In recent years, Public-Private Partnerships (PPPs) have emerged as a pivotal mechanism for financing and developing infrastructure projects across mainland China. As the country pushes forward with ambitious urbanization and modernization strategies, policymakers have increasingly leaned on PPPs to bridge the significant investment gaps in transport, urban development, and public utilities. By 2022, nearly 14,000 PPP projects had been proposed, aggregating an astronomical investment exceeding 20 trillion yuan. This scale underscores the crucial role these partnerships play in China’s economic and social landscape, but it also magnifies the accompanying fiscal risks and governance challenges.
The multifaceted nature of PPP arrangements involves intricate dynamics between government entities and private firms, creating complex interdependencies that influence project longevity and success. A recent comprehensive study has undertaken the formidable task of unraveling these determinants, applying rigorous empirical methods to a manually curated data set of over 12,000 PPP projects initiated between 2019 and 2022. This research aims not only to decode the parameters behind project desirability but also to illuminate the nuanced roles of ownership structures and revenue frameworks that largely dictate whether projects advance to execution or succumb to early termination.
Central to the inquiry is the examination of the social party composition – essentially the amalgamation of stakeholders within each project. The study meticulously assesses how the presence and proportion of state-owned enterprises (SOEs) and private firms within these partnerships affect project stability. Intriguingly, the findings reveal a dichotomy: in sectors where government backing is indispensable—such as transportation and urban infrastructure—SOE involvement acts as a stabilizing anchor. These enterprises bring not only financial muscle but also policy alignment that can shield projects from premature termination, particularly when quality and reliability outrank cost efficiency concerns.
Conversely, private sector participation, while crucial for injecting innovation and efficiency, often correlates with a higher probability of project abandonment before or during execution phases. The data suggests that private firms may bring elevated risks of termination, which could stem from differing priorities or risk appetites compared to their state counterparts. Moreover, the presence of a decentralized social party structure tends to mitigate these risks, indicating that collaboration diversity and balanced governance frameworks contribute positively to project endurance and success.
The research further delves into project funding schemes and their implications on project trajectories. Projects endowed with government payment guarantees or gap subsidies before execution demonstrate a markedly higher likelihood of proceeding smoothly to implementation. Such pre-execution financial assurances can alleviate investment uncertainties and improve stakeholder confidence, thus serving as vital levers to encourage project initiation and secure momentum towards completion.
Beyond sectoral and financial analyses, the study’s broader empirical approach represents the first of its kind on this scale within the Chinese PPP context. By deploying probit regression models to detect statistical signals within a vast, heterogeneous population of projects, it contributes significantly to academic discourse on infrastructure financing and risk management. The research elucidates how institutional peculiarities—particularly the unique operational and managerial paradigms governing SOEs—intersect with market dynamics to shape outcomes in public-private collaborations.
The timing of this inquiry is especially pertinent given contemporaneous regulatory developments aimed at mitigating implicit fiscal risks linked with local government debts. China’s State Council has promulgated policy guidelines, such as the 2023 No. 115 directive, emphasizing the necessity of sustainable PPP frameworks. This study furnishes evidence-based insights that can inform ongoing policy calibrations, guiding legislators in balancing the dual imperatives of infrastructure expansion and fiscal prudence.
From a practical standpoint, the research advocates for a more nuanced, sector-specific approach to PPP governance. In industries where public intervention is critical and project quality is non-negotiable, fostering SOE participation can enhance resilience and safeguard public interests. Conversely, sectors less encumbered by policy restrictions might benefit from increased private sector competition and innovation, provided that appropriate regulatory safeguards are implemented to mitigate early termination risks.
The COVID-19 pandemic and related economic headwinds have underscored the fragility of project financing and execution, intensifying the urgency for robust partnership models. This work highlights how ownership configurations and financing modalities can buffer projects against systemic shocks, enhancing their adaptive capacity in uncertain environments. By dissecting the interplay between market mechanisms and institutional factors, it charts a pathway toward more sustainable, efficient, and socially inclusive infrastructure development in China.
Geographically, PPP investment intensity displays notable heterogeneity, with developed provinces like Zhejiang and less economically advanced regions such as Guizhou both exhibiting significant deployments. This spatial distribution reflects the government’s strategic emphasis on balancing regional development disparities, leveraging PPPs as instruments to catalyze growth and modernization even in traditionally underserved areas.
Beyond theoretical contributions, this research furnishes granular insights that can be directly operationalized by policymakers, financial intermediaries, and project developers. Tailoring regulatory frameworks to reflect the distinctive risk profiles and stakeholder constellations across sectors will be paramount in optimizing resource allocation and maximizing the societal benefits of infrastructure investments. By integrating empirical evidence into policy design, China can pioneer a more resilient and inclusive model of infrastructure financing that stands the test of economic cycles and external shocks.
In conclusion, this study represents a watershed in evaluating the determinants of PPP desirability in China’s rapidly evolving infrastructural ecosystem. It deftly bridges academic rigor with urgent practical concerns, underscoring the equilibriums necessary for sustainable public-private collaboration. As China navigates the twin challenges of ambitious development goals and fiscal constraints, such evidence-driven analyses will be instrumental in crafting policies that harness the full potential of PPPs while safeguarding public resources and ensuring equitable outcomes.
Subject of Research: Determinants for the desirability of public-private partnership mode in infrastructure development in mainland China.
Article Title: Determinants for the desirability of public-private partnership mode in infrastructure development
News Publication Date: 19-Jul-2025
Web References:
https://doi.org/10.1108/CFRI-02-2024-0069
China Finance Review International
Image Credits: Zhengyi Zhou (Shanghai University of Finance and Economics, China).
Keywords: PPP, infrastructure financing, state-owned enterprises, public-private partnerships, project termination, China, urban development, transportation, fiscal risk management, public sector, private firms, gap subsidies

