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Awuzie, B O and McDermott, P (2015) A conceptual model for evaluating infrastructure-based temporary multi-organisations. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 103-20.

Eadie, R, Browne, M, Odeyinka, H, McKeown, C and McNiff, S (2015) A survey of current status of and perceived changes required for BIM adoption in the UK. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 4-21.

Eadie, R, Browne, M, Odeyinka, H, McKeown, C and McNiff, S (2015) A survey of current status of and perceived changes required for BIM adoption in the UK. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 4-21.

Liu, J, Love, P E D, Smith, J, Regan, M and Palaneeswaran, E (2015) Review of performance measurement: Implications for public-private partnerships. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 35-51.

Oluwatayo, A A (2015) Employee architect’s perception of human resource practices and their job satisfaction. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 89-102.

Senaratne, S and Samaraweera, A (2015) Construction project leadership across the team development process. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 69-88.

Shehu, Z, Holt, G D, Endut, I R and Akintoye, A (2015) Analysis of characteristics affecting completion time for Malaysian construction projects. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 52-68.

Tijhuis, W (2015) Managing public-private partnerships: Dealing with business-culture influences. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 22-34.

Wibowo, A and Alfen, H W (2015) Government-led critical success factors in PPP infrastructure development. Built Environment Project and Asset Management, 5(01), 121-34.

  • Type: Journal Article
  • Keywords: critical success factors; infrastructure; PPP; Indonesia; weighted gap analysis
  • ISBN/ISSN:
  • URL: https://doi.org/10.1108/BEPAM-03-2014-0016
  • Abstract:
    Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to identify 30 government-led critical success factors (CSFs) from both the meso and micro levels in public-private partnership (PPP) infrastructure development, measured the importance of these factors, and evaluated the government performance within the Indonesian context. Design/methodology/approach - The authors used weighted gap analysis, the Mann-Whitney test, and the Holland and Copenhaver procedure to support the analysis. Findings - The agreement-adjusted mean scores suggest that the identified CSFs are essential, but that these CSFs underperform in Indonesia. The tests indicated that the gap between performance and importance was significant on both the individual and aggregate level, and no respondent-background bias was observed in the data sets. Practical implications - This paper provides valuable information for prospective international investors who might be interested in alternative PPP investment opportunities in Indonesia. Originality/value - This paper enriches the existing body of knowledge on Indonesia’s PPP activities. This is important as, despite the fact that Indonesia offers one of the largest opportunities in Asia for investment in the national infrastructure sector, studies on Indonesia’s PPPs are rarely reported in the literature. This paper also offers a simple, practical, and replicable approach with a sound theoretical basis that can assist governments in identifying and evaluating PPP-specific determinant factors under their control, as well as in measuring their performance on these factors.