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Regulating Water and Sanitation for the Poor - Economic Regulation for Public and Private Partnerships (Hardcover, Large Print Ed)
Loot Price: R4,072
Discovery Miles 40 720
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Regulating Water and Sanitation for the Poor - Economic Regulation for Public and Private Partnerships (Hardcover, Large Print Ed)
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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, usually introduced in
the context of private operation of monopoly water supply, can
deliver objectivity and transparency in the price-setting process
for public providers also. But this is not, as is commonly assumed,
primarily to protect the customer from the provider; rather it is
to allow the service provider to set something approaching
cost-reflective tariffs. These charges, almost certainly higher
than previously, perversely can benefit the poor who have been
paying far more for informal access to any piped supplies. With the
addition of a regulatory duty to achieve some form of adaptive
Universal Service Obligation, economic regulation could contribute
significantly to the achievement of the Millennium Development
Goals in urban areas.The book describes and analyzes these issues
through a consideration of ten country case studies. 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 Argentina, Ghana, Philippines, Bolivia, Jordan,
Zambia and Indonesia, all with varying degrees of private sector
involvement and regulation. Finally, the experiences of the two
richest countries, Chile and England, are considered, investigating
service to the poor inthese examples with the longest experience of
economic regulation and the "most privatized" suppliers. 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 within the context of
the need for least cost utility service provision to all.
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