This report addresses the critical question: how can the public and private sectors build successful partnerships?
This policy outlook paper series is part of the Leadership Partner Program with the National Australia Bank.
This report uses data from the PPI Database to analyze broad trends of PPP investment in infrastructure from 1991 to 2015.
In order to deepen understanding and provide practical insight into the complexities of planning and delivering large infrastructure projects, the COAG Infrastructure Working Group released Infrastructure Planning and Delivery: Best Practice Case Studies Vol. 1 in 2010.
This booklet aims to provide a platform for sharing the knowledge gained through a review of best practice case studies within Australia s public sector.
Australian governments have developed national guidelines for the delivery of infrastructure projects to promote cross-government consistency and the use of best practice approaches.
This PPP checklist is an extension of the initial framework.
This second version of the PPP Reference Guide, as the first one, presents a global overview of the diversity of approaches and experiences in the implementation of PPPs and more.
The Reference Guide attempts to provide the most relevant examples, references and resources to help readers inform themselves on key PPP topics.
This document mainly focuses on Introduction to public Private Partnerships, Structuring a PPP Deal, PPP Procurement Process and Managing a PPP Relationship.
The core principle behind the PPP is the creation of a contractual bubble – a framework of contracts.
The Toolkit is a reference guide for public authorities in developing countries for the development of PPP programs in the highways sector, particularly in assisting in PPP policy development, project preparation and the sourcing and more.
This book proposes a synthesis of several of the works carried out for the research program, as well as a comparison with other works treating a similar problem.
The Guide to Guidance is principally aimed at public procurement authorities considering the use of public-private partnership (PPP) arrangements.