Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities

The Water Global Practice, under the WSS GSG Utility Turnaround thematic area, has implemented the Global Study on WSS Utility Aggregation to provide evidence-based guidance to policy makers and practitioners regarding when, why, and how water and...

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Main Author: Klien, Michael
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/693501503629631531/Statistical-analysis-global-study-on-the-aggregation-of-water-supply-and-sanitation-utilities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27981
id okr-10986-27981
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-279812021-05-25T09:02:34Z Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities Klien, Michael AGGREGATION WATER SUPPLY WATER AND SANITATION WATER UTILITIES UTILITY STRUCTURE INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY The Water Global Practice, under the WSS GSG Utility Turnaround thematic area, has implemented the Global Study on WSS Utility Aggregation to provide evidence-based guidance to policy makers and practitioners regarding when, why, and how water and sanitation utilities can work together ("aggregate") to successfully deliver specific policy outcomes, such as better services or lower costs. This work builds on a review of existing literature and an analysis of both qualitative and quantitative evidence, a global data set of international trends and a series of case studies. Additionally, as described in this report, a statistical analysis based on IB-Net data (which cover 1,306 utilities from more than 140 countries) was conducted to better understand the potential gains from aggregation. The objective of the statistical analysis was to empirically assess the performance consequences of aggregations. To this end, the statistical analysis report uses the whole universe of utilities from the IB-Net database to address three core aspects of aggregations. For more information on the global study, refer to the report, Joining Forces for Better Services? When, Why, and How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Benefit from Working Together. The accompanying toolkit (accessible at www.worldbank.org/water/aggregationtoolkit), offers a broader set of references and resources to inform aggregation processes. 2017-08-25T16:10:23Z 2017-08-25T16:10:23Z 2017-08 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/693501503629631531/Statistical-analysis-global-study-on-the-aggregation-of-water-supply-and-sanitation-utilities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27981 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Other Environmental Study Economic & Sector Work
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 AGGREGATION
WATER SUPPLY
WATER AND SANITATION
WATER UTILITIES
UTILITY STRUCTURE
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
spellingShingle AGGREGATION
WATER SUPPLY
WATER AND SANITATION
WATER UTILITIES
UTILITY STRUCTURE
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
Klien, Michael
Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
description The Water Global Practice, under the WSS GSG Utility Turnaround thematic area, has implemented the Global Study on WSS Utility Aggregation to provide evidence-based guidance to policy makers and practitioners regarding when, why, and how water and sanitation utilities can work together ("aggregate") to successfully deliver specific policy outcomes, such as better services or lower costs. This work builds on a review of existing literature and an analysis of both qualitative and quantitative evidence, a global data set of international trends and a series of case studies. Additionally, as described in this report, a statistical analysis based on IB-Net data (which cover 1,306 utilities from more than 140 countries) was conducted to better understand the potential gains from aggregation. The objective of the statistical analysis was to empirically assess the performance consequences of aggregations. To this end, the statistical analysis report uses the whole universe of utilities from the IB-Net database to address three core aspects of aggregations. For more information on the global study, refer to the report, Joining Forces for Better Services? When, Why, and How Water and Sanitation Utilities Can Benefit from Working Together. The accompanying toolkit (accessible at www.worldbank.org/water/aggregationtoolkit), offers a broader set of references and resources to inform aggregation processes.
format Report
author Klien, Michael
author_facet Klien, Michael
author_sort Klien, Michael
title Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
title_short Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
title_full Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
title_fullStr Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
title_full_unstemmed Statistical Analysis : Global Study on the Aggregation of Water Supply and Sanitation Utilities
title_sort statistical analysis : global study on the aggregation of water supply and sanitation utilities
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/693501503629631531/Statistical-analysis-global-study-on-the-aggregation-of-water-supply-and-sanitation-utilities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27981
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