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During financial years 2008-17, India pumped in about USD 1.1 trillion on infrastructure. However, the challenge is to step up infrastructure investment substantially, the Economic Survey 2021-22 said.
”Keeping this objective in view, National Infrastructure Pipeline (NIP) was launched with a projected infrastructure investment of around Rs 111 lakh crore (USD 1.5 trillion) during FY2020-2025 to provide world-class infrastructure across the country, and improve the quality of life for all citizens,” it said.
It also envisages improving project preparation and attracting investment, both domestic and foreign in infrastructure.
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NIP has involved all the stakeholders for a coordinated approach to infrastructure creation in India to boost short-term as well as the potential GDP growth.
”Infrastructure is the backbone for any economy. The extent and quality of infrastructure determine the ability of the country to utilize its comparative advantage and enable cost competitiveness. Given the strong backward and forward linkages and the positive externalities that infrastructure generates, it can be a vehicle for social and economic transformation,” it added.
Public-private partnership in infrastructure has been an important source of investment in the sector. As per the database of the World Bank on private participation in infrastructure, India is ranked second among developing countries both by the number of PPP projects as well as the associated investments.
Much of the Indian success in PPPs is attributed to development of a robust institutional structure, financial support, and use of standardized documents, both process documents like a model request for qualification and model request for proposal as well as substantive documents like the model concession agreements across infrastructure sectors.
The Public-Private Partnership Appraisal Committee (PPPAC) which is responsible for the appraisal of PPP projects has cleared 66 projects with a total project cost of Rs 1,37,218 crore from 2014-15 to 2020-21.
The government launched the Viability Gap Funding (VGF) scheme for providing financial assistance to financially unviable but socially/ economically desirable PPP projects. Up to 20 percent of the project cost is funded under this scheme as a grant.
”…the total VGF amount disbursed between 2014-15 to 2020-21 by DEA is Rs 2,943 crore. Further, the government in November 2020 approved continuation of and revamping of the Scheme for Financial Support to Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) in Infrastructure Viability Gap Funding (VGF) Scheme till 2024-25,” the survey said. The revamped VGF scheme is expected to attract more PPP projects and facilitate private investment in social sectors such as health, education, wastewater, solid waste management, and water supply, among others, it added.