ABSTRACT
Public–private partnerships (PPP) are the contractual arrangements between public and private parties to deliver infrastructure and services in which costs, risks, and benefits are shared. Good governance of PPPs, traditionally associated with an effective regulatory and institutional framework, appropriate risk-sharing, competitive and transparent procurement have recently been broadened to include citizens’ perspectives. Turkey uses PPPs to deliver public infrastructures such as airports, energy plants, highways, bridges, and hospitals. Our first section into Turkey’s PPP experience explores how the partnership between state and capital is instituted. We reveal nine crucial governance problems: Complexities of megaprojects, fragmented legal and regulatory framework, weak institutional capacity, risk-sharing discrepancies, poor value for money, non-affordable public services, lack of transparency, limited accountability, and disregard for environmental sustainability. We maintain that a deeper understanding of PPPs requires complementing this governance analysis with insights from critical political economy. Accordingly, we draw a critical political economy framework to explain why, when, and how PPPs in Turkey are utilized in our second section. We underline the neoliberal transformation and financialized capital accumulation dynamics. We argue that PPP projects have fuelled the construction-led economic growth model, distributed resources to pro-government capital groups, and reproduced political power in Turkey.
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Notes on contributors
Berkay Ayhan
Berkay Ayhan is an assistant professor in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the Kadir Has University. He received his Ph.D. in political science from McMaster University, Canada. His research interests are political economy, public policy, and public administration. His articles have been published in journals such as International Review of Administrative Sciences, Turkish Studies, and Amme Idaresi Dergisi.
Yılmaz Üstüner
Yılmaz Üstüner is an Associate Professor of Public Administration. He is a member of the Political Science and Public Administration Department of the Middle East Technical University in Ankara, Turkey. He makes research, publishes, and teaches in the fields of theory of public administration, administrative-organizational reform, organizational theory and the public administration and ethics.