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This paper looks at the relationship between economic inequality and urban environmental quality in developing countries, focusing on the provision of water and sanitation services.

TitleEconomic inequality and the urban environment : the case of water and sanitation
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication1997
AuthorsJohnstone, N
Secondary TitleEnvironmental Economics Programme discussion paper / IIED
VolumeDP 97-03
Paginationii, 22 p : 2 tab.
Date Published1997-09-01
PublisherInternational Institute for Environment and Development (IIED)
Place PublishedLondon, UK
Keywordscab97/6, economic aspects, low-income communities, safe water supply, sanitation, sdiurb, urban areas
Abstract

This paper looks at the relationship between economic inequality and urban environmental quality in developing countries, focusing on the provision of water and sanitation services. It explores the consequences of dual systems, whereby a proportion of a city's residents are served by subsidized town water and sanitation facilities, whilst another section of the city has been forced to develop a variety of on-site strategies through their own efforts. Among the findings are a. that poorer households are generally more adversely affected by low levels of provision and that standard evaluation techniques perpetuate this bias; b. that the cost structure of service provision implies that equal access to a standardized system is more efficient than the different levels of access and treatment which prevail; and c. that access to water and sanitation and the means by which such systems are financed can be one of the most significant and effective means of distributing resources in the urban context.

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