Water nationalization: network access, quality, and health outcomes
Fernando Borraz
No 201126, Working Papers from Latin American and Caribbean Environmental Economics Program
Abstract:
In the case of natural monopolies there tends to be a trade-off between a higher quality of output provided by private firms, and a better access for poor consumers provided by public firms. This partly reflects differences in objectives on the part of both private and public firms. The former tend to be profit-driven, whereas the latter tend to base decisions on political agendas (Chong and Lopez de Silanes, 2005). The objective of this paper is to explore the impact on network access, water quality, and health outcomes of Uruguay’s nationalization of water services. An important advantage of focusing on nationalization rather than privatization is that it avoids selection bias due to cherry-picking by firms or governments at the time of privatization. Indeed, nationalization in Uruguay affected all previously privatized firms, as water was declared “part of the public domain.” Results suggest that the change in ownership led to an increase in the sanitation rate, as well as improvements in water quality. It was also accompanied by a decline in water-related child mortality, although this latter effect tends not to be statistically significant across specifications.
Pages: 45 pages
Date: 2011, Revised 2011
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Working Paper: Water nationalization: network access, quality, and health outcomes (2011) 
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