Abstract
Abstract
This paper presents the findings of a literature review on public
private partnerships (PPPs) in two sectors – education and health – in
Africa, Asia and Latin America. It highlights the heterogeneity of the
category within and across sectors and shows that the key predictions of the
PPP doctrine – cost-efficiency for improved social service delivery to the
poor – are hardly fulfilled in practice. Moreover, PPPs – both as policy
model and practical arrangements – are underpinned by a narrow conception of
education and health, which denies their broader embeddedness within the
economy and society. The paper identifies theoretical and methodological
limitations of the existing scholarship. It underlines the scarcity of data
on the corporate sector and, more broadly, about the economics of education
and health PPPs. It also stresses the little attention paid to the
beneficiaries. The paper finally calls for further research to open up the
‘black box’ of PPPs.
Funder
London International Development
Centre
London International Development Centre
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Sociology and Political Science,Social Sciences (miscellaneous),Health(social science)
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