We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Why do households invest in sanitation in rural Benin: Health, wealth, or prestige?
- Authors
Gross, Elena; Günther, Isabel
- Abstract
Seventy percent of the rural population in sub-Saharan Africa does not use adequate sanitation facilities. In rural Benin, as much as 95% of the population does not use improved sanitation. By analyzing a representative sample of 2000 rural households, this paper explores why households remain without latrines. Our results show that wealth and latrine prices play the most decisive role for sanitation demand and ownership. At current income levels, sanitation coverage will only increase to 50% if costs for construction are reduced from currently $190 USD to $50 USD per latrine. Our analysis also suggests that previous sanitation campaigns, which were based on prestige and the allure of a modern lifestyle as motives for latrine construction, have had no success in increasing sanitation coverage. Moreover, improved public health, which is the objective of public policies promoting sanitation, will not be effective at low sanitation coverage rates. Fear at night, especially of animals, and personal harassment, are stated as the most important motivational factors for latrine ownership and the intention to build one. We therefore suggest changing the message of sanitation projects and introduce new low-cost technologies into rural markets; otherwise, marketing strategies will continue to fail in increasing sanitation demand.
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLD sanitation; HOUSEHOLDS; RURAL population; LIFESTYLES; RURAL marketing; MARKETING strategy
- Publication
Water Resources Research, 2014, Vol 50, Issue 10, p8314
- ISSN
0043-1397
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1002/2014WR015899