the transfer of assets or service delivery
from the government to the private sector Privatization runs a very broad range sometimes
leaving very little government involvement and other times creating partnerships between
government and private service providers where government is still the dominant player
Privatization may also be described as the incidence or process of transferring ownership of a business enterprise agency or public service from the public sector (government) to the private sector (business) In a broader sense privatization refers to transfer of any government function to the private sector including governmental functions like revenue collection and law enforcement
The term Privatization has been used to describe two unrelated transactions The first is a buyout by the majority owner of all shares of a public corporation or holding companys stock privatizing a publicly traded stock The second is a demutualization of a mutual organization or cooperative to form a joint stock company
There is constant increase in the privatization of the economy the government is taking many steps to privatize the government owned industries which are providing least efficiency The privatization is carried through the advertisement in the news by which the companies and individuals are asked to come to the auction ceremony of any property in which many buyers come together and they quote their prices The higher the price the person can win to take the property or ownership The privatization is the only key to gain the economic efficiency and enhance the productivity of the country
It started from the British when the government started to sold his owned properties to private sector in 1980 By doing privatization the government can attract large number of foreign investors by which the country get the foreign reserves and the there are chances to increase the employment opportunities in the country by utilizing the government funds the government can start the large infrastructure development projects by which the government can provide better facilities to the government sector It took practice after started from British to other countries of the world
Merely defining privatization is difficult In its purest form the term refers to the shifting of the production of a good or the provision of a service from the government to the private sector often by selling government-owned assets
Most definitions of privatization though are more expansive covering virtually any action that involves exposing the operations of government to the pressures of the commercial marketplace
2
The broader definition of privatization also includes a wide range of public-private partnerships
Types of privatization
There are three main methods of privatization
Share issue privatization (SIP) - selling shares on the stock market Asset sale privatization - selling the entire firms or part of it to a strategic investor
usually by auction or using Treuhand model
(The Treuhand (Treuhandanstalt or Treuhand agency) was the agency that privatized the East German enterprises owned as public property (common property) Created by the Volkskammer on June 17 1990 it oversaw the restructuring and selling of about 8500 firms with initially over 4 million employees At that time it was the worlds largest industrial enterprise)
Voucher privatization - shares of ownership are distributed to all citizens usually for free or at a very low price
Share issue privatization is the most common type of privatization
Share issue can broaden and deepen domestic capital markets boosting liquidity and potentially economic growth but if the capital markets are insufficiently developed it may be difficult to find enough buyers and transaction costs (eg under pricing required) may be higher For this reason many governments elect for listings in the more developed and liquid markets Euronext and the London New York and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges are popular because they are highly developed and sophisticated
As a result of higher political and currency risk deterring foreign investors asset sales are more common in developing countries
Voucher privatization has mainly been used in the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe such as Russia Poland the Czech Republic and Slovakia
A very substantial benefit to share or asset sale privatizations is that bidders compete to offer the state the highest price creating revenues for the state to redistribute in addition to new tax revenue Voucher privatizations on the other hand would be a genuine return of the assets into the hands of the general population and create a real sense of participation and inclusion Vouchers like all other private property could then be sold on if preferred by what companies are offering
3
TECHNIQUES OF PRIVATIZATION
A variety of alternative service delivery techniques can be employed to maximize efficiency and increase service quality Some methods will be more appropriate than others depending on the service In searching for ways of cutting costs and increasing delivery consider using a combination of these techniques
Contracting Out (also called outsourcing) The government competitively contracts with a private organization for-profit or non-profit to provide a service or part of a service
Management Contracts The operation of a facility is contracted out to a private company Facilities where the management is frequently contracted out include airports wastewater plants arenas and convention centers
Public-Private Competition (also called managed competition or market testing) When public services are opened up to competition in-house public organizations are allowed to participate in the bidding process
Franchise A private firm is given the exclusive right to provide a service within a certain geographical area
Internal Markets Departments are allowed to purchase support services such as printing maintenance computer repair and training from in-house providers or outside suppliers In-house providers of support services are required to operate as independent business units competing against outside contractors for departmentsrsquo business Under such a system market forces are brought to bear within an organization Internal customers can reject the offerings of internal service providers if they donrsquot like their quality or if they cost too much
Vouchers Government pays for the service however individuals are given redeemable certificates to purchase the service on the open market These subsidize the consumer of the service but services are provided by the private sector In addition to providing greater freedom of choice vouchers bring consumer pressure to bear creating incentives for consumers to shop around for services and for service providers to supply high-quality low-cost services
Commercialization (also referred to as service shedding) Government stops providing a service and lets the private sector assume the function
Self-Help (also referred to as transfer to non-profit organization) Community groups and neighborhood organizations take over a service or government asset such as a local park The new providers of the service also are directly benefiting from the service Governments increasingly are discovering that by turning some non-core servicesmdashsuch as zoos museums fairs remote parks and some recreational programsmdashover to non-profit organizations they are able to ensure that these institutions donrsquot drain the budget
Volunteers Volunteers are used to provide all or part of a government service Volunteer activities are conducted through a government volunteer program or through a non-profit organization
Corporatization Government organizations are reorganized along business lines Typically they are required to pay taxes raise capital on the market (with no government backingmdashexplicit or implicit) and operate according to commercial principles Government corporations focus on maximizing profits and achieving a
4
favorable return on investment They are freed from government procurement personnel and budget systems
Asset Sale or Long-Term Lease Government sells or enters into long-term leases for assets such as airports gas utilities or real estate to private firms thus turning physical capital into financial capital In a sale-leaseback arrangement government sells the asset to a private sector entity and then leases it back Another asset sale technique is the employee buyout Existing public managers and employees take the public unit private typically purchasing the company through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
Private Infrastructure Development and Operation The private sector builds finances and operates public infrastructure such as roads and airports recovering costs through user charges Several techniques commonly are used for privately building and operating infrastructure
o With Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) arrangements the private sector designs finances builds and operates the facility over the life of the contract At the end of this period ownership reverts to the government
o A variation of this is the Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) model under which title transfers to the government at the time construction is completed
o Finally with Build-Own-Operate (BOO) arrangements the private sector retains permanent ownership and operates the facility on contract
Why privatize Ownership is a significant determinant of enterprise performance In both developed and developing countries good SOE performance has been very difficult to bring about--and even harder to sustain Governments facing financial crisis often try to improve performance by bringing in new and dynamic managers and paying them incentive salaries And they grant managers autonomy to set prices and hire and fire--and agree to overdue tariff increases and payment of past due bills These measures often have a positive effect But as the crisis dissipates so does political resolve
Political interference a common and deadly disease of SOEs tends to re-emerge--and painfully achieved SOE reforms tend to backslide SOEs thought to be well on the road to recovery have either stopped improving performance or suffered deterioration In Korea where reform short of ownership change ended losses in a group of SOEs for three years in the mid-1980s large deficits have since reappeared In New Zealand and Japan SOE reforms began to bite only when done in conjunction with privatization
Recognition that SOE reforms are limited and unsustainable coupled with the fiscal burden of subsidizing loss-makers has led financially hard-pressed governments to opt for privatization
Arguments for and against privatization
Pro-privatization
Proponents of privatization believe that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than government due to free market competition In general it is argued that over time this will lead to lower prices improved quality more choices less corruption less red tape and quicker delivery Many proponents do not argue that everything
5
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
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History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
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The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
Privatization
Definition
A very broad term--but most simply privatization is the transfer of assets or service delivery
from the government to the private sector Privatization runs a very broad range sometimes
