Taxpayer risk a possibility with new infrastructure bank

Experts say the wording in the recently released documents suggests taxpayers will be asked to take on a bigger slice of the risk

Taxpayer risk a possibility with new infrastructure bank
By Jordan Press and Andy Blatchford

Federal investments doled out through the government's new infrastructure financing agency may be used to ensure a financial return to private investors if a project fails to generate enough revenues, documents show.

The revenues attached to projects financed through the soon-to-be-created infrastructure bank are key to the government's plan to leverage private capital to pay for public roads, bridges and transit systems.

What investors have recently been told _ and what the finance minister was told late last year is that if revenues fall short of estimates, federal investments through the bank would instead act as a revenue floor to help make a project commercially viable.

That would be the case when the bank takes a subordinated equity position, where the government buys ownership shares in a project, and would only be reimbursed after those higher up the equity ladder receive their repayments.

Experts say the wording in the documents suggests taxpayers will be asked to take on a bigger slice of the financial risk in a project to help private investors, a charge the government rejects.

A spokesman for Infrastructure Minister Amarjeet Sohi said the infrastructure bank would only be liable for its own stake in a project and the possibility of lower-than-expected revenues would be part of the risk private investors assume in financing a project.

"The (bank) is designed to shift risk to the private sector appropriate for the investments they make,'' Brook Simpson said. "The bank will not invest in projects that are too risky for taxpayer dollars and are not in the public interest.''

The Liberals see the bank as a way to build projects that are too expensive for government to handle and too risky for the private sector to tackle alone.

The government plans to infuse the new institution with $35 billion $15 billion in cash, $20 billion in equity and loans hoping to pry three or four times that amount from the private sector for large-scale projects.

An October briefing note to Finance Minister Bill Morneau ahead of the fall economic update where the government unveiled the financial plan for the bank, said federal funding could be structured in such a way that the bank's ``return on investment will only materialize if defined institutional investor revenue thresholds are met.''

"The infrastructure bank could enter in the capital structure to bridge the gap between reasonable returns on investment for investors and the revenue generation capacity of specific infrastructure projects,'' reads the briefing note, obtained by The Canadian Press under the Access to Information Act.

Investors have heard a similar message in recent months: A presentation federal officials have provided to stakeholders says that if revenues fall "far below expectations,'' the government's subordinated equity position would act as a floor.

An expert on federal finances from Institute of Fiscal Studies and Democracy at the University of Ottawa said the government hasn't been as clear publicly as it has been privately on the level of risk that would be transferred to the public from the private investors.

"Because the private investors get paid out first, that means the revenue risk for them is much lower than if the bank had an equal share of the risk,'' said Randall Bartlett, chief economist at the institute led by former parliamentary budget officer Kevin Page.


The Canadian Press


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