Instead of financing infrastructure projects alone, the government increasingly looks to cooperations with private investors. In political discussions, lack of public funds is often put forward as a limit on state activities. The growth in public-private partnerships as a way of fulfilling public tasks in partnership between the state administration and private enterprises must be seen in this context. PPP is one expression of a strong trend towards (re)privatisation, which in some European countries has arisen as a result of more difficult economic conditions in recent years and the associated structural crisis in the public sector (see Eschenbach, Müller, Gabriel: 1993). The name “public social private partnership” (PSPP) is a development of Public Private Partnership (PPP). 2.10 Prospects: opportunities and potentialīackground Models of co-operation between the market and the state: examples from Austria.2.3.1 Constitutive partnership principles.2 PSPP: public social private partnership – description of the model. 1.2 Public private partnership contrasted with conventional provision of public services.1.1 Models of co-operation between the market and the state: examples from Austria.
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