Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022

The World Bank estimates a significant funding gap in road safety of 260 billion to achieve SDG 3.6 and 11.2 in the next ten years, and recognizes that this gap cannot be closed through public funding alone and thus mobilization of private capital...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2022
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099525002222214332/P1750030e6c58506b08d5b05ccba3311628
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37039
id okr-10986-37039
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-370392022-05-05T21:37:40Z Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022 World Bank The World Bank estimates a significant funding gap in road safety of 260 billion to achieve SDG 3.6 and 11.2 in the next ten years, and recognizes that this gap cannot be closed through public funding alone and thus mobilization of private capital is required. The impacts of road traffic crashes reach far into the economy and can cost L/MICs as much as 6% of their GDP. The costs of a road traffic crash do not end at the roadside; they create ripple effects throughout the wider economy. Loss of income, property damage, insurance premiums, loss of taxes, and burdens on the health sector are just some of the far-reaching costs associated with road traffic crashes. Road traffic crashes can cost countries as much as 6 percent of their GDP and trap families in poverty as they lose income generating potential and focus on providing lifetime care. This report examines the potential for private capital mobilization to close this gap. The report investigates the market failure to appropriately account for the cost of road crashes, which prevents private capital from flowing to road safety investments. The growth of socially responsible investing and the sustainable finance market offers a new opportunity to address this market failure. The report proposes different business models and financing instruments to channel private investment into road safety projects. These investment structures consist of subnational, public-private partnerships (PPPs) and corporate investments that can leverage the growing sustainable finance market, including social and sustainability-linked financings (SLFs). The report also develops indicators that can be used to tie the cost of financing to the attainment of road safety targets, incentivizing borrowers to commit to road safety as part of SLFs. The report examines the enabling environment for structuring investable road safety projects in a sample of countries, looking at the barriers and opportunities, and proposing risks and mitigation strategies, like blended finance mechanisms and stable revenue sources, for long-term sustainability of road safety investments. 2022-02-25T19:41:05Z 2022-02-25T19:41:05Z 2022-02-22 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099525002222214332/P1750030e6c58506b08d5b05ccba3311628 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37039 English en Mobility and Transport Connectivity Series CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Report Publications & Research :: Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
English
relation Mobility and Transport Connectivity Series
description The World Bank estimates a significant funding gap in road safety of 260 billion to achieve SDG 3.6 and 11.2 in the next ten years, and recognizes that this gap cannot be closed through public funding alone and thus mobilization of private capital is required. The impacts of road traffic crashes reach far into the economy and can cost L/MICs as much as 6% of their GDP. The costs of a road traffic crash do not end at the roadside; they create ripple effects throughout the wider economy. Loss of income, property damage, insurance premiums, loss of taxes, and burdens on the health sector are just some of the far-reaching costs associated with road traffic crashes. Road traffic crashes can cost countries as much as 6 percent of their GDP and trap families in poverty as they lose income generating potential and focus on providing lifetime care. This report examines the potential for private capital mobilization to close this gap. The report investigates the market failure to appropriately account for the cost of road crashes, which prevents private capital from flowing to road safety investments. The growth of socially responsible investing and the sustainable finance market offers a new opportunity to address this market failure. The report proposes different business models and financing instruments to channel private investment into road safety projects. These investment structures consist of subnational, public-private partnerships (PPPs) and corporate investments that can leverage the growing sustainable finance market, including social and sustainability-linked financings (SLFs). The report also develops indicators that can be used to tie the cost of financing to the attainment of road safety targets, incentivizing borrowers to commit to road safety as part of SLFs. The report examines the enabling environment for structuring investable road safety projects in a sample of countries, looking at the barriers and opportunities, and proposing risks and mitigation strategies, like blended finance mechanisms and stable revenue sources, for long-term sustainability of road safety investments.
format Working Paper
author World Bank
spellingShingle World Bank
Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
title_short Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
title_full Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
title_fullStr Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
title_full_unstemmed Saving Lives Through Private Investment in Road Safety : Knowledge Report - 2022
title_sort saving lives through private investment in road safety : knowledge report - 2022
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2022
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/099525002222214332/P1750030e6c58506b08d5b05ccba3311628
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/37039
_version_ 1764486498767339520