The role of the private sector in peri-urban or rural water services in emerging countries

Author(s)
Dardenne, B.
Publication language
English
Pages
38
Date published
01 Jan 2006
Type
Conference, training & meeting documents
Keywords
Urban, Water, sanitation and hygiene

Private players in water supply services in developing countries are generally either too big (large international operators) or too small (informal vendors), with respect to the size that would be adequate for the needs of the low-income areas.
Large international operators made efforts to address the needs of the peri-urban or rural clusters. They obtained some promising results. No evidence can be found in the present situation in order to conclude whether the capacity to supply the poor is inherently linked to the private or public nature of the operator. Regulation concerns are fundamental, but the key issue seems to be more how to conceive a public service utility, universal and egalitarian, in cities or countries with an excessively imbalanced income distribution.
Small informal players are generally ignored by the authorities, although they serve between 25 and 50 % of the households in many developing countries. Their participation, as long as it is accompanied by more positive policies, could help the achievement of the MDGs. Interesting cases can be pointed out in some countries.
The strategy recommended by the author is to promote the constitution of a mid-size private offer, capable of responding to the needs of the deprived areas.