Keep it simple — focus on the endgame: more children in school.
Bill Banks
The impact: a legacy of learning
All of the classrooms covered in the project were completed on schedule and on budget, with 6,000 of the total finished between financial close in October 2012 and August 2014.
Thanks to careful planning and detailed evaluation at every stage, the innovatively funded project has now created learning space for 450,000 Philippine students. That’s 450,000 school-age children who may not otherwise have been educated to the same level, or at all.
Who knows what further legacy this program will have? It’s impossible to predict how many doctors, entrepreneurs, inventors, politicians or artists will emerge from that group of 450,000 children.
What is certain is, with those children now in proper classrooms, the Philippines has a much better chance of a prosperous future.
Can-do, must-do spirit
The Philippine government has since retained us to advise on a second and third program of transformative investment in infrastructure for education, and Banks says keeping up with the pace at which the government wants to move on these classroom procurement programs is a challenge. But he is continually impressed by the shared desire to improve access to education in the Philippines across the different government agencies involved.
“That whole commitment to get the right outcome and to get the project done was kind of breathtaking,” he says. “Keep it simple — focus on the endgame: more children in school.” That sense of public purpose carried over to the private delivery partner. “The private sector responded in kind with good bids and a can-do, must-do spirit. It was very much a true public private partnership that resulted in a coveted win-win for all parties, but especially for the children of the Philippines.”
Banks believes the model for the Philippines schools program could be replicated across a wide range of markets and social needs: “We see a great opportunity to help our clients build a better working world by helping them develop new commercially viable models to provide much needed infrastructure projects and reduce the significant infrastructure investment backlog. The ongoing Philippines schools programs are a perfect example of what the application of good infrastructure policy can provide in emerging markets.”
Summary
Public private partnerships, like this one in the Philippines, can help expand the opportunities in emerging markets.