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Policy and Planning for Large-Infrastructure Projects: Problems, Causes, Cures
Author(s) -
Bent Flyvbjerg
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
environment and planning b planning and design
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1472-3417
pISSN - 0265-8135
DOI - 10.1068/b32111
Subject(s) - misinformation , competition (biology) , order (exchange) , corporate governance , business , risk analysis (engineering) , infrastructure planning , cost–benefit analysis , politics , public economics , environmental planning , economics , finance , political science , environmental resource management , computer security , computer science , ecology , law , environmental science , biology
This paper focuses on problems and their causes and cures in policy and planning for large-infrastructure projects. First, it identifies as the main problem in major infrastructure developments pervasive misinformation about the costs, benefits, and risks involved. A consequence of misinformation is cost overruns, benefit shortfalls, and waste. Second, it explores the causes of misinformation and finds that political-economic explanations best account for the available evidence: planners and promoters deliberately misrepresent costs, benefits, and risks in order to increase the likelihood that it is their projects, and not those of their competition, that gain approval and funding. This results in the `survival of the unfittest', in which often it is not the best projects that are built, but the most misrepresented ones. Finally, it presents measures forreforming policy and planning for large-infrastructure projects with a focus on better planning methods and changed governance structures, the latter being more important

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