leaving very little government involvement and other times creating partnerships between
government and private service providers where government is still the dominant player
Privatization may also be described as the incidence or process of transferring ownership of a business enterprise agency or public service from the public sector (government) to the private sector (business) In a broader sense privatization refers to transfer of any government function to the private sector including governmental functions like revenue collection and law enforcement
The term Privatization has been used to describe two unrelated transactions The first is a buyout by the majority owner of all shares of a public corporation or holding companys stock privatizing a publicly traded stock The second is a demutualization of a mutual organization or cooperative to form a joint stock company
There is constant increase in the privatization of the economy the government is taking many steps to privatize the government owned industries which are providing least efficiency The privatization is carried through the advertisement in the news by which the companies and individuals are asked to come to the auction ceremony of any property in which many buyers come together and they quote their prices The higher the price the person can win to take the property or ownership The privatization is the only key to gain the economic efficiency and enhance the productivity of the country
It started from the British when the government started to sold his owned properties to private sector in 1980 By doing privatization the government can attract large number of foreign investors by which the country get the foreign reserves and the there are chances to increase the employment opportunities in the country by utilizing the government funds the government can start the large infrastructure development projects by which the government can provide better facilities to the government sector It took practice after started from British to other countries of the world
Merely defining privatization is difficult In its purest form the term refers to the shifting of the production of a good or the provision of a service from the government to the private sector often by selling government-owned assets
Most definitions of privatization though are more expansive covering virtually any action that involves exposing the operations of government to the pressures of the commercial marketplace
2
The broader definition of privatization also includes a wide range of public-private partnerships
Types of privatization
There are three main methods of privatization
Share issue privatization (SIP) - selling shares on the stock market Asset sale privatization - selling the entire firms or part of it to a strategic investor
usually by auction or using Treuhand model
(The Treuhand (Treuhandanstalt or Treuhand agency) was the agency that privatized the East German enterprises owned as public property (common property) Created by the Volkskammer on June 17 1990 it oversaw the restructuring and selling of about 8500 firms with initially over 4 million employees At that time it was the worlds largest industrial enterprise)
Voucher privatization - shares of ownership are distributed to all citizens usually for free or at a very low price
Share issue privatization is the most common type of privatization
Share issue can broaden and deepen domestic capital markets boosting liquidity and potentially economic growth but if the capital markets are insufficiently developed it may be difficult to find enough buyers and transaction costs (eg under pricing required) may be higher For this reason many governments elect for listings in the more developed and liquid markets Euronext and the London New York and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges are popular because they are highly developed and sophisticated
As a result of higher political and currency risk deterring foreign investors asset sales are more common in developing countries
Voucher privatization has mainly been used in the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe such as Russia Poland the Czech Republic and Slovakia
A very substantial benefit to share or asset sale privatizations is that bidders compete to offer the state the highest price creating revenues for the state to redistribute in addition to new tax revenue Voucher privatizations on the other hand would be a genuine return of the assets into the hands of the general population and create a real sense of participation and inclusion Vouchers like all other private property could then be sold on if preferred by what companies are offering
3
TECHNIQUES OF PRIVATIZATION
A variety of alternative service delivery techniques can be employed to maximize efficiency and increase service quality Some methods will be more appropriate than others depending on the service In searching for ways of cutting costs and increasing delivery consider using a combination of these techniques
Contracting Out (also called outsourcing) The government competitively contracts with a private organization for-profit or non-profit to provide a service or part of a service
Management Contracts The operation of a facility is contracted out to a private company Facilities where the management is frequently contracted out include airports wastewater plants arenas and convention centers
Public-Private Competition (also called managed competition or market testing) When public services are opened up to competition in-house public organizations are allowed to participate in the bidding process
Franchise A private firm is given the exclusive right to provide a service within a certain geographical area
Internal Markets Departments are allowed to purchase support services such as printing maintenance computer repair and training from in-house providers or outside suppliers In-house providers of support services are required to operate as independent business units competing against outside contractors for departmentsrsquo business Under such a system market forces are brought to bear within an organization Internal customers can reject the offerings of internal service providers if they donrsquot like their quality or if they cost too much
Vouchers Government pays for the service however individuals are given redeemable certificates to purchase the service on the open market These subsidize the consumer of the service but services are provided by the private sector In addition to providing greater freedom of choice vouchers bring consumer pressure to bear creating incentives for consumers to shop around for services and for service providers to supply high-quality low-cost services
Commercialization (also referred to as service shedding) Government stops providing a service and lets the private sector assume the function
Self-Help (also referred to as transfer to non-profit organization) Community groups and neighborhood organizations take over a service or government asset such as a local park The new providers of the service also are directly benefiting from the service Governments increasingly are discovering that by turning some non-core servicesmdashsuch as zoos museums fairs remote parks and some recreational programsmdashover to non-profit organizations they are able to ensure that these institutions donrsquot drain the budget
Volunteers Volunteers are used to provide all or part of a government service Volunteer activities are conducted through a government volunteer program or through a non-profit organization
Corporatization Government organizations are reorganized along business lines Typically they are required to pay taxes raise capital on the market (with no government backingmdashexplicit or implicit) and operate according to commercial principles Government corporations focus on maximizing profits and achieving a
4
favorable return on investment They are freed from government procurement personnel and budget systems
Asset Sale or Long-Term Lease Government sells or enters into long-term leases for assets such as airports gas utilities or real estate to private firms thus turning physical capital into financial capital In a sale-leaseback arrangement government sells the asset to a private sector entity and then leases it back Another asset sale technique is the employee buyout Existing public managers and employees take the public unit private typically purchasing the company through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
Private Infrastructure Development and Operation The private sector builds finances and operates public infrastructure such as roads and airports recovering costs through user charges Several techniques commonly are used for privately building and operating infrastructure
o With Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) arrangements the private sector designs finances builds and operates the facility over the life of the contract At the end of this period ownership reverts to the government
o A variation of this is the Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) model under which title transfers to the government at the time construction is completed
o Finally with Build-Own-Operate (BOO) arrangements the private sector retains permanent ownership and operates the facility on contract
Why privatize Ownership is a significant determinant of enterprise performance In both developed and developing countries good SOE performance has been very difficult to bring about--and even harder to sustain Governments facing financial crisis often try to improve performance by bringing in new and dynamic managers and paying them incentive salaries And they grant managers autonomy to set prices and hire and fire--and agree to overdue tariff increases and payment of past due bills These measures often have a positive effect But as the crisis dissipates so does political resolve
Political interference a common and deadly disease of SOEs tends to re-emerge--and painfully achieved SOE reforms tend to backslide SOEs thought to be well on the road to recovery have either stopped improving performance or suffered deterioration In Korea where reform short of ownership change ended losses in a group of SOEs for three years in the mid-1980s large deficits have since reappeared In New Zealand and Japan SOE reforms began to bite only when done in conjunction with privatization
Recognition that SOE reforms are limited and unsustainable coupled with the fiscal burden of subsidizing loss-makers has led financially hard-pressed governments to opt for privatization
Arguments for and against privatization
Pro-privatization
Proponents of privatization believe that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than government due to free market competition In general it is argued that over time this will lead to lower prices improved quality more choices less corruption less red tape and quicker delivery Many proponents do not argue that everything
5
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
The broader definition of privatization also includes a wide range of public-private partnerships
Types of privatization
There are three main methods of privatization
Share issue privatization (SIP) - selling shares on the stock market Asset sale privatization - selling the entire firms or part of it to a strategic investor
usually by auction or using Treuhand model
(The Treuhand (Treuhandanstalt or Treuhand agency) was the agency that privatized the East German enterprises owned as public property (common property) Created by the Volkskammer on June 17 1990 it oversaw the restructuring and selling of about 8500 firms with initially over 4 million employees At that time it was the worlds largest industrial enterprise)
