Try GOLD - Free
Revitalising PPPs
Business Standard
|February 20, 2026
India's experience with public-private partnerships (PPPs) offers a clear lesson. When designed and executed well, PPPs can transform infrastructure delivery; when poorly structured, they can stall development for years.
-
During the infrastructure boom of the 2000s, particularly in highways, power, ports, and airports, PPPs played a decisive role. Private investment accounted for nearly 37 per cent of infrastructure spending during the Eleventh Plan (2007-12).
Between 2009 and 2013, almost 60 per cent of new National Highways, over 6,300 km, were built under PPPs on the built-operate-transfer principle for tolls.
That momentum, however, dissipated rapidly. By the mid-2010s, many PPP projects slowed, turned distressed, or defaulted. Developers faced delays in land acquisition and clearances, weak traffic growth, high leverage, and rising costs. Aggressive bidding, often driven by ultralow toll assumptions, won projects but destroyed balance sheets. Crucially, risk allocation was deeply flawed, as too much risk was pushed on to the private side, while contracts were treated as immutable. With no formal renegotiation framework, even fundamentally viable projects became stranded. As the Kelkar Committee (2015) warned, "inefficient and inequitable allocation of risk ... can be a major factor in PPP failures".
The Union Budget this year once again reiterates infrastructure as a growth driver, announcing multiple initiatives across transport, urban development, housing, logistics and financing. Yet it sidesteps the most consequential question confronting India's infrastructure strategy today. How will the country revive PPPs as a central pillar of infrastructure development?
This story is from the February 20, 2026 edition of Business Standard.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Business Standard
Business Standard
Sensex, Nifty slide over 1% on AI-led disruption, tariff worries
Overall market capitalisation fell by 3.5 trillion to 465.6 trillion
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
'Trade talks to resume after clarity over US tariff situation'
India will resume trade negotiations with the United States once there is greater clarity on the tariff situation in Washington, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said on Tuesday.
1 min
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
How AI is forcing a green rethink for data centres
India will need to factor a green energy component into its data centre policy framework as the country’s expanding digital footprint — driven by the rapid rise of artificial intelligence (AI) systems — creates demand for greater storage capacity, experts said.
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
Average pay hike projected at 9.1% in 2026: AON survey
Employees across sectors are expected to get a salary hike of 9.1 per cent on average in 2026, slightly higher than the increment of 8.9 per cent received last year, a survey said on Tuesday.
1 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
At least 13 municipal bond issues in pipeline
Nashik to come up with maiden public issue of green bonds for raising ₹200 crore
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
AI, trust, faster bets: Pharma leaders map road to '47
Artificial intelligence (AI) is no longer a side conversation for Indian pharma.
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
Skittish investors spooked as dystopian AI outlook goes viral
An imagined dystopia of mass unemployment fuelled by artificial intelligence, highlighted in Citrini Research's now viral report, has unsettled global markets, where a recent huge bet on the technology is starting to show cracks.
3 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
Debt fundraising of Reits, Invits at record high
RBI has proposed that banks be allowed to lend directly to investment trusts
3 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
Tata Sons board defers call on Chandra's reappointment
NOEL TATA, THE CHAIRMAN OF TATA TRUSTS, WHICH OWNS TWO-THIRDS OF TATA SONS, SET ASLEW OF CONDITIONS FOR CHANDRASEKARAN S TERM EXTENSION, SOURCES SAID
2 mins
February 25, 2026
Business Standard
Iran nears deal to buy Chinese anti-ship supersonic missiles
Iran is close to a deal with China to purchase anti ship cruise missiles, according to six people with knowledge of the negotiations, just as the United States deploys a vast naval force near the Iranian coast ahead of possible strikes on the Islamic Republic.
1 min
February 25, 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size

