Great decisions are timely: Benefits from more efficient infrastructure investment decision-making

Cost of delays in decisions
Eilya Torshizian and Milad Maralani of Principal Economics

 

Aotearoa New Zealand suffers from an infrastructure deficit. Without the key infrastructure needed now for our economy to thrive, we deprive future generations from significant economic prosperity. While transformational infrastructure projects necessitate time to be developed into sound technical solutions to our needs, many New Zealand projects are further delayed by policy decision and financing constraints.
In this novel application of the infrastructure Wider Economic Benefits approach, we quantify the cost to society of these further delays for the first time, by using the example of the Waikato Expressway. We used our subregional CGE model to estimate the downstream benefits of the Expressway. At a high-level, results of our analysis quantify the annual benefits of having the Waikato Expressway in the economy. Without the expressway in function as early as possible, $334 million of economic benefits were forgone each year.

Read the report here.

Cite this article

Principal Economics. (2022). Great decisions are timely: Benefits from more efficient
infrastructure investment decision-making. Report to Infrastructure New Zealand.