Voucher privatization - shares of ownership are distributed to all citizens usually for free or at a very low price
Share issue privatization is the most common type of privatization
Share issue can broaden and deepen domestic capital markets boosting liquidity and potentially economic growth but if the capital markets are insufficiently developed it may be difficult to find enough buyers and transaction costs (eg under pricing required) may be higher For this reason many governments elect for listings in the more developed and liquid markets Euronext and the London New York and Hong Kong Stock Exchanges are popular because they are highly developed and sophisticated
As a result of higher political and currency risk deterring foreign investors asset sales are more common in developing countries
Voucher privatization has mainly been used in the transition economies of Central and Eastern Europe such as Russia Poland the Czech Republic and Slovakia
A very substantial benefit to share or asset sale privatizations is that bidders compete to offer the state the highest price creating revenues for the state to redistribute in addition to new tax revenue Voucher privatizations on the other hand would be a genuine return of the assets into the hands of the general population and create a real sense of participation and inclusion Vouchers like all other private property could then be sold on if preferred by what companies are offering
3
TECHNIQUES OF PRIVATIZATION
A variety of alternative service delivery techniques can be employed to maximize efficiency and increase service quality Some methods will be more appropriate than others depending on the service In searching for ways of cutting costs and increasing delivery consider using a combination of these techniques
Contracting Out (also called outsourcing) The government competitively contracts with a private organization for-profit or non-profit to provide a service or part of a service
Management Contracts The operation of a facility is contracted out to a private company Facilities where the management is frequently contracted out include airports wastewater plants arenas and convention centers
Public-Private Competition (also called managed competition or market testing) When public services are opened up to competition in-house public organizations are allowed to participate in the bidding process
Franchise A private firm is given the exclusive right to provide a service within a certain geographical area
Internal Markets Departments are allowed to purchase support services such as printing maintenance computer repair and training from in-house providers or outside suppliers In-house providers of support services are required to operate as independent business units competing against outside contractors for departmentsrsquo business Under such a system market forces are brought to bear within an organization Internal customers can reject the offerings of internal service providers if they donrsquot like their quality or if they cost too much
Vouchers Government pays for the service however individuals are given redeemable certificates to purchase the service on the open market These subsidize the consumer of the service but services are provided by the private sector In addition to providing greater freedom of choice vouchers bring consumer pressure to bear creating incentives for consumers to shop around for services and for service providers to supply high-quality low-cost services
Commercialization (also referred to as service shedding) Government stops providing a service and lets the private sector assume the function
Self-Help (also referred to as transfer to non-profit organization) Community groups and neighborhood organizations take over a service or government asset such as a local park The new providers of the service also are directly benefiting from the service Governments increasingly are discovering that by turning some non-core servicesmdashsuch as zoos museums fairs remote parks and some recreational programsmdashover to non-profit organizations they are able to ensure that these institutions donrsquot drain the budget
Volunteers Volunteers are used to provide all or part of a government service Volunteer activities are conducted through a government volunteer program or through a non-profit organization
Corporatization Government organizations are reorganized along business lines Typically they are required to pay taxes raise capital on the market (with no government backingmdashexplicit or implicit) and operate according to commercial principles Government corporations focus on maximizing profits and achieving a
4
favorable return on investment They are freed from government procurement personnel and budget systems
Asset Sale or Long-Term Lease Government sells or enters into long-term leases for assets such as airports gas utilities or real estate to private firms thus turning physical capital into financial capital In a sale-leaseback arrangement government sells the asset to a private sector entity and then leases it back Another asset sale technique is the employee buyout Existing public managers and employees take the public unit private typically purchasing the company through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
Private Infrastructure Development and Operation The private sector builds finances and operates public infrastructure such as roads and airports recovering costs through user charges Several techniques commonly are used for privately building and operating infrastructure
o With Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) arrangements the private sector designs finances builds and operates the facility over the life of the contract At the end of this period ownership reverts to the government
o A variation of this is the Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) model under which title transfers to the government at the time construction is completed
o Finally with Build-Own-Operate (BOO) arrangements the private sector retains permanent ownership and operates the facility on contract
Why privatize Ownership is a significant determinant of enterprise performance In both developed and developing countries good SOE performance has been very difficult to bring about--and even harder to sustain Governments facing financial crisis often try to improve performance by bringing in new and dynamic managers and paying them incentive salaries And they grant managers autonomy to set prices and hire and fire--and agree to overdue tariff increases and payment of past due bills These measures often have a positive effect But as the crisis dissipates so does political resolve
Political interference a common and deadly disease of SOEs tends to re-emerge--and painfully achieved SOE reforms tend to backslide SOEs thought to be well on the road to recovery have either stopped improving performance or suffered deterioration In Korea where reform short of ownership change ended losses in a group of SOEs for three years in the mid-1980s large deficits have since reappeared In New Zealand and Japan SOE reforms began to bite only when done in conjunction with privatization
Recognition that SOE reforms are limited and unsustainable coupled with the fiscal burden of subsidizing loss-makers has led financially hard-pressed governments to opt for privatization
Arguments for and against privatization
Pro-privatization
Proponents of privatization believe that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than government due to free market competition In general it is argued that over time this will lead to lower prices improved quality more choices less corruption less red tape and quicker delivery Many proponents do not argue that everything
5
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
TECHNIQUES OF PRIVATIZATION
A variety of alternative service delivery techniques can be employed to maximize efficiency and increase service quality Some methods will be more appropriate than others depending on the service In searching for ways of cutting costs and increasing delivery consider using a combination of these techniques
Contracting Out (also called outsourcing) The government competitively contracts with a private organization for-profit or non-profit to provide a service or part of a service
Management Contracts The operation of a facility is contracted out to a private company Facilities where the management is frequently contracted out include airports wastewater plants arenas and convention centers
Public-Private Competition (also called managed competition or market testing) When public services are opened up to competition in-house public organizations are allowed to participate in the bidding process
Franchise A private firm is given the exclusive right to provide a service within a certain geographical area
Internal Markets Departments are allowed to purchase support services such as printing maintenance computer repair and training from in-house providers or outside suppliers In-house providers of support services are required to operate as independent business units competing against outside contractors for departmentsrsquo business Under such a system market forces are brought to bear within an organization Internal customers can reject the offerings of internal service providers if they donrsquot like their quality or if they cost too much
Vouchers Government pays for the service however individuals are given redeemable certificates to purchase the service on the open market These subsidize the consumer of the service but services are provided by the private sector In addition to providing greater freedom of choice vouchers bring consumer pressure to bear creating incentives for consumers to shop around for services and for service providers to supply high-quality low-cost services
Commercialization (also referred to as service shedding) Government stops providing a service and lets the private sector assume the function
Self-Help (also referred to as transfer to non-profit organization) Community groups and neighborhood organizations take over a service or government asset such as a local park The new providers of the service also are directly benefiting from the service Governments increasingly are discovering that by turning some non-core servicesmdashsuch as zoos museums fairs remote parks and some recreational programsmdashover to non-profit organizations they are able to ensure that these institutions donrsquot drain the budget
Volunteers Volunteers are used to provide all or part of a government service Volunteer activities are conducted through a government volunteer program or through a non-profit organization
Corporatization Government organizations are reorganized along business lines Typically they are required to pay taxes raise capital on the market (with no government backingmdashexplicit or implicit) and operate according to commercial principles Government corporations focus on maximizing profits and achieving a
4
favorable return on investment They are freed from government procurement personnel and budget systems
Asset Sale or Long-Term Lease Government sells or enters into long-term leases for assets such as airports gas utilities or real estate to private firms thus turning physical capital into financial capital In a sale-leaseback arrangement government sells the asset to a private sector entity and then leases it back Another asset sale technique is the employee buyout Existing public managers and employees take the public unit private typically purchasing the company through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
