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UK faces tough choices to finance infrastructure ambitions

There is an urgent need to spend more on crit­i­cal infra­struc­ture like pow­er sta­tions and hos­pi­tals. But with pub­lic finances under pres­sure, the gov­ern­ment needs new ways to raise mon­ey


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Man in hard hat by scaffolding

The UK’s lat­est Nation­al Infra­struc­ture and Con­struc­tion Pipeline promis­es £650bn of infra­struc­ture schemes over the next decade. You can’t fault the government’s ambi­tion – but where will the mon­ey come from? 

Across the UK, world-class infra­struc­ture will be the foun­da­tion to “build back bet­ter, unit­ing and lev­el­ling up the coun­try as we recov­er from the pan­dem­ic”, the gov­ern­ment says. High­ways, rail, air­ports, hos­pi­tals, schools, dig­i­tal net­works – the list is long and the ambi­tion is huge.  

The UK isn’t alone in its vision for a gold­en era of infra­struc­ture spend­ing that will bring jobs and pros­per­i­ty. The US, for exam­ple, plans to spend $1.2tn (around £900bn) over what Pres­i­dent Biden has called “the decade of infra­struc­ture.” The Euro­pean Com­mis­sion has unveiled a major infra­struc­ture invest­ment strat­e­gy aimed at mobil­is­ing up to €300bn (about £250bn) of invest­ments in glob­al devel­op­ment by 2027. Infra­struc­ture spend­ing has had a huge role to play in China’s mete­oric eco­nom­ic rise over the past three decades; on the back of slow­ing growth, it’s once again turn­ing to such invest­ment to stim­u­late the econ­o­my.

Future-proof infrastructure

Ambi­tions are one thing – financ­ing them is quite anoth­er. As the world emerges from the pan­dem­ic, state spend­ing and gov­ern­ment bor­row­ing are already at record lev­els. Tax­a­tion is high and the cost of bor­row­ing is going up after many years of cheap mon­ey. Infla­tion has returned with a vengeance: high ener­gy prices and a short­age of resources and mate­ri­als are push­ing up the cost of all projects. The need to future-proof infra­struc­ture for cli­mate change and to meet com­mit­ments around the UN’s Sus­tain­able Devel­op­ment Goals (SDGs) adds many bil­lions to the cost of con­struc­tion. 

Still, invest­ment in infra­struc­ture is crit­i­cal and can­not be delayed. Essen­tial infra­struc­ture has been starved of invest­ment over the past decade in the wake of the bank­ing cri­sis. In the UK, for exam­ple, the back­log of spend­ing on NHS build­ings is esti­mat­ed at more than £9bn, sim­ply to address crum­bling hos­pi­tals and clin­ics. The repair bill for schools in Eng­land is put at £11bn. 

Greater align­ment between users and pay­ers will need to be found if gov­ern­ments are to deliv­er on their infra­struc­ture agen­das

Against this inaus­pi­cious back­ground, lofti­er ambi­tions are already being scaled back. Projects like High Speed 2 and Cross­rail 2 have been clipped back as spend­ing pri­or­i­ties have shift­ed. Again, the UK isn’t alone: the US infra­struc­ture pro­gramme, while still huge, has been reduced from the orig­i­nal pro­pos­al because of a back­lash over high­er tax­es. 

The UK gov­ern­ment has indi­cat­ed that it hopes at least half of the tar­get­ed £650bn infra­struc­ture spend will come from the pri­vate sec­tor. The new UK Infra­struc­ture Bank (UKIB), set up in the wake of Brex­it to repli­cate part of the role tra­di­tion­al­ly adopt­ed by the Euro­pean Invest­ment Bank (EIB) in the UK, will play an impor­tant role in build­ing bridges with busi­ness.   

The Gov­ern­ment believes the UKIB will be more aligned with its pol­i­cy aims, includ­ing the ‘lev­el­ling up’ agen­da and the green econ­o­my, and be more tar­get­ed than the EIB. The aim is for the UKIB to assume project start-up risk before attract­ing tra­di­tion­al investors once the project is up and run­ning. 

The bank is due to pub­lish its first strate­gic plan in June, includ­ing invest­ment pri­or­i­ties. It has an ini­tial £12bn of cap­i­tal to deploy as well as £10bn of gov­ern­ment guar­an­tees. 

It made its first invest­ment in Feb­ru­ary when Tees Val­ley Com­bined Author­i­ty agreed a 50-year loan of £107m to fund its South Bank Quay project. This would trans­form part of a for­mer steel­works into a 450-metre quay to ser­vice the off­shore wind sec­tor.

