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Q: Stakeholders in Privatization ( Answered 4 out of 5 stars,   0 Comments )
Question  
Subject: Stakeholders in Privatization
Category: Business and Money > Economics
Asked by: tom123-ga
List Price: $50.00
Posted: 24 Jan 2003 00:35 PST
Expires: 23 Feb 2003 00:35 PST
Question ID: 147860
- Who are stakeholders in infrastructure privatization? How important
of them?
- How stakeholders tried to impact on the decision of privatization,
and with what effects?

Need help with above questions with references.

Request for Question Clarification by czh-ga on 24 Jan 2003 01:57 PST
Please add a little more information. What kind of infrastructure?
What products or services? What sized organization? Or is this
strictly a theoretical question? It sounds like it might be a case
study or homework. The more information you share, the better we'll be
able to answer your question. Thanks.

czh

Clarification of Question by tom123-ga on 24 Jan 2003 02:36 PST
Thanks for a quick response. These questions are theoretical questions
for my literature review in MBA level. So, it does not need a specific
industry in this time but general information with few examples and
references. However, my case study is in Transport Infrastructure
Privatization. The expectation length for this section is about 10-15
pages. It aims to emphasize on the importance of including stakeholder
views in studying privatization and effect of stakeholders on policy
implementation.
Answer  
Subject: Re: Stakeholders in Privatization
Answered By: omnivorous-ga on 24 Jan 2003 04:53 PST
Rated:4 out of 5 stars
 
Tom - - 

Several years ago I had the occasion to meet a former investment
banker in his late 30's.  He had become a Peace Corps volunteer
working on privatization of Polish utilities.

In an intriguing discussion, he described the process as being
initiated by the government; as being lead jointly by management and
the government; as involving foreign investors who had capital and
technology the country's infrastructure needed.  There were several
political aspects to the process, including how much of the ownership
would be reserved for employees and the terms under which employees
received shares.  Another political aspect was who the foreign
investors were.  Given historical enmity, German firms were regarded
as much less attractive than American firms.

You'll find some interesting information about how unique the
privatization process is by country.  And how it's unique going from
industry to industry and even firm-to-firm.  Changes in economic
conditions can have a dramatic effect on the process and the parties
interested.

Stakeholders vary in almost every instance, so their impact on the
process varies highly.  But here are some good references:


WORLDWIDE
----------

The World Bank has a compendium of links on privatization issues, with
a good description of the content at each point:
World Bank
"Papers and Links on the Impact of Privatization" 
http://rru.worldbank.org/resources/privatization.asp

OECD
"Recent Privatisation Trends in OECD Countries" (June, 2002)
http://www.oecd.org/pdf/M00031000/M00031987.pdf

The World Bank's privatization status pages, with a variety of updates
and statistics for each country:
Privatization Link
http://www.privatizationlink.com/


POLAND
------

From the first post-Cold War government, the Poles made a strategic
commitment to privatizing the economy as rapidly as possible.  It has
provided a rich amount of information about the process over the past
12 years.

The Polish Ministry of the Treasury reported in 2001 that
privatization actions had taken place in almost 5,400 companies. 
Other reports say that 100,000 businesses were affected, including
retail stores.

International Labor Organization (ILO)
"Enterprise Privatization and Employee Buy-outs in Poland," R. Schliwa
(Jan. 24, 2000)
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/ent/papers/ippred2.htm

Worldbank Institute
"Case study: Privatization in Poland," Michel and Ngo (undated)
http://www.worldbank.org/wbi/cases/indexpol.html

Polish Ministry of the Treasury
"Information on the participation of foreign investors in
privatization, 1990-2002" (May 16, 2002)
http://www.mst.gov.pl/dokumenty/raport_inwestorzy_an.pdf

Polish Ministry of the Treasury
"Privatisation Quarterly" (March 2002)
http://www.mst.gov.pl/dokumenty/Kwartalnike.pdf

This study on the privatization of health care systems in Chile,
Columbia and Poland introduces a wide range of participants in the
process, from insurers to doctors:
Harvard School of Public Health
"Privatization for Payments: Lessons for Poland from Chile and
Columbia," Bossert (March, 2000)
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/ihsg/publications/pdf/No-77.PDF


UNITED KINGDOM
---------------

Many of the U.K. cases are more technical or complex, particularly in
your area of interest – transportation.  Each of the major sectors
involved in privatization - - energy, water, rail, health care, air
transportation - - has unique sets of stakeholders.  There's an
overwhelming amount written about the process because of the size of
the enterprises and the amount of press coverage.

