Schwartz, JordanHalkyard, Pablo2012-08-132012-08-132006-03https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11188Postconflict countries have had difficulty attracting private investment in infrastructure, and their growth and stability have suffered as a result. But the success of a few countries hints at policy initiatives that governments could pursue to close this destabilizing gap in investment. The emphasis should be on making sure that sector reforms go far enough, getting the timing and sequencing of the reforms right, reducing investor risk, and recognizing the importance of small-scale providers.CC BY 3.0 IGOAFFILIATED ORGANIZATIONSAPPROACHBARRIERS TO ENTRYBASIC INFRASTRUCTUREBASIC SERVICESBIDDINGCAPITAL MARKETSCARGOCONCESSIONSCONTRACTUAL ARRANGEMENTSCORPORATIONDEREGULATIONELECTRICITYELECTRICITY DISTRIBUTIONELECTRICITY GENERATIONENTERPRISE DEVELOPMENTEXPROPRIATIONFOREIGN DIRECT INVESTMENTFOREIGN OWNERSHIPFUTURE INVESTMENTSGASGAS DISTRIBUTIONGOVERNMENT INTERVENTIONINCUMBENT OPERATORINFRASTRUCTURE CONTRACTSINFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTSINFRASTRUCTURE INVESTORSINFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTSINFRASTRUCTURE REFORMINFRASTRUCTURE SERVICESINTEREST RATEINTERNATIONAL FINANCEINVESTMENT CLIMATEINVESTMENT FLOWSINVESTMENT OPPORTUNITIESINVESTMENT RISKLEGAL ARRANGEMENTSMANAGEMENT CONTRACTSMARKET ENTRYOILPACIFIC REGIONPAYMENT OBLIGATIONSPORTSPOST-CONFLICTPRIVATE INFRASTRUCTUREPRIVATE INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENTPRIVATE INVESTMENTPRIVATE INVESTMENTSPRIVATE INVESTORSPRIVATE OPERATORSPRIVATE PROVIDERSPRIVATE SECTORPRIVATE SECTOR DEVELOPMENTPRIVATE SERVICE PROVIDERSPRIVATIZATIONPROVISION OF INFRASTRUCTUREPUBLIC AGENCIESPUBLIC POLICY INNOVATIONSPUBLIC UTILITIESPUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPSREGULATORY AGENCIESREGULATORY APPROACHESREGULATORY BARRIERSREGULATORY ENVIRONMENTREGULATORY FRAMEWORKSREGULATORY STRUCTURESREVENUE COLLECTIONRURAL ENERGYSERVICE PROVISIONTRAFFICUNBUNDLINGUTILITIESWATER SECTORWATER SUPPLYRebuilding InfrastructureWorld Bank10.1596/11188