“It’s not just renew­able ener­gy projects that could be con­sid­ered for these sorts of loans,” says Mark Casey, a spe­cial­ist in bank­ing and finance and legal direc­tor at Womble Bond Dick­in­son. “Trans­port infra­struc­ture – which has always been a hard sell in terms of attract­ing pri­vate sec­tor invest­ment – is an essen­tial part of the road to net zero. If author­i­ties get their pitch right, whether it’s for local bus ser­vices or oth­er trans­port links, they might be able to kick off projects with the UKIB-backed fund­ing.” 

The UKIB will have to meet sub­sidy rules, though its pro­posed offer­ing of 60 basis points above gilts is con­sid­er­ably cheap­er than the com­mer­cial mar­ket.

PFI out of favour

Gov­ern­ments have pre­vi­ous­ly leaned heav­i­ly on schemes like the pri­vate finance ini­tia­tive (PFI) and its suc­ces­sor, PF2, to form pri­vate sec­tor part­ner­ships for infra­struc­ture projects. How­ev­er, such schemes have fall­en heav­i­ly out of favour, main­ly because of lega­cy costs to the pub­lic sec­tor which many con­sid­ered exces­sive. For exam­ple, PFI deals financed £11.8bn of hos­pi­tal build­ings across Eng­land; over 30 years these arrange­ments will cost the NHS £79bn in repay­ments. 

Although reviv­ing PFI will be dif­fi­cult polit­i­cal­ly, many believe that some form of pub­lic-pri­vate part­ner­ship is crit­i­cal to secure the infra­struc­ture invest­ment required. Daniel Woolf is a prin­ci­pal con­sul­tant at AECOM, the glob­al infra­struc­ture con­sul­tan­cy firm, and a for­mer infra­struc­ture finance pol­i­cy lead at the CBI. He thinks that cham­pi­oning pri­vate finance deliv­ery mod­els should be giv­en pri­or­i­ty to fill the void left by the death of PFI. 

“Pub­lic-pri­vate part­ner­ships can be an effec­tive mech­a­nism to raise invest­ment for infra­struc­ture,” says Woolf. “They are still wide­ly used in coun­tries like Nor­way, Nether­lands and Aus­tralia. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, in the UK PFI has become syn­ony­mous with a small num­ber of high-pro­file fail­ures, which detracts from its many strengths.” 

There are a num­ber of options, depend­ing on what type of project is involved

Woolf says it would be help­ful for the next Nation­al Infra­struc­ture and Con­struc­tion Pipeline to set out infra­struc­ture projects that will seek pri­vate finance and the pri­vate finance deliv­ery mod­el that will be utilised in each case. This would restore con­fi­dence in the government’s appetite to facil­i­tate pri­vate sec­tor invest­ment and finance in UK infra­struc­ture and pro­vide a clear path­way to par­tic­i­pa­tion for busi­ness­es. This doc­u­ment could also be show­cased glob­al­ly to high­light and pro­mote projects that Britain is dri­ving.

“The solu­tion has to be mul­ti­fac­eted,” says Woolf. “There are a num­ber of options, depend­ing on what type of project is involved and over dif­fer­ent time­frames.” 

For exam­ple, the Thames Tide­way Tun­nel project was financed using an inno­v­a­tive reg­u­lat­ed asset base mod­el, which result­ed in a low­er cost of cap­i­tal and an increase in con­sumer bills of £13-£25 per year, con­sid­er­ably low­er than the orig­i­nal esti­mates of £70-£80 per year. How­ev­er, this mod­el might not be appro­pri­ate for oth­er projects. 

Time for honesty

Richard Threlfall, glob­al head of infra­struc­ture at the con­sul­tan­cy KPMG and a for­mer advis­er to the sec­re­tary of state for trans­port and the deputy prime min­is­ter, says it’s time for “polit­i­cal hon­esty” about the state’s abil­i­ty to fund infra­struc­ture invest­ment. Users should be expect­ed to direct­ly bear more of the cost. 

“Gov­ern­ments every­where are under pres­sure to pass more of the cost of infra­struc­ture to users, but they are wor­ried about the polit­i­cal back­lash,” says Threlfall. He notes that in the UK, the ener­gy reg­u­la­tor has been sup­port­ed by gov­ern­ment in its refusal to lift the ener­gy price cap, even as dozens of ener­gy firms face col­lapse. 

“No one wants to pay more for some­thing they regard as essen­tial, like pow­er, water or the dri­ve to work. But greater align­ment between users and pay­ers will need to be found if gov­ern­ments are to deliv­er on their infra­struc­ture agen­das and in par­tic­u­lar their net zero com­mit­ments.”

Renew­ing long-term pub­lic-pri­vate part­ner­ships is essen­tial, he agrees. “The ques­tion of inter­gen­er­a­tional fair­ness is crit­i­cal. If we build roads, bridges or air­ports that last for 30, 50 or even 100 years, there is an argu­ment for defray­ing some of the pay­ment to future gen­er­a­tions.”