Infrastructure Coverage and the Poor : The Global Perspective

The authors use the World Bank's Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) surveys from 15 countries (covering more than 55,500 households) to examine the relationship between infrastructure coverage and household income. The results show that throughout the world all income groups have much higher levels of coverage for electricity than for other formal infrastructure services (in-house piped water service, sewerage service, and private telephone service). In many countries most households in urban areas now have electricity service. As monthly household incomes increase from $100 to $250, coverage of all these infrastructure services rises, but at different rates. The findings confirm that the very poor rarely have these infrastructure services - with exceptions. The very poor often do have electricity if they live in urban areas. The very poor in Eastern Europe and Central Asia have much higher levels of coverage than those elsewhere in the world; they often have electricity, water, sewer, and telephone services. The results also suggest that if the poor gain access to services in their communities, many will decide to connect.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Komives, Kristin, Whittington, Dale, Wu, Xun
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2001-02
Subjects:ACCESS TO SERVICES, CAPITA CONSUMPTION, CITIES, COMMUNITY INFRASTRUCTURE, COMMUNITY WATER, CONNECTION FEES, CONSUMPTION DATA, DRINKING WATER, DWELLINGS, EXPENDITURES, HOMES, HOUSE CONNECTIONS, HOUSE WATER, HOUSEHOLD CONSUMPTION, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD SIZE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS, HOUSEHOLD USE, HOUSEHOLD WATER, HOUSEHOLD- LEVEL, HOUSEHOLDS, INCOME DATA, INCOME LEVEL, LIVING STANDARDS, NEIGHBORHOODS, POLICY RESEARCH, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, PRICE OF WATER, PRIVATE PARTICIPATION, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE WATER CONNECTIONS, PRIVATE WELLS, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC WATER, RENTS, RURAL AREAS, RURAL COMMUNITIES, RURAL COMMUNITY, SANITATION SOLUTIONS, SEPTIC TANK, SERVICE PROVIDERS, SEWER SERVICE, SEWERAGE SERVICE, URBAN AREAS, URBAN COMMUNITIES, UTILITIES, WATER SERVICE, WATER SERVICES, WATER SOURCE, WATER SOURCES, WATER SUPPLY,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2001/02/1003162/infrastructure-coverage-poor-global-perspective
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/19712
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