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recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-151592021-04-23T14:03:11Z Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision Brook, Penelope J. Irwin, Timothy C. Brook, Penelope J. Irwin, Timothy C. POOR PEOPLE STATE OWNED COMPANIES PRIVATE COMPANY ELECTRICITY WATER TELECOMMUNICATIONS PRIVATIZATION DEVELOPING COUNTRIES INFRASTRUCTURE SANITATION BORROWING CITIES COMPETITIVE MARKETS CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT CREDITWORTHINESS DEMOGRAPHICS DEREGULATION ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY ECONOMICS ELECTRICITY EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE EMPLOYMENT ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES FINANCIAL RESOURCES FUELS INCOME INCOME LEVELS LAWS LEVIES LICENSES LOW INCOME MARKET POWER MONOPOLIES OPERATING COSTS PENALTIES POLICY RESEARCH PRIVATE SECTOR PRIVATIZATION PROPERTY RIGHTS PROVISION OF INFRASTRUCTURE PUBLIC OWNERSHIP PUBLIC POLICY PUBLIC SERVICES PURCHASING POWER QUALITY STANDARDS SUBSIDIARY TAXATION TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRANSPORT UTILITIES WATER SUPPLY The chapters in this book examine the data on infrastructure and the poor in developing countries and consider how policies centered on private provision can address their needs. Many of the chapters focus on the extent to which the poor have access to infrastructure services of reasonable quality, for example, to water that is safe to drink, to a reliable source of electricity, and to a nearby telephone. Access to such services is, of course, not the only infrastructure issue that matters to the poor; the poor who already have access to modern services care, for instance, about the price and reliability of those services. However, in most developing countries access is the key issue. In these countries most of the poor have no access to standard infrastructure services provided by utilities. Instead they often pay high prices for lower-quality substitutes: they might buy water by the bucket from a private vendor and use candles instead of electricity for lighting. They would rarely make a telephone call. The lack of ready access to good basic infrastructure services can directly reduce the well-being of the poor. 2013-08-19T16:55:53Z 2013-08-19T16:55:53Z 2003 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/03/2373377/infrastructure-poor-people-public-policy-private-provision 0-8213-5342-X http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15159 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC: World Bank Publications & Research :: Publication Publications & Research :: Publication
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic POOR PEOPLE
STATE OWNED COMPANIES
PRIVATE COMPANY
ELECTRICITY
WATER
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
PRIVATIZATION
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION BORROWING
CITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CREDITWORTHINESS
DEMOGRAPHICS
DEREGULATION
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMICS
ELECTRICITY
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
FUELS
INCOME
INCOME LEVELS
LAWS
LEVIES
LICENSES
LOW INCOME
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLIES
OPERATING COSTS
PENALTIES
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATIZATION
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PROVISION OF INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC OWNERSHIP
PUBLIC POLICY
PUBLIC SERVICES
PURCHASING POWER
QUALITY STANDARDS
SUBSIDIARY
TAXATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRANSPORT
UTILITIES
WATER SUPPLY
spellingShingle POOR PEOPLE
STATE OWNED COMPANIES
PRIVATE COMPANY
ELECTRICITY
WATER
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
PRIVATIZATION
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
INFRASTRUCTURE
SANITATION BORROWING
CITIES
COMPETITIVE MARKETS
CONTRACT ENFORCEMENT
CREDITWORTHINESS
DEMOGRAPHICS
DEREGULATION
ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY
ECONOMICS
ELECTRICITY
EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE
EMPLOYMENT
ENVIRONMENTAL RESOURCES
FINANCIAL RESOURCES
FUELS
INCOME
INCOME LEVELS
LAWS
LEVIES
LICENSES
LOW INCOME
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLIES
OPERATING COSTS
PENALTIES
POLICY RESEARCH
PRIVATE SECTOR
PRIVATIZATION
PROPERTY RIGHTS
PROVISION OF INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC OWNERSHIP
PUBLIC POLICY
PUBLIC SERVICES
PURCHASING POWER
QUALITY STANDARDS
SUBSIDIARY
TAXATION
TELECOMMUNICATIONS
TRANSPORT
UTILITIES
WATER SUPPLY
Brook, Penelope J.
Irwin, Timothy C.
Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
description The chapters in this book examine the data on infrastructure and the poor in developing countries and consider how policies centered on private provision can address their needs. Many of the chapters focus on the extent to which the poor have access to infrastructure services of reasonable quality, for example, to water that is safe to drink, to a reliable source of electricity, and to a nearby telephone. Access to such services is, of course, not the only infrastructure issue that matters to the poor; the poor who already have access to modern services care, for instance, about the price and reliability of those services. However, in most developing countries access is the key issue. In these countries most of the poor have no access to standard infrastructure services provided by utilities. Instead they often pay high prices for lower-quality substitutes: they might buy water by the bucket from a private vendor and use candles instead of electricity for lighting. They would rarely make a telephone call. The lack of ready access to good basic infrastructure services can directly reduce the well-being of the poor.
author2 Brook, Penelope J.
author_facet Brook, Penelope J.
Brook, Penelope J.
Irwin, Timothy C.
format Publications & Research :: Publication
author Brook, Penelope J.
Irwin, Timothy C.
author_sort Brook, Penelope J.
title Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
title_short Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
title_full Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
title_fullStr Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
title_full_unstemmed Infrastructure for Poor People : Public Policy for Private Provision
title_sort infrastructure for poor people : public policy for private provision
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2013
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/03/2373377/infrastructure-poor-people-public-policy-private-provision
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15159
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