The Economist is not well-indexed on the Internet, but would be an
excellent source of historical and critical analysis of the process in
the U.K.

Creative Resistance
"Derailed: the U.K.'s Disastrous Experience with Railway
Privatization" (Jan. 1, 2002)
http://www.creativeresistance.ca/awareness/2002-jan01-uk's-disastrous-experience-with-railway-privatization.htm

This analysis treats use of private contractors to support military
services:
Rand Corporation
"Lessons Learned from the U.K. – Public-Private Partnerships"
(undated)
http://www.rand.org/natsec_area/products/partner.html

A Canadian commentary on water system privatization in the U.K.:
Urban Renaissance Institute
"No water regulation without privatization" from the National Post
(Jan. 23, 2001)
http://www.urban-renaissance.org/urbanren/index.cfm?DSP=content&ContentID=1637

Air traffic control privatization:
Air Wise News
"U.K. Proceeds with Part-Privatization of Air Traffic Control"  (Jan.
31, 2001)
http://news.airwise.com/stories/2001/01/980969845.html


RUSSIA 
-------

Russian privatization efforts have come under strong critical
analysis.  There are several books written about the impact on the
country's economy, including the following two.  The first is a more
critical analysis; the second written for the standpoint of insiders:
"The Privatization Process in Russia, Ukraine, and the Baltics,"
Frydman and Rapaczynski, CEU Press, 1993.

"Privatizing Russia," Boycko, Shliefer and Vishny, MIT Press,
December, 1996.

This is a critical analysis of what's happened in Russia, particular
with the transfer of major state enterprises:
International Labor Organization
"Privatization: Lessons from Russia and China" (Jan. 24, 2000)
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/ent/papers/emd24.htm

A detailed analysis of the progress in privatization over the past 10
years.  Requires some knowledge of major Russian businesses and their
history:
Institute for Economy in Transition
"Russian Economy in 2001"
http://www.iet.ru/trend/2001/index.htm


Google search strategy:
privatization + Poland
privatization + England
privatization + Russia

If there's any aspect of this answer that's unclear, please let us
know with a clarification request before rating this answer.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Request for Answer Clarification by tom123-ga on 24 Jan 2003 05:43 PST
Hello,

I don't think those provided information are useful to me. I had
access to all those sites. I need a written answer that I could
directly use in my paper, not just a link to web sites.

Sorry, please try again.

Clarification of Answer by omnivorous-ga on 24 Jan 2003 10:40 PST
Tom --

I just wanted you to know that I'm working on it and should be done in
several hours.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Clarification of Answer by omnivorous-ga on 24 Jan 2003 15:45 PST
Tom –

Stakeholders in privatization can be broken into several general
groups:
1.	Government
2.	Management
3.	Investors
4.	Labor
5.	Suppliers
6.	Others


The involvement by the stakeholders varies highly by country,
primarily due to the process involved, but also due to peculiarities
of each industry.  In some cases, such as the de-nationalization of
oil and aluminum industries in Russia, the process was done swiftly
and with little input.  In the case of western democracies, large
amounts of public debate preceded the process.


GOVERNMENT
----------------------

Government commitment to privatization starts the process,
particularly because enabling legislation is always necessary.  And
even the private Reason Institute, which back privatization strongly,
notes that "privatization is a political process."
Reason Institute
"Privatization Center"
http://www.privatization.org/

A second reason is that government-operated concerns often don't
follow any form of standard accounting practice, as Yergin and
Stanislaw's book, 'The Commanding Heights,' notes in their account of
the U.K. efforts.  Even British Telecom, which later became a star in
privatization, had books that were "a total mess."
PBS
"Comanding Heights: the Birth of Privatization"
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/commandingheights/shared/pdf/ess_privatization.pdf


Modern privatization efforts really started with the success of the
Thatcher government in privatizing British Telecom in November, 1984. 
The ability of the government to raise capital, while forcing more
competition into the market, made the process irresistible.  Virtually
every country except Cuba, North Korea and Myanmar have been involved
in the process.

More than $1 trillion had been raised by governments by the end of
1999, according to Henry Gibbon in 'Privatisation International.' with
another $180 billion added in 2000.

