Privatisation of waste collection services in response to fiscal stress in times of crisis
Metadatos
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Zafra Gómez, José Luis; Plata Díaz, Ana María; Pérez López, Gemma; López‐Hernández, Antonio ManuelEditorial
JSTOR
Materia
privatisation waste collection service fiscal stress crisis
Fecha
2016-08-10Referencia bibliográfica
Urban Studies, 53(10), 2134–2153
Patrocinador
This research was funded by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Education (ECO2013-48413-R) and the Fundación Centro de Estudios Andaluces, Junta de Andalucía (Spain) (PRY139/14).Resumen
According to the conventional theoretical framework, fiscal stress is an explanatory factor of privatisation,
since the latter can provide economies of scale and cost savings, as indicated by the
theory of public choice. However, urban planning theories suggest that public choice does not take
into account the collective needs of those receiving public services. The present study aims to clarify
two major issues. Firstly, in the presence of fiscal stress, do public managers really privatise?
And secondly, does privatisation harm the public interest? To investigate these questions, we constructed
and analysed a discrete-time survival model, which was applied to the period 2000–2010,
to reflect the effects of the current global financial crisis on the fiscal stress–privatisation relationship
with respect to urban waste collection services. The results obtained indicate that when certain
aspects of financial condition worsen, the likelihood of public services being privatised
increases. This was the case during the Great Recession of 2008–2010, especially when a neighbouring
municipality had previously privatised its services. After privatisation, service quality did
not vary significantly, and so we conclude that public choice does not prejudice the public interest.