Private Infrastructure Development and Operation The private sector builds finances and operates public infrastructure such as roads and airports recovering costs through user charges Several techniques commonly are used for privately building and operating infrastructure
o With Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) arrangements the private sector designs finances builds and operates the facility over the life of the contract At the end of this period ownership reverts to the government
o A variation of this is the Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) model under which title transfers to the government at the time construction is completed
o Finally with Build-Own-Operate (BOO) arrangements the private sector retains permanent ownership and operates the facility on contract
Why privatize Ownership is a significant determinant of enterprise performance In both developed and developing countries good SOE performance has been very difficult to bring about--and even harder to sustain Governments facing financial crisis often try to improve performance by bringing in new and dynamic managers and paying them incentive salaries And they grant managers autonomy to set prices and hire and fire--and agree to overdue tariff increases and payment of past due bills These measures often have a positive effect But as the crisis dissipates so does political resolve
Political interference a common and deadly disease of SOEs tends to re-emerge--and painfully achieved SOE reforms tend to backslide SOEs thought to be well on the road to recovery have either stopped improving performance or suffered deterioration In Korea where reform short of ownership change ended losses in a group of SOEs for three years in the mid-1980s large deficits have since reappeared In New Zealand and Japan SOE reforms began to bite only when done in conjunction with privatization
Recognition that SOE reforms are limited and unsustainable coupled with the fiscal burden of subsidizing loss-makers has led financially hard-pressed governments to opt for privatization
Arguments for and against privatization
Pro-privatization
Proponents of privatization believe that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than government due to free market competition In general it is argued that over time this will lead to lower prices improved quality more choices less corruption less red tape and quicker delivery Many proponents do not argue that everything
5
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
favorable return on investment They are freed from government procurement personnel and budget systems
Asset Sale or Long-Term Lease Government sells or enters into long-term leases for assets such as airports gas utilities or real estate to private firms thus turning physical capital into financial capital In a sale-leaseback arrangement government sells the asset to a private sector entity and then leases it back Another asset sale technique is the employee buyout Existing public managers and employees take the public unit private typically purchasing the company through an Employee Stock Ownership Plan (ESOP)
Private Infrastructure Development and Operation The private sector builds finances and operates public infrastructure such as roads and airports recovering costs through user charges Several techniques commonly are used for privately building and operating infrastructure
o With Build-Operate-Transfer (BOT) arrangements the private sector designs finances builds and operates the facility over the life of the contract At the end of this period ownership reverts to the government
o A variation of this is the Build-Transfer-Operate (BTO) model under which title transfers to the government at the time construction is completed
o Finally with Build-Own-Operate (BOO) arrangements the private sector retains permanent ownership and operates the facility on contract
Why privatize Ownership is a significant determinant of enterprise performance In both developed and developing countries good SOE performance has been very difficult to bring about--and even harder to sustain Governments facing financial crisis often try to improve performance by bringing in new and dynamic managers and paying them incentive salaries And they grant managers autonomy to set prices and hire and fire--and agree to overdue tariff increases and payment of past due bills These measures often have a positive effect But as the crisis dissipates so does political resolve
Political interference a common and deadly disease of SOEs tends to re-emerge--and painfully achieved SOE reforms tend to backslide SOEs thought to be well on the road to recovery have either stopped improving performance or suffered deterioration In Korea where reform short of ownership change ended losses in a group of SOEs for three years in the mid-1980s large deficits have since reappeared In New Zealand and Japan SOE reforms began to bite only when done in conjunction with privatization
Recognition that SOE reforms are limited and unsustainable coupled with the fiscal burden of subsidizing loss-makers has led financially hard-pressed governments to opt for privatization
Arguments for and against privatization
Pro-privatization
Proponents of privatization believe that private market factors can more efficiently deliver many goods or service than government due to free market competition In general it is argued that over time this will lead to lower prices improved quality more choices less corruption less red tape and quicker delivery Many proponents do not argue that everything
5
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
should be privatised According to them market failures and natural monopolies could be problematic However some Austrian school economists and anarcho-capitalists would prefer that everything be privatised including the state itself
The basic economic argument given for privatisation is that governments have few incentives to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run One problem is the lack of comparison in state monopolies It is difficult to know if an enterprise is efficient or not without competitors to compare against Another is that the central government administration and the voters who elect them have difficulty evaluating the efficiency of numerous and very different enterprises A private owner often specializing and gaining great knowledge about a certain industrial sector can evaluate and then reward or punish the management in much fewer enterprises much more efficiently Also governments can raise money by taxation or simply printing money should revenues be insufficient unlike a private owner
If there are both private and state owned enterprises competing against each other then the state owned may borrow money more cheaply from the debt markets than private enterprises since the state owned enterprises are ultimately backed by the taxation and printing press power of the state gaining an unfair advantage
Privatising a non-profitable company which was state-owned may force the company to raise prices in order to become profitable However this would remove the need for the state to provide tax money in order to cover the losses
Performance State-run industries tend to be bureaucratic A political government may only be motivated to improve a function when its poor performance becomes politically sensitive and such an improvement can be reversed easily by another regime
Increased efficiency Private companies and firms have a greater incentive to produce more goods and services for the sake of reaching a customer base and hence increasing profits A state-owned firm would not be as productive due to the lack of financing allocated by the entire governments budget that must consider other areas of the economy
Specialisation A private business has the ability to focus all relevant human and financial resources onto specific functions A state-owned firm does not have the necessary resources to specialise its goods and services as a result of the general products provided to the greatest number of people in the population
Improvements Conversely the government may put off improvements due to political sensitivity and special interests mdash even in cases of companies that are run well and better serve their customers needs
Corruption A monopolized function is prone to corruption decisions are made primarily for political reasons personal gain of the decision-maker (ie graft) rather than economic ones Corruption (or principal-agent issues) during the privatisation process - however - can result in significant underpricing of the asset This allows for more immediate and efficient corrupt transfer of value - not just from ongoing cash flow but from the entire lifetime of the asset stream Often such transfers are difficult to reverse
Accountability Managers of privately owned companies are accountable to their ownersshareholders and to the consumer and can only exist and thrive where needs are met Managers of publicly owned companies are required to be more accountable
6
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
to the broader community and to political stakeholders This can reduce their ability to directly and specifically serve the needs of their customers and can bias investment decisions away from otherwise profitable areas
Civil-liberty concerns A company controlled by the state may have access to information or assets which may be used against dissidents or any individuals who disagree with their policies
Goals A political government tends to run an industry or company for political goals rather than economic ones
Capital Privately held companies can sometimes more easily raise investment capital in the financial markets when such local markets exist and are suitably liquid While interest rates for private companies are often higher than for government debt this can serve as a useful constraint to promote efficient investments by private companies instead of cross-subsidizing them with the overall credit-risk of the country Investment decisions are then governed by market interest rates State-owned industries have to compete with demands from other government departments and special interests In either case for smaller markets political risk may add substantially to the cost of capital
Security Governments have had the tendency to bail out poorly run businesses often due to the sensitivity of job losses when economically it may be better to let the business fold
Lack of market discipline Poorly managed state companies are insulated from the same discipline as private companies which could go bankrupt have their management removed or be taken over by competitors Private companies are also able to take greater risks and then seek bankruptcy protection against creditors if those risks turn sour
Natural monopolies The existence of natural monopolies does not mean that these sectors must be state owned Governments can enact or are armed with anti-trust legislation and bodies to deal with anti-competitive behavior of all companies public or private
Concentration of wealth Ownership of and profits from successful enterprises tend to be dispersed and diversified -particularly in voucher privatisation The availability of more investment vehicles stimulates capital markets and promotes liquidity and job creation