France privatized 22 companies worth $12 billion during the 1980s
under Jacques Chirac.  The subsequent Socialist government didn't
continue the process but didn't reverse it either.  In the mid-1990s
the process continued in France, raised $7.1 billion in a France
Telecom IPO (October, 1997) and $10.5 billion in a secondary offering
(November, 1998).

According to Price, Waterhouse, the goals for the government have
been:
1.	raise revenue
2.	promote economic efficiency
3.	reduce government interference in the economy and the drain on
treasury resources
4.	promote wide ownership of shares
5.	introduce competition
6.	subject the enterprises to market discipline

Journal of Economic Literature
"State to Market: A Survey of Empirical Studies on Privatization,"
Megginson and Netter (June, 2001)
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=262311

Government commitments to the process have been related to both
political considerations and the degree of market failure.  In the
U.K., despite success in energy, water, rail and telecommunications
industries, the popularity of the National Health Care system has led
to relatively little activity.

And Poland's commitment to the process was strong, primarily as a
reaction to domination of the country's economy by the Soviet Union
until 1990 but also to preclude re-emergence of Communist government. 
More than 5,300 state-owned companies were involved in the process
over the past 12 years, not counting retail businesses that have
totaled 100,000 companies in some estimates.

But the Polish process became so intricate that the Privatization
Ministry in the Treasury Department found itself having to explain
what was happening, particularly when unviable companies such as Hula
Batory, a steelmaker, were a candidate for consideration.

In Michel and Ngo's case study of the ministry, they quote Dr. Jerzy
Thieme, chairperson of the Steering Committee on Mass Privatization at
Poland's ministry, who discusses problems in implementation - - and
identifies the stakeholders who he thinks they need to reach in a
public relations campaign:
"This program is hard to explain even to a technical audience. We
should have left time for a comprehensive education and media
campaign. We should have identified who needed to understand the
program and how to speak to them in language they could understand.
Much of our key audiences include the general public, subgroups like
employees and managers, other agencies of government, the Parliament,
the media, foreign investors, and the international donors. I hope
that in the pressure to keep Poland moving toward its transition to a
market economy we don't forget this lesson. I think this is one of the
most important lessons for those considering similar programs in other
countries."

Worldbank Institute
"Case study: Privatization in Poland," Michel and Ngo (undated)
http://www.worldbank.org/wbi/cases/indexpol.html

Poland's process was specifically oriented towards international
investors, as from the start the ministry had determined that for key
state utilities it would be essential to invest in obsolete facilities
and to attract partners with management expertise.  And, of course,
there are biases in what foreign investors are sought.  American firms
were highly sought - - while investment from neighboring Germany was
NOT encouraged.
University of Warsaw 
"Privatization in Poland: the statistical picture" (August, 1993)
http://www.ciesin.ci.uw.edu.pl/poland/privatizationintro.html

Many key "tactical" decisions need to be made by the government,
including:
·	who participates in revenues from the sale?
·	how much of the firm is sold in the initial offering?
·	what form should a sale take (partnership, sale to private firm,
maintenance of company as publicly traded firm)?
·	what investments in the firm are required as a pre-condition of
sale?
·	what property transfers to the company?
·	are layoffs of redundant employees performed before or after the
sale?
·	what continued oversight is maintained by the government?
·	how can strategic assets be protected from foreign control?
·	how is competition enhanced when a former state monopoly passes into
the private sector?

There are two notable examples of the influential role of government
in the process - - Russia's troubled transfer of ownership in major
natural resource industries and China's limited privatization process.

The three authors of "Russian Privatization: What Went Wrong?" are
scathing in their attacks on what they term a 'kleptocracy.'  Black,
Kraakman and Tarassova write,  "Russia accelerated the self-dealing
process by selling control of its largest enterprises cheaply to
crooks, who transferred their skimming talents to the enterprises they
acquired, and used their wealth to further corrupt the government and
block reforms that might constrain their actions."

They also argue that official corruption, a punitive tax system,
unwieldy bureaucracy and organized crime added to the poor
environment.  All of which contributed to weak support for further
reform from voters.  They conclude, "A principal lesson: developing
the institutions to control self-dealing is central to successful
privatization of large firms."
Stanford Law Review
"Russian Privatization: What Went Wrong?" Black, Kraakman, Tarassova
(2000)
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=181348

Megginson and Netter note that Chinese law privatizes all but the
largest 300 enterprises but ensures that the government dominates the
decision-making by holding two-thirds of the shares in the hands of
the government or domestic financial institutions.


