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A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study

Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) are a commonly used procurement strategy, adopted to advance the achievement of national developmental goals. The transactions match the efficiency of the private sector, with the large market potential of the public sector, to establish mutually beneficial part...

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Main Author: Kopeledi, Mosa
Other Authors: Alhassan, Latif
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Graduate School of Business (GSB) 2023
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access_status_str Open Access
author Kopeledi, Mosa
author2 Alhassan, Latif
author_browse Alhassan, Latif
Kopeledi, Mosa
author_facet Alhassan, Latif
Kopeledi, Mosa
author_sort Kopeledi, Mosa
collection Thesis
description Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) are a commonly used procurement strategy, adopted to advance the achievement of national developmental goals. The transactions match the efficiency of the private sector, with the large market potential of the public sector, to establish mutually beneficial partnerships and address increasingly growing public infrastructure development demand. Blended finance, as a subject on alternative financing for public infrastructure finance, has gained popularity in developing counties with poor balance sheets and deteriorating sovereign credit ratings, as an option to raise capital to address infrastructure backlogs and developmental challenges by creating commercially viable public infrastructure markets for sustainable development. However, the results on blended finance transactions and initiatives have not realised the benefits purported for the adoption of blended finance in developing countries. This study sought to critically explore the perceptions of stakeholders on the outcomes of blended finance in the Infrastructure Initiative Programme for Southern Africa (IIPSA) programme. A qualitative research method approach is utilised to explore the factors that advanced or hindered the achievement of the objectives of IIPSA, and based on their experience, further identifies CSF for the adoption of blended finance in South Africa. The thematic analysis utilized in the study, reveals that participants do not believe that the objectives of IIPSA were met due to a Mis- alignment in expectations between the European Union and the SA stakeholders. Governance, State Capacity, DFI mandate restriction, Ambiguous communication of programme objectives, Misalignment in Expectations, Resistance to change, Performance measure, Regulatory restrictions, and an Unstable political environment constitute the nine main themes to emerge from the analysis of factors that hindered the achievement of IIPSA objectives. The CSF are organized around six main themes of Context, Institutional Capacity & Coordination, Alternatives to blended finance, Transparency, Motives, and Environment. The study recommendations are categorized at the Country level, where environmental factors are fundamentally at play, the Institutional Capacity level, where the competency factors of the implementing institutions are highlighted, and at the Project level, where the study relates these to motivation factors of the stakeholders.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:48.261Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Graduate School of Business (GSB)
publisherStr Graduate School of Business (GSB)
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39077 A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study Kopeledi, Mosa Alhassan, Latif development finance Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) are a commonly used procurement strategy, adopted to advance the achievement of national developmental goals. The transactions match the efficiency of the private sector, with the large market potential of the public sector, to establish mutually beneficial partnerships and address increasingly growing public infrastructure development demand. Blended finance, as a subject on alternative financing for public infrastructure finance, has gained popularity in developing counties with poor balance sheets and deteriorating sovereign credit ratings, as an option to raise capital to address infrastructure backlogs and developmental challenges by creating commercially viable public infrastructure markets for sustainable development. However, the results on blended finance transactions and initiatives have not realised the benefits purported for the adoption of blended finance in developing countries. This study sought to critically explore the perceptions of stakeholders on the outcomes of blended finance in the Infrastructure Initiative Programme for Southern Africa (IIPSA) programme. A qualitative research method approach is utilised to explore the factors that advanced or hindered the achievement of the objectives of IIPSA, and based on their experience, further identifies CSF for the adoption of blended finance in South Africa. The thematic analysis utilized in the study, reveals that participants do not believe that the objectives of IIPSA were met due to a Mis- alignment in expectations between the European Union and the SA stakeholders. Governance, State Capacity, DFI mandate restriction, Ambiguous communication of programme objectives, Misalignment in Expectations, Resistance to change, Performance measure, Regulatory restrictions, and an Unstable political environment constitute the nine main themes to emerge from the analysis of factors that hindered the achievement of IIPSA objectives. The CSF are organized around six main themes of Context, Institutional Capacity & Coordination, Alternatives to blended finance, Transparency, Motives, and Environment. The study recommendations are categorized at the Country level, where environmental factors are fundamentally at play, the Institutional Capacity level, where the competency factors of the implementing institutions are highlighted, and at the Project level, where the study relates these to motivation factors of the stakeholders. 2023-11-02T08:40:01Z 2023-11-02T08:40:01Z 2022 2023-11-02T08:39:19Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MCOM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39077 eng application/pdf Graduate School of Business (GSB) Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle development finance
Kopeledi, Mosa
A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
thesis_degree_str Master's
title A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
title_full A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
title_fullStr A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
title_full_unstemmed A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
title_short A critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in South Africa: The IIPSA Case Study
title_sort critical analysis of the use of blended finance for public infrastructure development in south africa the iipsa case study
topic development finance
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39077
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AT kopeledimosa criticalanalysisoftheuseofblendedfinanceforpublicinfrastructuredevelopmentinsouthafricatheiipsacasestudy