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Cost recovery strategy for rural water delivery in Nigeria

Dale Whittington, Apia Okorafor, Augustine Okore and Alexander McPhail

No 369, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank

Abstract: What economic and political factors have made cost recovery for rural water systems so difficult in the Nsuuka district of Anambra State? This paper found that households in the region do not want to pay for water in advance or commit themselves to a fixed monthly payment for water. They want the freedom to buy water only when they use it - partly because they do not want to buy water in the rainy season and partly because they want control of their cash flow in the event of more pressing needs. Equally important, they do not trust the government to provide a reliable public water supply. If required to pay a fixed fee every month, households are willing to pay only relatively small amounts for improved services. Current arrangements for cost recovery - fixed monthly fees for both public taps and unmetered private connections - are inappropriate. Kiosk systems or kiosk systems with metered private connections for some households are the most promising way to improve cost recovery and meet consumers's cash flow needs. Kiosk systems can provide less expensive, more reliable, and better quality water than water vendors do. It is not yet possible to generalize these results to other parts of Nigeria or other developing countries, but the advantages are likely to be equally valid in many other places.

Keywords: Town Water Supply and Sanitation; Water Supply and Sanitation Governance and Institutions; Water and Industry; Water Conservation; Water Use (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1990-03-31
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (1)

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