Manish K Singh, S Ramann
Bank-led infrastructure financing in India has
subsided in a reflection of the micro-prudential risks faced by
banks. Bond-based financing is constrained by an incomplete bond
market. Foreign borrowing is particularly inappropriate as it forces
currency mismatch upon infrastructure projects. In the search for
innovative methods of infrastructure financing this paper introduces
the possibility of "User right" as one component of infrastructure
financing. The key insight is to harness users, from amongst the
universe of investors, as financiers with a high yield tradeable debt
instrument that derives its value from a rebate on user
charges. Liquidity would come about through trading at exchanges,
which would yield a liquidity premium. Users as bond-holders would
have the incentive to perform monitoring functions, which would
enhance accountability. Public interest vested in public
infrastructure may improve existing institutional mechanism. |