INVESTORS
---------

After the government, who's the second most-influential participant in
the process?

Obviously based on the experiences described above, it will vary by
country and process.

Poland actively sought international investment and participation,
even while discouraging participation of investment from neighboring
Germany.  At another extreme, China is trying to encourage private
investment while the government retains overall control.

Megginson & Netter's excellent summary study notes several aspects:
·	foreign ownership is provides greater performance improvement than
domestic ownership
·	outsider control gets greater performance improvement than
management control
·	firms controlled by non-employees are much more likely to
restructure
·	new management invariably brings better performance


In an analysis of Hungary's privatization program, Peter Mihalyi
argues that international investment is a prime determinant in a
successful privatization program.  Multinationals provided investment
in manufacturing and links to the outside world that seeded the
landscape for "portfolio" and startup investors.  Mihalyi uses Hungary
as the economic example to prove that its performance is better than
surrounding countries.
Central European University
"FDI in Hungary" (2000)
http://www.ceu.hu/econ/economic/fdi_ceuwp.pdf

How is the influence of investors reflected in the process?

First in the level of interest.  The 2001 privatization programs
dropped to $20 billion in the countries of the Organization for
Economic Co-Operation and Development (OECD), partly because of poor
economic performance at the end of 2001, "resulting in cancellation
and/or postponements of planned privatisations."
OECD
"Recent Privatisation Trends in OECD Countries" (June, 2002)
http://www.oecd.org/pdf/M00031000/M00031987.pdf

In the case of U.K. water privatization, share prices were clearly
lowered to make disposal of the assets possible, according to Charles
Howe's analysis:
Universities Water Information Network
"The Effect of Privatization on Public Services: the Case of Urban
Water"
http://www.uwin.siu.edu/ucowr/updates/pdf/V117_A9.pdf

In more than one case involving water systems, private investors
withdrew or were tossed out of projects because the returns weren't as
expected.  In 1999, British firm Biwater withdrew from a Zimbabwe
project; in Argentina a dispute over a privatization contract ended up
in a lawsuit involving Vivendi and the government:
Nadir.org
"Problems with Privatization of Water Supply & Sanitation"
http://www.nadir.org/nadir/initiativ/agp/campanas/water/txt/2000/03waterprivatization.htm

Investors face a full range of issues with the other stakeholders, as
a case study on privatization of the electrical system of Moldova
indicates.  This case, outlined by U.S. Agency for International
Development, has very typical factors common to all privatizations:
·	pricing to consumers 
·	status of previous obligations
·	debt of existing organization

But it also adds other factors unique to the business, including the
future of thermal energy development; dealing with interconnections
with Romania; and subsidies for social protection.

U.S. AID also sponsored another study done by Carana Corp. in Egypt on
privatization efforts, which yields interesting information on why
offerings fail.  The study covered 34 enterprises, of which 10 were
sold and 12 more "in progress."

Each of the unsuccessful offerings had multiple problems, in Carana's
opinion including price, packaging, prolonged negotiations, disclosure
issues, technical complications, and uncertainties over
land/labor/government issues.  They maintain that proper due diligence
by the SELLER is critical, as is the necessity to negotiate
professionally and quickly.
Carana Corporation
"Getting the Deal Done" (May 7, 2000)
http://www.carana.com/pcsu/


MANAGEMENT
-----------

Polish law gives three participants the ability to start the process
of privatizing a company, putting them in a very strong position.
*  the company's board of directors
*  the employee council
*  a state ministry

Company management in Poland becomes dominant in the process as it
continues, according to this ILO study:
International Labor Organization (ILO)
"Enterprise Privatization and Employee Buy-outs in Poland," R. Schliwa
(Jan. 24, 2000)
http://www.ilo.org/public/english/employment/ent/papers/ippred2.htm

In a 1995 International Labor Organization survey of 20 firms which
were privatized, outside investors were present in only 20 percent of
the cases.  Workers savings plans could be used for financing and in
fact provided 50-100% of the capital in all 20 cases.  When completed,
debt financing for the companies was heavy, at 80% of total assets.