Political influence Nationalized industries are prone to interference from politicians for political or populist reasons Examples include making an industry buy supplies from local producers (when that may be more expensive than buying from abroad) forcing an industry to freeze its pricesfares to satisfy the electorate or control inflation increasing its staffing to reduce unemployment or moving its operations to marginal constituencies
Profits Corporations exist to generate profits for their shareholders Private companies make a profit by enticing consumers to buy their products in preference to their competitors (or by increasing primary demand for their products or by reducing costs) Private corporations typically profit more if they serve the needs of their clients well Corporations of different sizes may target different market niches in order to focus on marginal groups and satisfy their demand A company with good corporate governance will therefore be incentivized to meet the needs of its customers efficiently
7
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
Anti-privatization
Opponents of privatisation dispute the claims concerning the alleged lack of incentive for governments to ensure that the enterprises they own are well run on the basis of the idea that governments are proxy owners answerable to the people It is argued that a government which runs nationalized enterprises poorly will lose public support and votes while a government which runs those enterprises well will gain public support and votes Thus democratic governments do have an incentive to maximize efficiency in nationalized companies due to the pressure of future elections
Opponents of certain privatisations believe certain parts of the social terrain should remain closed to market forces in order to protect them from the unpredictability and ruthlessness of the market (such as private prisons basic health care and basic education) Another view is that some of the utilities which government provides benefit society at large and are indirect and difficult to measure or unable to produce a profit such as defense Still another is that natural monopolies are by definition not subject to competition and better administrated by the state
The controlling ethical issue in the anti-privatisation perspective is the need for responsible stewardship of social support missions Market interactions are all guided by self-interest and successful actors in a healthy market must be committed to charging the maximum price that the market will bear Privatisation opponents believe that this model is not compatible with government missions for social support whose primary aim is delivering affordability and quality of service to society
Many privatisation opponents also warn against the practices inherent tendency toward corruption As many areas which the government could provide are essentially profitless the only way private companies could to any degree operate them would be through contracts or block payments In these cases the private firms performance in a particular project would be removed from their performance and embezzlement and dangerous cost cutting measures might be taken to maximize profits
Furthermore large corporations can pay public relations professionals to convince decision-makers that privitazation is a sensible idea whether or not this is actually the case Corporations typically have far more resources for expert testimony advertisements conferences and other propaganda efforts than anti-privatisation advocates Of course this fact has no bearing on the merits of privatisation itself
Some would also point out that privatising certain functions of government might hamper coordination and charge firms with specialized and limited capabilities to perform functions which they are not suited for In rebuilding a war torn nations infrastructure for example a private firm would in order to provide security either have to hire security which would be both necessarily limited and complicate their functions or coordinate with government which due to a lack of command structure shared between firm and government might be difficult A government agency on the other hand would have the entire military of a nation to draw upon for security whose chain of command is clearly defined Opponents would say
8
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
that this is a false assertion numerous books refer to poor organization between government departments (for example the Hurricane Katrina incident)
Furthermore opponents of privatization argue that it is undesirable to transfer state-owned assets into private hands for the following reasons
Performance A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a legislature Congress or Parliament and is motivated to safeguarding the assets of the nation The profit motive may be subordinated to social objectives
Improvements the government is motivated to performance improvements as well run businesses contribute to the States revenues
Corruption Government ministers and civil servants are bound to uphold the highest ethical standards and standards of probity are guaranteed through codes of conduct and declarations of interest However the selling process could lack transparency allowing the purchaser and civil servants controlling the sale to gain personally
Accountability The public does not have any control or oversight of private companies
Civil-liberty concerns A democratically elected government is accountable to the people through a parliament and can intervene when civil liberties are threatened
Goals The government may seek to use state companies as instruments to further social goals for the benefit of the nation as a whole
Capital Governments can raise money in the financial markets most cheaply to re-lend to state-owned enterprises
Lack of market discipline Governments have chosen to keep certain companiesindustries under public ownership because of their strategic importance or sensitive nature
Cuts in essential services If a government-owned company providing an essential service (such as the water supply) to all citizens is privatised its new owner(s) could lead to the abandoning of the social obligation to those who are less able to pay or to regions where this service is unprofitable
Natural monopolies Privatisation will not result in true competition if a natural monopoly exists
Concentration of wealth Profits from successful enterprises end up in private often foreign hands instead of being available for the common good
Political influence Governments may more easily exert pressure on state-owned firms to help implementing government policy
Downsizing Private companies often face a conflict between profitability and service levels and could over-react to short-term events A state-owned company might have a longer-term view and thus be less likely to cut back on maintenance or staff costs training etc to stem short term losses Many private companies have downsized while making record profits
Profit Private companies do not have any goal other than to maximize profits A private company will serve the needs of those who are most willing (and able) to pay as opposed to the needs of the majority and are thus anti-democratic The more necessary a good is the lower the price elasticity of demand as people will attempt to buy it no matter the price In the case of price elasticity of demand is zero (perfectly unelastic good) demand part of supply and demand theories does not work
Privatisation and Poverty It is acknowledged by many studies that there are winners and losers with privatisation The number of losers mdashwhich may add up to the size and severity of povertymdashcan be unexpectedly large if the method and process
9
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
of privatisation and how it is implemented are seriously flawed (eg lack of transparency leading to state-owned assets being appropriated at minuscule amounts by those with political connections absence of regulatory institutions leading to transfer of monopoly rents from public to private sector improper design and inadequate control of the privatisation process leading to asset stripping[6]
Job Loss Due to the additional financial burden placed on privatized companies to succeed without any government help unlike the public companies jobs could be lost to keep more money in the company
Intermediate Views
Others dont dispute that well run for-profit entities with sound corporate governance may be considerably more efficient than an inefficient governmental bureaucracy or NGO however many implementations of privatization can - in practice - lead to the firesale of public assets andor to inefficient or corrupt - for profit management
Developed Low corruption economies
It is fairly easy for a top executive to reduce the perceived value of an asset - due to information asymmetry The executive can accelerate accounting of expected expenses delay accounting of expected revenue engage in off balance sheet transactions to make the companys profitability appear temporarily poorer or simply promote and report severely conservative (eg pessimistic) estimates of future earnings Such seemingly adverse earnings news will be likely to (at least temporarily) reduce sale price (This is again due to information asymmetries since it is more common for top executives to do everything they can to window dress their earnings forecasts) There are typically very few legal risks to being too conservative in ones accounting and earnings estimates
When the entity gets taken private - at a dramatically lower price - the new private owner gains a windfall from the former top executives actions to surreptitiously reduce the sales price This can represent 10s of billions of dollars (questionably) transferred from previous owners (the public) to the takeover artist The former top executive is then rewarded with a golden handshake for presiding over the firesale that can sometimes be in the 10s or 100s of millions of dollars for one or two years of work (This is nevertheless an excellent bargain for the takeover artist who will tend to benefit from developing a reputation of being very generous to parting top executives)
When a publicly held asset mutual or non-profit organization undergoes privatization Top executives often reap tremendous monetary benefits The executives can facilitate the process by making the entity appear to be in financial crisis - this reduces the sale price (to the profit of the purchaser) and makes non-profits and governments more likely to sell
Ironically it can also contribute to a public perception that private entities are more efficiently run reinforcing the political will to sell of public assets Again due to asymmetric
10
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
information policy makers and the general public see a government owned firm that was a financial disaster - miraculously turned around by the private sector (and typically resold) within a few years
Underdeveloped ampor High corruption economies
In a society with substantial corruption privatization allows the government currently in power and its backers to siphon a large portion of the entire net present value of state assets away from the public and into the accounts of their favored power brokers Without privatization corrupt officials would have to slowly harvest their corrupt earnings over time As such efficient privatization depends on their being a very low of current corruption among the current government officials since it allows for far more efficient extraction of corrupt rents
