Playing in Invisible Markets: Toilet Innovations and Empowerment
Shyama Ramani ()
Working Papers from eSocialSciences
Abstract:
Sanitation is at the heart of not only environmental security but also food security and health. About 42,000 people die every week due to drinking water polluted with faecal matter. The problem is most acute in India, China, many countries of Africa and a few countries of Latin America. Why is there such a crisis in the toilets market? How much of the present problem is due to a lack of supply and how much is it due to a lack of demand? What is the optimal role of the State, the firms and the NPOs? The present paper attempts to give some insight on the above questions through the case study of the market for toilets for the poor in India. It examines the toilet history and achievements of India, the innovations in the market for toilets targeting the group at the bottom of the income pyramid and the factors that influence the adoption and usage of toilets in an Indian coastal village, in order to infer answers to the above questions.
Keywords: toilets; sanitation; pollution; toilets market; water and sanitation; welfare services (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2008-03
Note: Institutional Papers
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