Russian imperative for rapid privatization (1992-93) put local
managers and employees in charge through attractive pricing and
government loans.  However, weak legal structure for investors, and
the state's ability to loan transferred 12 major energy companies into
private hands and replaced state monopoly with a market oligopoly.

Though the academics and consultants often note the necessity of
management change after privatization, in many cases in the
industrialized world, the changes came before an IPO.   As Yergin and
Stanislaw note with British Telecom, the process began with new
managers at the top of the company to prepare it for the eventual IPO.
 Similar action was taken at France Telecom and Deutsche Telecom to
bring in senior management familiar with operation of public
companies.


LABOR
----------

Every study has shown that government enterprises are over-staffed and
that following privatization employment is reduced and productivity
increases.   So it's not unusual that labor has a say in how the
process happens.  Labor participation is "key" to the success of
programs, according to World Bank analyses of privatization.

Some of the most-dramatic changes have been in rail transportation,
including Ferrocarillo Argentina, where labor productivity increased
by 370%, enabling the passenger/freight service to decrease employment
from 92,000 to just under 18,000, while service actually expanded:
HongKong Legislative Council
"Overseas Experience in Privatization of Railway Transportation"
(October, 1999)
http://www.legco.gov.hk/yr98-99/english/panels/tp/papers/tp28073.htm

Employment falls -- sales grow but not enough to offset significant
gains in productivity, so there is a net loss of employment.

One example of the reaction against privatization is in France, where
C.G.T., the union of civil servants, protested the privatization at
France Telecom.  The union continues to argue against further
privatization, mobilizing a protest in October against government
plans to spin out
Electricité de France, Gaz de France, the two biggest utilities, and
to further reduce the state's stake in Air France.
Time Magazine (International)
"The Future is Calling" (April 26, 1996)
http://www.time.com/time/international/1996/960422/privatization.html

Similar protests have been raised by air traffic controller unions in
the U.K., Canada and the U.S., who are unconvinced that privatization
will advance any part of their role in assuring safety:
Air traffic control privatization:
Air Wise News
"U.K. Proceeds with Part-Privatization of Air Traffic Control"  (Jan.
31, 2001)
http://news.airwise.com/stories/2001/01/980969845.html

In other countries, labor involvement is formal and well-recognized,
even if it fades later in the process.  In Poland, Sliwa's analysis
for the ILO says that "the most important task of the employee council
is to prepare the employees of the company for privatization."

Duties Sliwa sites include: 
-- explaining why privatization is being done; 
-- presenting advantages and risks; 
-- formulating the company's objectives in privatization; 
-- defining social objectives; 
-- discussing with potential investors; 
-- sharing information with employee counselors from other companies;
-- managing expectations and any apprehension vis-à-vis privatization;
-- acting as an intermediary between the board of directors and the
workforce.

In this critical analysis, the most-devastating critiques of
organization and its impact on safety comes from union members and
managers, who contend efficiencies resulted in un-trained workers in
maintenance and train operation, leading directly to a pair of fatal
accidents in the U.K.
Creative Resistance
"Derailed: the U.K.'s Disastrous Experience with Railway
Privatization" (Jan. 1, 2002)
http://www.creativeresistance.ca/awareness/2002-jan01-uk's-disastrous-experience-with-railway-privatization.htm


SUPPLIERS
----------

There has been little written about the role of suppliers in
privatization.  In fact, in many cases privatized industries have been
vertically-integrated and upon privatization they are split up to
create more competition and to rationalize them economically.  This is
the case with the British Rail industry and even with court-mandated
breakups such as the split of American Telephone & Telegraph in the
United States.

This study on the privatization of health care systems in Chile,
Columbia and Poland introduces a wide range of participants in the
process, from insurers to doctors.  Thomas Bossert makes it clear that
in a complex delivery system of health care involving doctors,
hospitals, insurers careful attention needs to be paid to incentives
for efficiency and structure of an effective payment system.  Failing
to do so, he warns, will ultimately erode public confidence in the
system.
Harvard School of Public Health
"Privatization for Payments: Lessons for Poland from Chile and
Columbia," Bossert (March, 2000)
http://www.hsph.harvard.edu/ihsg/publications/pdf/No-77.PDF


OTHERS
-------------

More peripheral to the task are non-governmental organizations, which
often supply the rationale for the process and give governments the
willingness to act.  Among the leaders would be the World Bank, which
has pushed privatization as a way of reducing government spending - -
and has provided the funding to plan and execute it.

