A pioneering approach
Harris recalls first ruminating about creating a PPP certification course to achieve this common language and knowledge with colleagues in 2010. The aim was to improve the performance of PPPs by enhancing and standardizing practices across the globe.
What if the World Bank Group developed this certification in the very spirit of PPPs, calling on the expertise of companies already well-versed in delivering certification programs on other topics, while maintaining control of curriculum development to ensure quality and adherence to development principles? This way, the program could eventually run itself.
Nothing like this had ever been done here. On hearing the concept, colleagues agreed it was a clever idea, though plenty doubted it could be accomplished.
A Certification Dream Team — comprising PPP specialists from the World Bank and IFC, in addition to a dedicated procurement specialist (given the novelty of the approach) — persisted, holding the Bank’s first-ever competitive dialogue to seek out inputs from companies on the ins-and-outs of how certification programs work. The Public-Private Infrastructure Advisory Facility (PPIAF) helped fund this initial sounding and eventually a request for proposals was launched.
APMG International was selected to run the program that officially debuted in 2016. APMG was compensated upon reaching certain milestones, which meant that there was strong proof of concept when the team took the next step: shopping it to other multilateral development banks (MDBs) for their buy-in. It eventually attracted the support of the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank, and the Islamic Development Bank — with continued support from PPIAF.
The MDBs collectively own the body of knowledge, and some have funded translations. The foundation certification is now available in Albanian, Chinese, French, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, Serbian, and Spanish.
Who takes the certification?
Most of the certification’s audience are government officials in PPP units or otherwise involved in infrastructure planning for their countries. When World Bank and IFC colleagues advise these officials, the certification is often recommended to them. The same is true for the other supporting MDBs.
Government uptake of the PPP certification program can be even more robust. Two years ago, Indonesia’s IIGF Institute became the first government entity to become an accredited training organization under APMG’s model — the first time any government moved this expertise in-house. More than 250 Indonesian government officials have since been trained.
Other professionals ripe for the certification include infrastructure operators, lawyers involved in PPP transactions, private PPP advisors, financiers, and MDB staff involved in infrastructure at all levels — creating frameworks, planning programs, selecting and structuring projects, looking at ESG issues, and more.
In fact, to emphasize that the certification was useful to all kinds of PPP-related work, all staff on the World Bank’s PPP team were strongly encouraged to go through the course — taking the foundational exam together. “It was the first exam I took since university,” joked Harris.
What has the program accomplished?
Feedback from the field has been strong and consistent. “I exercised valuable skills such as project structuring and preparation as well as allocating risks between public and private partners. I did have this knowledge before, I just didn’t know how to apply it correctly,” said Gavkhar Ashirova, a senior expert in the Kyrgyz Republic’s PPP Center, housed in the Ministry of Economy.
And this is emblematic of the response the program has received consistently over the years: it has built stronger hard skills to evaluate PPPs, a consistent lexicon to ease comprehension, and better understanding of each party’s needs to reach mutually beneficial partnerships. All this helps deliver value for money and better services to people across the globe.
What’s next?
The certification is undergoing an update to keep it current and adaptable. This will include material to integrate climate change considerations and lessons learned from the COVID-19 pandemic as they relate to the ongoing viability of PPPs.
Given the certification program’s formidable origin story and resounding support, there is every expectation that it will evolve to remain the go-to global resource for PPP expertise.