The Project Finance core course reflects the dynamic skills required to stimulate development on a stand-alone sustainable financial basis.

 MASTERS IN DEVELOPMENT FINANCE 2003

 Core Module: Project Finance

Lecturer:  Richard Tinsley

ABOUT THE COURSE:

 

Project finance is a specialized tool for financing a development on a stand-alone basis with the financier relying on future cash flows as the primary source of repayment.  The projects assets, rights and interests are held as legal collateral.  The ‘core’ of the business is a full understanding of the project and institutional risks.  Only then can the structuring and appropriate funding be understood.

First, the theoretical and academic foundations to the financial, national, and institutional considerations for project finance will be canvassed.  The learning log for this course focuses the student on developing a hands-on, practical, systematic, and applied approach to project preparation, analysis, and finance at every level.

The course methodology is a mix of lectures/course material, in-course worked examples, case studies and a workshop on financial risk and structure.  Handbooks, guidelines, articles, journal materials and matrix/checklists will serve as reference material for future project design and delivery.

Besides pre-course reading and presentation, the course format includes pre-assigned questions and topics for discussion.  A highly interactive environment thus extracts the course features for each student. 

Mark:    Your grade will be weighted as follows:  Classroom/Coursework (10%), Essay (20%), Dealsheet (5%), Case Study (25%), Final exam (40%).

The course notes will contain the necessary background and reading.  However, these additional sources will enhance the overall coverage of this core module:

ADB (1997), Guidelines for the Economic Analysis of Projects.

ADB (2002), Guidelines for the Financial Governance and Management of Investment Projects Financed by the Asian Development Bank.

ABD (2002), Handbook for Integrating Risk Analysis in the Economic Analysis of Projects, May.

Benoit P. (1996), Project Finance at the World Bank: An Overview of Policies and Instruments, World Bank Technical Papers – No. 312.

Cordukes P.A. (1994), Submission and Evaluation of Proposals for Private Power Generation Projects in Developing Countries, World Bank, Discussion Paper 250.

IFC (1999), Project Finance in Developing Countries, Lessons of Experience 7.

IFC (1999), Results on the Ground 4:  The Private Sector and Development: Five Case Studies.

Morisset J. (2000), Foreign Direct Investment in Africa : Policies Also Matter, World Bank Working Papers No. 2481, November.

Razavi H. (1996), Financing Energy Projects in Emergency Economics, Pennwell Books.

Tinsley C.R. (2000), Advanced Project Financing: Structuring Risk, 1st Ed., Euromoney Books  (referred to as “APF”)  Copies of APF reside in the US Business School Library in Belleville, Cape Town, South Africa.

UNIDO (1996), BOT Guidelines.

Note: Case profiles and emphases will necessarily change over time to highlight developing trends and best practices.

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