Infrastructure Gap in South Asia : Inequality of Access to Infrastructure Services

The South Asia region is home to the largest pool of individuals living under the poverty line, coupled with a fast-growing population. The importance of access to basic infrastructure services on welfare and the quality of life is clear. Yet the South Asia region's rates of access to infrastructure (sanitation, electricity, telecom, and transport) are closer to those of Sub-Saharan Africa, the one exception being water, where the South Asia region is comparable to East Asia and the pacific and Latin America and the Caribbean. The challenge of increasing access to these services across the South Asia region is compounded by the unequal distribution of existing access for households. This study improves understanding of this inequality by evaluating access across the region's physical (location), poverty, and income considerations. The paper also analyzes inequality of access across time, that is, across generations. It finds that while the regressivity of infrastructure services is clearly present in South Asia, the story that emerges is heterogeneous and complex. There is no simple explanation for these inequalities, although certainly geography matters, some household characteristics matter (like living in a rural area with a head of household who lacks education), and policy intent matters. If a poorer country or a poorer state can have better access to a given infrastructure service than in a richer country or a richer state, then there is hope that policy makers can adopt measures that will improve access in a manner in which prosperity is more widely shared.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Biller, Dan, Andres, Luis, Herrera Dappe, Matias
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank Group, Washington, DC 2014-09
Subjects:ACCESS INDICATORS, ACCESS TO EDUCATION, ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY, ACCESS TO INFORMATION, ACCESS TO INFRASTRUCTURE, ACCESS TO INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES, ACCESS TO PRIMARY EDUCATION, ACCESS TO SANITATION, ACCESS TO SANITATION FACILITIES, ACCESS TO SERVICES, ADMINISTRATIVE REGIONS, AGGLOMERATION BENEFITS, AIR, AIR POLLUTION, BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE, CITIES, CLEAN WATER, COMMUNITY PARTICIPATION, CONFLICT, CONGESTION, DEVELOPING REGION, DISTRIBUTION OF ACCESS, DRAINAGE, DRINKING WATER, DRIVING, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELASTICITY, EMPLOYMENT, ENVIRONMENTAL EXTERNALITIES, EQUITABLE ACCESS, EXTRACTIVE INDUSTRIES, FAMILY MEMBERS, FEMALE-HEADED HOUSEHOLDS, FINANCE INFRASTRUCTURE, FIREWOOD, FOSSIL FUELS, FREIGHT, FREIGHT TRANSPORT, FUEL, FUELS, HIGHER INEQUALITY, HOUSEHOLD DISTRIBUTION, HOUSEHOLD HEAD, HOUSEHOLD HEADS, HOUSEHOLD INCOME, HOUSEHOLD SIZE, HOUSEHOLD SURVEY, HOUSEHOLDS WITH CHILDREN, HUMAN CAPITAL, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, INCIDENCE ANALYSIS, INCOME INEQUALITY, INCOME POVERTY, INCOME QUINTILE, INCOME REDISTRIBUTION, INFRASTRUCTURE INVESTMENT, INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS, INFRASTRUCTURES, LACK OF INFORMATION, LACK OF INFRASTRUCTURE, LAGGING REGIONS, MARKET FAILURES, MOBILITY, NEIGHBORHOOD, OPIUM, PETROLEUM GAS, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POOR COMMUNITIES, POOR HOUSEHOLDS, POOR INDIVIDUALS, POVERTY ALLEVIATION, POVERTY DATA, POVERTY LEVEL, POVERTY LINE, POVERTY LINES, POVERTY RATE, POVERTY RATES, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY THRESHOLD, QUALITY OF LIFE, RAIL, REGIONAL STUDY, ROAD, ROAD NETWORK, ROADS, RURAL, RURAL AREA, RURAL AREAS, RURAL COMMUNITIES, RURAL DEVELOPMENT, RURAL HOUSEHOLD, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, RURAL POPULATION, RURAL POVERTY, SANITATION, SCHOOL ATTENDANCE, SPATIAL ANALYSIS, SPATIAL DISTRIBUTION, SPATIAL INEQUALITIES, SPATIAL INEQUALITY, SUBDIVISIONS, TOLL, TRANSPORT, TRANSPORT ACCESS, TRANSPORT INFRASTRUCTURE, TRANSPORT SERVICES, TRUE, URBAN AREAS, URBAN ENVIRONMENTS, URBAN POOR, URBANIZATION, VULNERABILITY ASSESSMENT, WASTE, WATER SOURCES, WATER SUPPLY, WELFARE BENEFITS, WELFARE IMPROVEMENTS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2014/09/20210855/infrastructure-gap-south-asia-inequality-access-infrastructure-services
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/20344
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