Of course corrupt governments can also extract corrupt rents quite efficiently in other ways - particularly by borrowing extensively to engage in spending on overly favorable contracts with their backers (or on tax shelters subsidies or other give-aways) Generations of subsequent taxpayers are then left with paying back the debt incurred for corrupt transfers made decades previously Naturally this may lead to the sale of public assets
In the end the public is left with a government that taxes them heavily and gives them nothing in return Debt repayment is enforced by international agreements and agencies such as the IMF Infrastructure and upkeep is sacrificed - leading to a further decay in the economic efficiency of the country over time
Outcomes
Literature reviews find that in competitive industries with well-informed consumers privatisation consistently improves efficiency Such efficiency gains mean a one-off increase in GDP but through improved incentives to innovate and reduce costs also tend to raise the rate of economic growth The type of industries to which this generally applies includes manufacturing and retailing Although typically there are social costs associated with these efficiency gains many economists argue that these can be dealt with by appropriate government support through redistribution and perhaps retraining
In sectors that are natural monopolies or public services the results of privatization are much more mixed as a private monopoly behaves much the same as a public one in liberal economic theory In general if the performance of an existing public sector operation is sufficiently bad privatisation (or threat thereof) has been known to improve matters Changes may include inter alia the imposition of related reforms such as greater transparency and accountability of management improved internal controls regulatory systems and better financing rather than privatisation itself
Regarding political corruption it is a controversial issue whether the size of the public sector per se results in corruption The Nordic countries have low corruption but large public sectors However these countries score high on the Ease of Doing Business Index due to good and often simple regulations and for political rights and civil liberties showing high government accountability and transparency One should also notice the successful corruption-free privatizations and restructuring of government enterprises in the Nordic
11
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
countries For example dismantling telecommunications monopolies have resulted in several new players entering the market and intense competition with price and service
Also regarding corruption the sales themselves give a large opportunity for grand corruption Privatizations in Russia and Latin America were accompanied by large-scale corruption during the sale of the state-owned companies Those with political connections unfairly gained large wealth which has discredited privatization in these regions While media have reported widely the grand corruption that accompanied the sales studies have argued that in addition to increased operating efficiency daily petty corruption is or would be larger without privatization and that corruption is more prevalent in non-privatized sectors Furthermore there is evidence to suggest that extralegal and unofficial activities are more prevalent in countries that privatized less
Alternatives to total privatization
Public Utility
The enterprise can remain as a public utility
Non-Profit
The enterprise could be managed by a private non-profit organization
Municipalization
Transferring control to municipal government
Outsourcing or Sub-contracting
It is possible that national services may sub-contract or out-source functions to private enterprises A notable example of this is in the United Kingdom where many municipalities have contracted out their garbage collection or administration of parking fines to private companies In addition the British government has involved the private sector more in the workings of the National Health Service principally through outsourcing the construction and operation of new hospitals to private companies There are also moves to refer patients to private surgeries to ease the load on existing NHS human resources and covering the cost of this
Partial ownership
An enterprise may be privatised with a number of shares in the company being retained by the state This is a particularly notable phenomenon in France where the state often retains a blocking stake in private industries In Germany the state privatised Deutsche Telekom in small tranches and still retains about a third of the company As of 2005 the state of North Rhine-Westphalia is also planning to buy shares in the energy company EON in what is claimed to be an attempt to control spiraling costs
12
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
Whilst partial privatization could be an alternative it is more often a stepping stone to full privatization It can offer the business a smoother transition period during which it can gradually adjust to market competition Some state-owned companies are so large that there is the risk of sucking liquidity from the rest of the market even in the most liquid marketplaces and thus must be sold off bit by bit The first tranche of a multi-step privatization would also in the first instance establish a valuation for the enterprise to mitigate complaints of under-pricing
In some instances of partial privatization of contracted services provision of some portion(s) of the state-owned service are provided by private-sector contactors but the government retains the capacity to self-operate at contract intervals if it so chooses An example of partial privatization would be some forms of school bus service contracting such as arrangements where equipment and other resources purchased with government capital funds ando those already owned by a governmental entity are used by the contractor for a period of time in providing services but ownership is retained by the governmental unit This form of partial privatization eases concerns that once an operation is contracted the government may be unable to obtain sufficient competitive bids and be subjected to terms less desirable than the prior operation under state-ownership Under that scenario a reverse privatisation would be more feasible for the government (see section below)
Notable privatizations
The largest privatization in history was Japan Post It was the nations largest employer and one third of all Japanese government employees worked for Japan Post Japan Post was often said to be the largest holder of personal savings in the world
The Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi wanted to privatize it because it was thought to be an inefficient and a source for corruption In September 2003 Koizumis cabinet proposed splitting Japan Post into four separate companies a bank an insurance company a postal service company and a fourth company to handle the post offices as retail storefronts of the other three
After privatization was rejected by upper house Koizumi scheduled nationwide elections to be held on September 11 2005 He declared the election to be a referendum on postal privatization Koizumi subsequently won this election gaining the necessary supermajority and a mandate for reform and in October 2005 the bill was passed to privatize Japan Post in 2007
Nippon Telegraph and Telephones privatization in 1987 was the largest share offering in financial history at the time 15 of the worlds 20 largest public share offerings have been privatizations of telecoms
The United Kingdoms largest public share offerings were privatisations of British Telecom and British Gas The largest public share offering in France was France Telecom Privatisation in Europe has led to genuine competition the former state-owned enterprises lost their monopolies due to legislation and technological change competitors entered the market and prices for broadband access and telephone calls fell dramatically
PRIVATIZATION IN KENYA
13
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
History of Privatization
After Kenyarsquos independence in 1963 the establishment of the parastatals was driven by a national desire to
bull Accelerate economic social developmentbull Redress regional economic imbalancesbull Increase Kenyan Citizenrsquos participation in the economybull Promote indigenous entrepreneurshipbull Promote foreign investments (through joint ventures)
This desire was expressed in the Sessional Paper No 10 of 1965 on African Socialism and its application to planning in Kenya
Review of the Public Enterprises Performance
A comprehensive review of the Public Enterprises Performance was carried out in 1979 (the Report on the Review of Statutory Boards) and 1982 (the Report of the Working Party on Government Expenditures)
The Report on Review of Statutory Boards pointed out that -
(i) The growth in the parastatal sector had not been accompanied by development of efficient systems to ensure that the sector plays its role in an efficient manner
(ii) There was clear evidence of prolonged inefficiency financial mismanagement waste and malpractices in many parastatals(iii) Government investments had largely been at the initiative of private promoters with government being brought in either as an indispensable partner or to undertake rescue measures(iv) Many of the parastatals had moved away from their primary functions especially the regulatory boards most of which had translated their regulatory role into executive one resulting in waste and confusion(v) There was danger of over-politicizing production and distribution through establishment of too many parastatals
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that productivity of state corporations was quite low while at the same time they continued to absorb an excessive portion of the budget becoming a principal cause of long-term fiscal problem The report observed that -
(i) Nationalization had remained merely presentational through government ownership(ii) State corporationsrsquo operations had become inefficient and unprofitable partly due to multiplicity of objectives(iii) existence of parastatals in commercial activities had stifled private sector initiatives and
(iv) many of the joint ventures had failed requiring the Government to shoulder major financial burden
14
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
The Report on the Working Party on Government Expenditures concluded that some of the resources diverted to the government to finance the state corporationsrsquo activities could have contributed more to national development if these state corporations were left in the private sector The report recommended that-
(i) The government should act as a creator of favourable setting within which people can develop themselves and the economy(ii) The government should divest from its investments in commercial and industrial enterprises to transfer active participation to more Kenyans through participation in shareholding(iii) The government should reduce exposure to risk in areas in which the Private Sector can assume risk without government intervention(iv) The government should dismantle some of the existing administrative hurdles which discourage private sector initiative and provide needless opportunities for corruption
(v) The government should reorganize legal and institutional framework regarding monitoring and supervision of parastatals
