TY - BOOK AU - Estache,Antonio AU - Carbajo,C.Jose AU - Estache,Antonio AU - Rus,de Gines TI - Argentina's Transport Privatization and Re-Regulation: Ups and Downs of a Daring Decade-Long Experience PY - 1999/// CY - Washington, D.C. PB - The World Bank KW - Airport KW - Airport Authority KW - Commuters KW - Costs KW - Infrastructure KW - Investments KW - Modal Shift KW - Port Services KW - Rail KW - Railroad KW - Railways KW - Road Transport KW - Roads KW - Subsidy KW - Subway KW - Traffic KW - Transport KW - Transport Economics KW - Transport Economics, Policy and Planning KW - Transport Sector KW - Trucks N2 - November 1999 - Argentina's policy for reform of the transport sector has been a mix of competition in the market and, through concessions, for the market. Capacity has increased, demand has grown, and prices and services have improved. Public financing has not been eliminated but it has been drastically reduced. When Argentina initiated reform of its transport sector in 1989, it had few models to follow. It was the first Latin American country to privatize its intercity railroad, to explicitly organize intraport competition, and to grant a private concession to operate its subway. It was second (after Japan) to privatize its urban commuter railways and one of the first in the developing world to grant road concessions to private operators. Argentina's experience shows that transport privatization and deregulation provide efficiency gains that can be delivered to users. Despite unexpectedly high residual subsidy requirements, fiscal costs are lower, services have improved, and new investment is taking place. Argentina's decade-long experience shows that the reform process involves learning by doing. Inexperienced new regulators quickly face the challenges in controlling monopoly power and providing long-run incentives for private investment. Designing sustainable reform requires a commitment by government to minimize its role in the sector and to respect its original promises to both users and concessionaires. Argentina has learned the importance of building up the regulatory capacity needed to monitor contracts, especially when initial uncertainty about demand and cost conditions is strong and renegotiation is the probable outcome of daring reform. The government's main challenge in monitoring contracts is to get enough information to reach a balance in its decisions about distributing efficiency gains fairly between consumers and private investors. This is one area in which Argentina may not yet have met the challenge. As the last wave of contract extensions in rail and roads comes to an end, one issue is likely to be the need for better targeting of subsidies for the poor. This paper - a product of Governance, Regulation, and Finance, World Bank Institute - is part of a larger effort in the institute to increase understanding of infrastructure regulation. Antonio Estache may be contacted at aestache@worldbank.org UR - http://elibrary.worldbank.org/doi/book/10.1596/1813-9450-2249 ER -