Road to Ruin?
05/02/07
by
Daniel Schulman,
MoJoBLOG
In its latest issue, Business Week
weighs in with a cover story on the push to
privatize the nation's highways, bridges,
and airports, among other public
infrastructure. This growing trend, which
Jim Ridgeway and I explored in MoJo's
January/February issue, is now moving along
at a feverish clip, propelled by investment
banks and foreign companies who see in these
low-risk assets the prospect of enormous and
steady returns, not to mention, as
Business Week puts it, "monopolistic
advantages that keep those cash flows as
steady as a beating heart." For would-be
privateers, it doesn't hurt that this model
is enthusiastically backed by the Bush
administration and a cadre of ardent free
marketeers within the Department of
Transportation.
With cash-strapped states struggling as
it is, the time is ripe for private firms to
offer large upfront payments in exchange for
long-term leases on public infrastructure (a
foreign consortium, for instance, paid $3.8
billion for a 75-year concession on
Indiana's 157-mile toll road last summer).
“All told," Business Week reports,
"some $100 billion worth of public property
could change hands in the next two years, up
from less than $7 billion over the past two
years; a lease for the Pennsylvania Turnpike
could go for more than $30 billion all by
itself." As Mark Florian, the COO of Goldman
Sachs' North American infrastructure
division told the magazine, "There's a lot
of value trapped in these assets.” You'll
often hear privatization proponents like
Florian -- who has canvassed the nation
pitching this concept to state and local
governments -- speak of the value that's
locked up in public infrastructure. Left
unsaid, however, is that upon being
“liberated” the majority of this value will
flow directly into the pockets of the
investors who are lobbying so aggressively
for privatization, not to the taxpayers who
technically own these assets and who have
funded their construction and operation.
While there is certainly a case to be
made for public-private partnerships, as
these arrangements are often called, there
are numerous public policy questions that
have yet to be adequately addressed. One, as
Business Week points out, has to do
with the "quality of service on deals that
can span 100 years.”
The newly private toll roads are being
managed well now, but owners could sell
them to other parties that might not
operate them as capably in the future.
Already, the experience outside of toll
roads has been mixed: The Atlanta city
water system, for example, was so poorly
managed by private owners that the
government reclaimed it."
Then there's the issue of pricing, since
the companies who have thus far secured
leases on U.S. infrastructure, particularly
toll roads, have been give wide latitude to
hike tolls.
Chicago's Skyway could see car tolls
rise from $2 in 2005 to $5 by 2017. For
some perspective, if a similar scheme
were applied to the Pennsylvania
Turnpike during its 67 years of
existence, the toll for traveling from
the Delaware River to the Ohio border
would be as much as $553 now instead of
$22.75. Macquarie, which teamed up with
Spain's Cintra to purchase the Chicago
Skyway and the Indiana Toll Road,
underscored the governmental trade-off
during a presentation at the recent
White House Surface Transportation
Legislative Leadership Summit: "More
Money or Lower Tolls." In an extreme
scenario, governments could begin to
sell properties that aren't tolled to
private owners who will impose fees.
Of course, tolls won't go to the moon if
they result in dramatic reductions in
traffic. For example, investment firm NW
Financial Group estimates that if the
Chicago Skyway pricing scheme were
applied to New York's Holland Tunnel
over its 80 years, it would cost $185 to
travel through it instead of the current
$6. "No one will pay that much," says
Murray E. Bleach, president of Macquarie
Holdings (USA) Inc. "It's just not going
to happen."
I agree with Bleach that charging $553
and $185 for passage on a toll road is
unrealistic. That said, you can bet that the
companies who take over toll roads are going
to seriously push the envelope in order to
maximize returns to their investors, which
is one of the ways that the inherent value
of these roads is “unlocked.”
In the states where privatization is on
the table, including Texas and Pennsylvania,
there's strong resistance among citizens as
well as public officials. In Texas, as
Business Week reports, the state House
of Representatives voted in April, by an
overwhelming margin, to place a two-year
moratorium on privatizing the state's toll
road. But it’s unlikely that local
opposition will fend off the privatizers who
have power, money, and influence to spare.
For some time now investment banks have been
raising multi-billion dollar infrastructure
funds in order to take advantage of
opportunities in North America. We reported
in January that Goldman's fledgling fund had
generated such an outpouring of investor
interest that it had surpassed its $3
billion target. According to Business
Week, Goldman’s fund now holds some
$6.5 billion. That money won’t be sitting
idle for long.
While the Business Week piece
provides a comprehensive and appropriately
skeptical take on the privatization push, it
fails to mention a key issue. These deals
are rife with the possibility of corruption
and cronyism and conflicts of interest. On
the latter, Goldman is a prime example.
Beyond its persistent lobbying efforts to
open U.S. infrastructure to private
investment, the firm has acted as an outside
financial advisor to states considering
public-private partnerships (ostensibly
providing disinterested advice to their
clients), while simultaneously raising a
$6.5 billion fund whose sole purpose is to
buy infrastructure on the cheap. Last fall,
at a privatization conference in New York, I
had the opportunity to ask Goldman's Mark
Florian about the firm’s various roles in
the emerging infrastructure market. When I
asked him whether Goldman wants to be an
adviser or an investor in the road business,
he replied, simply, "both."