Following the two reviews a number of measures were put in place One of the measures was the enactment of the State Corporations Act However although this was a major attempt to streamline the management of the state corporations the performance of most of the corporations continued to deteriorate One reason is the continued reliance on limited public sector financing The state corporations continued relying on public sector financing which was not adequate to meet all the sectorrsquos needs They continued to be financed from loans borrowed by the government andor channeled through them as government equity loans borrowed by the enterprises on government guarantees which in most cases ended up being repaid by the Treasury when the corporations defaulted funds provided directly by the Treasury as grants or equity or through internally generated funds The internally generated funds were however inadequate due to huge debt burdens tariffs that were below cost recovery levels over employment which caused most of the revenue to be used in payment of salaries non-viable ventures which siphoned away resources from the enterprises corruption and mismanagement in general In addition most of the parastatals were under capitalization from the time of incorporation as they were mainly financed from loans without due regard to the establishment of a strong financial base Most of them also continued to spread their resources thinly due to multiplicity of objectives and poor accountability
In July 1992 through the issuance of the Policy Paper on Public Enterprise Reform and Privatization the Government outlined the scope of the Public Sector Reform Programme the institutional framework and the guidelines and procedures for privatizing Public Enterprises (PEs) The Policy Paper identified 240 commercial PEs with public sector equity participation and classified them into two categories
(i) 207 Non strategic commercial PEs which were to be privatized and
(ii) 33 Strategic Commercial PEs which were to be re-structured and retained under public sector control
By the end of the first phase of the privatization programme in 2002 most of the non-strategic commercial enterprises had either been fully or partially privatized
15
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
At that time the direction of thinking regarding restructuring and retention of a number of strategic corporations under Government operation and control had also changed due to-
bull Inadequacy of public resources to finance the requisite investment in infrastructure facilitiesbull The need to arrest continued deterioration in infrastructure servicesbull Lesson from other countries which had succeeded in improving their infrastructure services through Public Private Partnerships and
bull Restructuring which resulted in separation of commercial activities from regulatory functions making it possible to privatize commercial activities while ensuring Government continued presence in the privatized sectors through establishment of strong legal and institutional regulatory frameworks
Although numerous enterprises were privatized during the first phase the impact on the economy was limited because
(i) Most of the enterprises privatized under this Phase were relatively small and self-sufficient (ii) Most of the large companies were considered strategic and therefore not privatized and
(iii) The programme had institutional and process weaknesses arising from failure to entrench the procedures and institutional framework in law
As a result the Parastatal Reform Programme Committee (PRPC) eventually became dormant while its secretariat (The Executive Secretariat and Technical Unit (ESTU))which was the administrative organ was reduced to a skeleton staff following closure of the World Bank Credit under which it was funded Lack of clearly defined processes and an effective communications strategy also exposed the Programme to accusation of corruption There was also limited participation by individual Kenyans in most of the transactions due to the transaction methods applied
Under the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 the Government implemented a number of key privatization transactions These included the Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) Initial Public Offer (IPO) the concessioning of the Kenya Railways operations Mumias Sugar Company Second Offer Kenya Reinsurance Corporation IPO Sale of 51 Telkom Kenya shareholding to a strategic partner and the recently completed Safaricom IPO Through these transactions the country mobilized over Kshs80 billion used to support the countrys recovery and overall development agenda
Following expiry of the Economic Recovery Strategy for Wealth and Employment Creation (ERSWEC) 2003-2007 Kenya has embarked on implementation of a long term strategy Vision 2030 On basis of Vision 2030 and its First Medium Term plan for the period 2008 - 2020 the Government is focusing on four priority areas namely
bull Restoring the economy to a higher broad-based long term growth path with expanded opportunities for all Kenyansbull Creating employment opportunities for the youth for a more stable andcohesive society
16
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
bull Reducing poverty and inequality through accelerated regional development and
bull Deepening human capital development efforts to increase productivity and prosperity
To support the pursuit of these goals the privatization seeks to improve the efficiency and competitiveness of Kenyas productive resources by subjecting more of Kenyas production to market forces mobilizing investment resources for rehabilitation expanding and modernizing key infrastructure facilities developing the capital markets and supporting the budget through privatization proceeds and increased taxes Government is also expected to earn increased dividends from its remaining shareholding as a result of improved performance following enterprise privatization
Privatization commission of Kenya
PRIVATIZATION PROCESS
For each privatization included in the privatization programme the Commission shall make a specific proposal for privatization The Minister shall present a report on the privatization proposals approved by the Cabinet to the relevant committee of Parliament Without limiting what else may be included a privatization proposal shall set out the following ndash
(a) For the assets or operations being proposed for privatization
(i) the purpose of the establishment or existence of the assets or operations(ii) the extent to which the purpose has been met by the assets or operations including any inadequacies in meeting that purpose(iii) the rights or other entitlements and resources that have been provided to meet the purpose(iv) Recommendations for continuing to meet the purpose and
(v) if the asset is a state corporation the financial position of the state corporation
(b) The recommended method of privatization
(c) The estimated costs of implementing the proposed privatization
(d) Recommendations for dealing with the employees directly affected by the proposed privatization including dealing with any benefits they might be owed
(e) The benefits to be gained from the proposed privatization
(f) A work plan for the proposed privatization
(g) Information regarding any written law the repeal amendment or enactment of which will be necessary for the proposed privatization to be carried out and
(h) Proposals on how Kenyans are to be encouraged to participate in the transaction
17
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
METHODS OF PRIVATIZATIONThe Different Approaches
The following methods shall be used for privatization
i public offering of sharesii concessions leases management contracts and other forms of public-private partnershipsiii negotiated sales resulting from the exercise of pre-emptive rightsiv sale of assets including liquidation
v any other method approved by the Cabinet in the approval of a specific privatization proposal
BENEFITS OF PRIVATIZATION
i) The improvement of infrastructure and delivery of public services by the involvement of private capital and expertise
ii) The reduction of the demand for government resources
iii) The generation of additional government revenues by receiving compensation for privatizations iv) The improvement of the regulation of the economy by reducing conflicts between the public sectorrsquos regulatory and commercial functionsv) The improvement of the efficiency of the Kenyan economy by making it more responsive to market forcesvi) The broadening of the base of ownership in the Kenyan economy and vii) The enhancement of the capital markets
Some of the institutions that have been privatized in Kenya
Year Name 1988 Kenya Commercial Bank 1996 Kenya Airways
18
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
2001 Mumias Sugar Co
2006Kenya Electricity Generating Company Limited
2006 Kenya-Uganda Railways2007 Telkom Kenya
2007 Kenya Reinsurance2008 Safaricom Kenya Limited
National Bank of KenyaHousing Finance Company of KenyaEast Africa Portland Cement CoKenya Power amp Lighting Co
STATE FIRMS SLATED FOR PRIVATISATION
Institution and Public Shareholding Shareholding
Kenya Energy Generation Company (KenGen) - GoK 70
Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - GoK 100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Outsourcing of Stevedoring Services (KPA)
100
Kenya Ports Authority ndash Development of Berths No 11-14 100
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash ADC 962
Chemilil Sugar Company ndash Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
14
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash GoK 988
South Nyanza Sugar Company- ICDC 07
South Nyanza Sugar Company ndash Industrial Development Bank (IDB)
03
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 979
Nzoia Sugar Company ndash IDB Capital limited 09
Miwani Sugar Company Limited (Under receivership) ADC
169
Miwani Sugar Company Limited ndash Development Bank of Kenya
03
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) ADC
169
Muhoroni Sugar Company Limited(Under receivership) DBK
03
Kabarnet Hotel ndash Kenya Tourist Development Cooperation (KTDC)
982
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (KTDC) 729
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Kitale Municipal Council)) 135
Mt Elgon Lodge Limited (Trans Nzoia County Council) 135
Golf Hotel Limited (KTDC) 80
Golf Hotel Limited (Kakamega Municipal Council) 20
Sunset Hotel (KTDC) Kisumu Municipal Council 46
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KTDC) 634
Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Limited (KWS)
19
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
KTDC Associated Companiesi International Hotels Kenya Limited (KTDC)
ii Kenya Hotels Properties Limited (KTDC)iii Mountain Lodge Limited (KTDC)
40338391
National Bank of Kenya ndash GoK 225
National Bank of Kenya ndash NSSF 481
Consolidated Bank ndash Deposit Protection Fund 502
Consolidated Bank ndash State Corps 488
Development Bank of Kenya 893
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ADC) 282
Agrochemical and Food Corporation (ICDC) 288
Kenya Wine Agencies (ICDC) 726
East Africa Portland Cement (NSSF) 27
East Africa Portland Cement (GoK) 25
Kenya Meat Commission 100
New Kenya Co-operative Creameries 100
Numerical Machining Complex (Kenya Railways) 51
Numerical Machining Complex (University of Nairobi) 49
Isolated Power Stations -
PRIVATIZATION PROGRAMME
The Privatization Programme is a list of public sector assets and operations identified for privatization as provided for under the Act The current Privatization Programme was approved by Cabinet on 11th December 2008 and gazetted by the Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Finance on 14th August 2009 The investments in the approved programme current public sector shareholding and the objectives for their privatization are as follows
Entityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme
Main ObjectiveRationale for privatization
(i) Development Bank of Kenya (DBK) Industrial amp Commercial Development Corporation (ICDC) ndash 893
bull To release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(ii) National Bank of Kenya (NBK) Restructuring and Privatization Ordinary shares - GOK 225 National Social Security Fund (NSSF) 4805 Preference shares GOK KShs 45bn NSSF KShs 1175 bn
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects
(iii) Public Owned Sugar Companies
bull Chemelil Sugar Company ndash Agriculture Development Corporation (ADC) 9621 and DBK 142
bull To enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in
20
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
bull South Nyanza Sugar Company Ltd ndash GOK 988 ICDC 07 and Industrial Development Bank (IDB) 03
bull Nzoia Sugar Company ndash GoK 9793 IDB Capital Ltd 094
bull Miwani Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash GoK 49
bull Muhoroni Sugar Company Ltd (Under Receivership) ndash ADC 169 Development Bank of Kenya 03
2012
bull To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factories
bull To address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
(iv) Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)
ICDC ndash 288
bull To assure its continued viability
(v) Privatization of the Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotels
bull Kabarnet Hotel ndash KTDC 982
bull Mt Elgon Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 7292 Kitale Municipal council 1354 and Trans-Nzoia Country Council 1354
bull Golf Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 80 Kakamega Municipal Council 20
bull Sunset Hotel Ltd ndash KTDC 954 Kisumu City 46
bull Kenya Safari Lodges and Hotels Ltd ndash KTDC 6342 KWS 002
bull KTDC Associated Companies
International Hotels Kenya Ltd ndash KTDC 40
Kenya Hotel Properties Ltd ndash KTDC 3383
Mountain Lodge Ltd ndash KTDC 3911
Ark Ltd ndash KTDC 564)
bull To mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities
bull To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC
bull To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
21
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
(vi) Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operations
(i) Eldoret container Terminal KPA -100
(ii) Stevedoring services KPA- 100
(iii) Development of Berths 11-14 KPA- 100
bull To enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growth
bull To improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resources
bull To expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(vii) Consolidated Bank of Kenya (Deposit Protection Fund ndash 502 State Corporations and other Government institutions- 488)
bull To mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
(viii)Agrochemical and Food Company ndash ADC 282 and ICDC 288
bull To address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
(ix) Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC) GOK 100
bull To ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
(x) Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) - Sale of Part of Government shares GOK ndash 70
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xi) East African Portland Cement ndash NSSF 27 GOK 25
bull To mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
(xii) Kenya Meat Commission (KMC) GOK ndash 100
bull To address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
(xiii)Privatization of the New Kenya Co-operative Creameries ndash GOK - 100
bull To address future governance and sustainability of its operations
(xiv) Numerical Machining Complex ndash Kenya Railways Corporation 51 Nairobi University 49
bull To address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
(xv) Isolated Power Stations bull To facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
STATUSEntityoperation in the approved Privatization Programme and the government objective
1 Development Bank of Kenya (DBK)
22
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
The ObjectiveTo release funds invested by ICDC for lending to industry and other enterprises and mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial markets enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding The StatusDetailed proposal has been submitted to the Treasury for submission to the cabinet
2 National Bank of Kenya (NBK) The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector and the capital markets enhance corporate governance broaden shareholding and to recoup part of Government investment to finance other development projects The StatusDetailed proposal has been finalized for submission to the cabinet 3 Public Owned Sugar Companies The ObjectiveTo enhance efficiency of the sugar sector and meet GOKCommon Market for East and Southern Africa (COMESA) Sugar safeguard commitment to privatize sugar companies Key objective is to carry out necessary investments and address all challenges affecting the sectorrsquos competitiveness before the safeguard is lifted in 2012To raise funds for the rehabilitation of the sugar factoriesTo address the excess debt through necessary restructuring
The StatusMost of the necessary work to prepare detailed proposal has been completedDetailed proposal finalized after stakeholders workshop held on 23rd Oct 2009 in Kisumu 4 Kenya Wine Agencies (KWAL)The ObjectiveTo ensure its continued viabilityBring a Strategic Equity Partner on board obviate pressure from current suppliers
The StatusMost of the work necessary to finalize detailed proposal has been completed 5 Kenya Tourist Development Corporation (KTDC) hotelsThe ObjectiveTo mobilize resources to rehabilitate and modernize existing facilities To raise proceeds to finance the industry through loans and other investments by KTDC To address and identify the best option for ownership and management of hotels owned by KTDC
The StatusConsultancy work at an advanced stage 6 Kenya Ports Authority (KPA) - approved operationsThe ObjectiveTo enhance Kenyarsquos regional competitiveness and facilitate investment and economic growthTo improve efficiency in delivery of services through mobilization of private sector financial and management resourcesTo expand capacity through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusProcurement of transaction advisory services at final stage7 Consolidated Bank of Kenya The ObjectiveTo mobilize necessary resources to support the bankrsquos future growth support the growth and stability of the financial sector enhance corporate governance and broaden shareholding
The Status
23
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
Identification of transaction advisory services completedNegotiation with consultancy team scheduled to take place this week
8 Agrochemical and Food Company ADCThe ObjectiveTo address financial and management resource needs and the companyrsquos excess debt
The StatusIdentification of transaction advisory team completedNegotiation with consultants scheduled to take place this week 9 Kenya Pipeline Company Limited (KPC)The ObjectiveTo ensue capacity expansion through mobilization of private sector capital and management resources
The StatusTransaction advisors identified contracts to be signed after 14 days appeal window
10 Kenya Electricity Generating Company (KenGen) The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 11 East African Portland Cement The ObjectiveTo mobilize resources for additional investments enhance transparency and corporate governance broaden shareholding in the economy develop the Capital Markets and raise resources to support the Government budget
The StatusTo await recovery of market 12 Kenya Meat Commission (KMC)The ObjectiveTo address KMCrsquos future viability and the required financial and management resources through restructuring and privatization
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for consultancy services ongoing
13 New Kenya Co-operative CreameriesThe ObjectiveTo address future governance and sustainability of its operationsImprove its competitiveness
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy Services ongoing
14 Numerical Machining ComplexThe ObjectiveTo address mobilization of resources for investment in the company and the utilization of the companyrsquos idle assets through restructuring and privatization
The Status
24
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
Procurement of consultancy services on hold 15 Isolated Power StationsThe ObjectiveTo facilitate comprehensive review of the most appropriate and effective way of operating the stations in the future
The StatusEvaluation of Expression of Interest for Consultancy services ongoing
References
KikeriS (1997) Privatization The lessons of Experience World Bank
Others
Srno
Weblink TitleInformation
1 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationprivatization_techniqueshtml
Types and Techniques of Privatization(good one)
2 httpwwwprivatizationorgdatabasewhatisprivatizationhtml About privatization in general(good one)
3 httpwwwgassmannconsultingcomprivatisationhtm Overall view
4 httpwwwindymediaieopenwiresearch_text=privatisations Articles u may want to go through
5 httpwwwwaronwantorglid=6533 Privatisation Power amp Poverty
6 httpwwwmonbiotcomarchivescategoryprivatisation Articles related to privatisation of the medical industry and education
7 httpukanswersyahoocomquestionindexqid=1006030100609 Write up on privatisation in India
8 httpwwwturkisheconomyorgukprivatisationhtml Official government link in Turkey
9 httpwwwanarkismonetnewswirephpstory_id=3472 Privatisation ndash the rip-off of public resources - But is lsquonationalisationrsquo the answer
10 httpwwwactionaidorguk1358world_bank__imfhtml World bank IMF ndashconditions of privatisation
11 httpwwwoecdorgstatisticsdata02643en+2825+293564+1+1+1+1+1_2649_34847_1_119656_1_1_3746700html
OECD and privatisation
12 httpwwwprivatisationgovpk Official Pakistan link on privatisation
13 httpwwwbrettonwoodsprojectorgarticleshtmlcmd[126]=x-126-16248
Bank ldquosoul searchingrdquo on privatisation
14 httpwwwjohnpilgercompageasppartid=134 Globalisation New Rulers of the World- Privatisation
25
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26
15 httpsearchftcomsearchpage=1ampqueryText=privatisationampdrillDown=2Bgatopics3A22Privatisations22ampaje=true
Newspaper articles from financial times on privatisation
16 httpwwwiflaorgIVifla64188-139ehtm A Review of Privatisation
27 httpweeklyahramorgeg2004685ec3htm Study criticises privatisation programme-Egypt
18 httpwwweercrudetailsdownloadaspxfile_id=3769 Analysis of the impact of privatisation on medium and large scale industries
19 httpwwwxternacomxtPrivatisationpage2html Links to newspapers articles and privatisation related articles
20 httpwwwnatointdocucolloq199595-12htm NATO link on privatisation
22 httpwwwcompetition-regulationorgukpublicationsworking_paperswp55pdf
Privatisation in developingCountries a review of theEvidence and the policyLessons
23 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1076pdf Utilities Privatization and the Poor Lessons and Evidence from Latin America
24 httprruworldbankorgDocumentsPapersLinks1481pdf Private Participation inInfrastructure inDeveloping Countries
25 httprruworldbankorgPapersLinksImpact-Infrastructure-Privatization(Click on the title of the article)
Winners and LosersAssessing the Distributional Impact of Privatization
26 httpprivatisationmackphilisanetpagesHistory_of_Privatizationvrt History of Privatization in Kenya
26