Litcius/Paper detail

Urban Water Disinfection and Mortality Decline in Lower-Income Countries

Sonia Bhalotra, Alberto Díaz-Cayeros, Grant Miller, Alfonso Miranda, Atheendar Venkataramani

2021American Economic Journal Economic Policy26 citationsDOI

Abstract

Historically, improvements in municipal water quality led to substantial mortality decline in today’s wealthy countries. However, water disinfection has not consistently produced large benefits in lower-income countries. We study this issue by analyzing a large-scale municipal water disinfection program in Mexico that increased water chlorination coverage in urban areas from 58 percent to over 90 percent within 18 months. We estimate that the program reduced childhood diarrheal disease mortality rates by 45 to 67 percent. However, inadequate sanitation infrastructure and age (degradation) of water pipes may have attenuated these benefits substantially. (JEL I12, I18, L95, O13, O18, Q25, Q53)

Topics & Concepts

SanitationWater qualityDiarrheal diseaseMortality rateEnvironmental healthWaterborne diseasesGeographyEnvironmental scienceWater resource managementSocioeconomicsEnvironmental engineeringMedicineEconomicsDiarrheaBiologyInternal medicineEcologyChild Nutrition and Water AccessGlobal Maternal and Child HealthUrban and Rural Development Challenges
Urban Water Disinfection and Mortality Decline in Lower-Income Countries | Litcius