Others include organizations such as the World Water Council (WWC),
which argues that solutions to water supply are best handled
privately.  "The public sector proved not to be efficient," Ismael
Serageldin, a former World Bank vice-president and member of the WWC,
said at an international conference in 2000.  Serageldin blames
government for failing to treat water as an economic good, like oil.
 
Multiple problems result from having state agencies run the water
supplies, including loss due to theft, leakage and poor accounting. 
Additionally, state-owned factories are often prime polluters of water
supplies, he argues.  Yet another source of waste are major
hydro-electric projects which prove to devour capital and change the
ecology.
Embassy of Jordan 
Jordan Times (March 20, 2000) 
http://www.jordanembassyus.org/03202000007.htm 

Serageldin is even harsher on other aspects of government water
management, contending that subsidies work to benefit the wrong
population; dams and other major projects end up having huge negative
returns from pollution or environmental damage; and that innovations
in plants and aquifer management can't come from governments.
World Water Council
"A Water Secure World" (Feb. 15, 2000)
http://www.serageldin.org/CommissionReport.pdf

One final group with an interest in the process is primarily in former
Communist countries, which nationalized industries without
compensation.  In Czechoslovakia 10% of the state property had
restitution claims against it from the earlier nationalizations.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA

Request for Answer Clarification by tom123-ga on 24 Jan 2003 17:40 PST
Hi

I think now you have answered my first question but not sure whether
the second bit "How stakeholders tried to impact on the decision of
privatization,
and with what effects?" has been answered. If you could clarify on
that point, then we've done this job. Here is a plan for you to
use;look at each stakeholder groups and explain capacity to influence
success/failure of privatization policy and potential gains/losses
from privatization.

Regards,
Tom

Clarification of Answer by omnivorous-ga on 25 Jan 2003 05:44 PST
The ability to change the decision on privatization is a good
indicator of the importance of each of the stakeholders.  The ability
to change the decision could be measured by the impact that each has
on the terms and conditions of privatization.  Importance can also be
measured by when each can act.

The government arranges all of the pre-conditions, from enabling
legislation to putting the enterprise in order, as we've seen.  But
then the government also has to act to put together a deal, one which
all participants in privatization deals note is "a political process"
involving all of the other stakeholders.  Right down to the end, the
government has the power to adjust many of terms of the deal,
including subsidies, what property gets transferred, and pricing.

Still, there are limits to what can be accomplished, as noted by both
the Egyptian and Polish experiences.  In Poland, though more than
3,000 companies have been privatized, 1,751 have been liquidated.
Polish Ministry of the Treasury
"Information on the participation of foreign investors in
privatization, 1990-2002" (May 16, 2002)
http://www.mst.gov.pl/dokumenty/raport_inwestorzy_an.pdf

Polish Ministry of the Treasury
"Privatisation Quarterly" (March 2002)
http://www.mst.gov.pl/dokumenty/Kwartalnike.pdf
Investors carry a strong ability to set the terms & conditions of any
privatization but lack the ability to start the process or set legal
conditions on which they occur.  In Poland for example, legal
restrictions still exist on foreign ownership of real estate, leaving
restrictions on foreign investors in farm and residential estate
ventures.

Management's importance depends on its active participation with the
government in preparing the firm; then in its alignment with investors
once control of the company passes.  In some cases as in Russia,
management has become the controlling investor interest and continued
to dominate the firm.

Employees have relatively little power to change the terms &
conditions but through their political voice carry a big impact at the
outset of the process. Thus, we see a powerful union like France's CGT
trying to convince French public opinion that privatizing 'strategic'
resources like Air France or natural monopolies like gas or
electricity utilities doesn't make sense.

Suppliers are weak during the process of privatization but have a key
role in ensuring the health of the enterprise once ownership has
changed.  The process can still fail without a healthy and economic
infrastructure to support their participation, as the Chilean and
Columbian healthcare examples note.

NGO's are influential in setting the political atmosphere for change
and are very similar to the "other" case of people with restitution
claims in that aspect.  The one exception, of course, is the World
Bank which has the ability to set a framework for privatization - -
and act as an investor in later stages of the process.

Best regards,

Omnivorous-GA
tom123-ga rated this answer:4 out of 5 stars
Professional and quick response. Highly recommended!

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