2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.polsoc.2008.10.004
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Water supply: Public or private?

Abstract: Most theories on private sector participation in water infrastructure are based on the sole supposed difference of efficiency between the public and the private sector. The review of 23 empirical tests and 51 case studies shows that private sector participation per se in water supply does not systematically have a significant positive effect on efficiency. Thus, the choice between public and private water delivery is probably not only a question of efficiency.We developed a complete theory of the choice betwee… Show more

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Cited by 68 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…According to a World Bank study these costs can amount to five to ten per cent of the total value of projects (cited in Lobina and Hall 2003). Similar evidence can be found for OECD countries in Perard (2009) and for Spain in Bell and Fageda (2008).…”
Section: Empirical Validity Of the Tct Approach On 'Public Governancesupporting
confidence: 83%
“…According to a World Bank study these costs can amount to five to ten per cent of the total value of projects (cited in Lobina and Hall 2003). Similar evidence can be found for OECD countries in Perard (2009) and for Spain in Bell and Fageda (2008).…”
Section: Empirical Validity Of the Tct Approach On 'Public Governancesupporting
confidence: 83%
“…The decentralization of water utilities, on the other hand, occurred much more frequently in the developing world, whereby water provision was devolved to municipal governments, with partial or no privatization (Cavaliere, Maggi and Stroffolini ). Although local governments’ incentives would lie in ensuring water provision in order to ‘maximize electoral support’, the impact of decentralized and partially privatized municipal water utilities is still contested in the literature, as neither service coverage nor efficiency are always improved in this process (Perard ; Cavaliere, Maggi and Stroffolini ; Anwandter and Ozuna ).…”
Section: Literature Review and Modelmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, the wave of industrial deregulation that took place during the 1970s in the English-speaking world [24] and during the 1980s in the United States [25] encouraged the private sector to increase its participation in water management, a common practice in many developed countries today. For example, taking data from 2007, the private sector supplied water to more than 70% of the population in France and the United Kingdom; between 50 and 70% in the Czech Republic; and between 30 and 50% in Greece, Italy and Spain [26]. In the latter case, Spain, it is worth mentioning how many of the regions on its Mediterranean coast have become a paradigm of privatization for the different parts of the water cycle.…”
Section: Water Governance Public Versus Private Managementmentioning
confidence: 99%