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Quantifying welfare effects in the presence of externalities: An ex-ante evaluation of sanitation interventions

Sanghmitra Gautam

2023Journal of Development Economics14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

This paper analyzes the impact of externalities on household demand for sanitation and the subsequent welfare effects generated from policy interventions. A critical feature of household sanitation (e.g., toilets) is that the take-up generates externalities where the privately chosen level is less than the socially optimal. To analyze the impact of policy interventions, I explicitly model household choice, taking into account the interdependence of household decision-making within the village. I identify and estimate the model using micro-survey data from India. Using the estimated model, I show how untargeted price subsidies , although cost effective at increasing sanitation coverage, have a regressive effect. I contrast this policy response with a targeted cash transfer to households with children, which ameliorates the regressive impact at the expense of a lower take-up.

Topics & Concepts

SanitationExternalitySubsidyWelfareEx-anteEconomicsPsychological interventionPublic economicsCashSurvey data collectionCash transfersMicroeconomicsMacroeconomicsEngineeringPsychiatryMathematicsPsychologyStatisticsMarket economyEnvironmental engineeringChild Nutrition and Water AccessWater resources management and optimizationEconomic and Environmental Valuation
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