Regulating Water and Sanitation for the Poor

£47.99

Regulating Water and Sanitation for the Poor

Economic Regulation for Public and Private Partnerships

Development studies Politics and government Development economics and emerging economies Environmental economics Energy industries and utilities Public international law The environment Civil engineering, surveying and building

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Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 4th May 2012

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 5 Mb

ISBN: 9781136558887


Introduction and Focus

The aim of this book is to present the potential benefits as well as the challenges of introducing a more formal economic regulatory process into the urban water sector arena in lower-income countries. There is a particular focus upon the impact this may have on the poorest, the informal, slum and shanty dwellers of the rapidly growing cities.

Economic Regulation and Its Benefits

Economic regulation, usually introduced in the context of private operation of monopoly water supply, can deliver objectivity and transparency in the price-setting process for public as well as private providers. The book describes and analyses these issues through a consideration of ten country case studies.

Case Studies Overview

As a starting point, the current situation for the provision of water and sanitation services for the poorest through non-regulated public providers in India and Uganda is reviewed. Comparative chapters are then presented on Ghana, Philippines, Bolivia, Jordan, Zambia and Indonesia, all with varying degrees of private sector involvement and regulation. Finally, the experiences of two richer countries are considered - Chile and England, countries with the longest experience of economic regulation and the most privatized suppliers.

Key Themes

In all cases there is a focus on the very necessary role of customer involvement in price-setting and service monitoring and on the role of alternative (private) service providers.

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