Do Community Water Sources Provide Safe Drinking Water? Evidence from a Randomized Experiment in Rural Bangladesh

Author:

Cocciolo Serena1,Ghisolfi Selene2ORCID,Habib Md Ahasan34,Rashid S M A3,Tompsett Anna5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Young Professional at the World Bank, Washington, DC, USA

2. Laboratory for Effective Anti-poverty Policies, Bocconi University, Italy

3. NGO Forum for Public Health, Dhaka, Bangladesh

4. KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Stockholm, Sweden

5. Stockholm University, Stockholm, Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Health, and in turn income and welfare, depend on access to safe drinking water. Although the majority of rural households worldwide obtain drinking water from community water sources, there is limited evidence about how effectively these sources provide safe drinking water. This study combines a randomized experiment with water quality testing to evaluate the impact of a program that provides community deep tubewells in rural Bangladesh. The program reduces exposure to arsenic, a major natural pollutant, but not fecal contamination. Households may use fewer sources with fecal contamination, but any such effects are offset by recontamination through transport and possibly storage. The results suggest that while community deep-tubewell construction programs may reduce exposure to arsenic in Bangladesh, reducing exposure to fecal contamination may require interventions that go beyond community sources.

Funder

International Initiative for Impact Evaluation

Swedish Research Council Development Research

International Growth Center

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Economics and Econometrics,Finance,Development,Accounting

Reference58 articles.

1. An Overview of Arsenic Removal Technologies in Bangladesh and India;Ahmed,2001

2. Associations between Drinking Water and Urinary Arsenic Levels and Skin Lesions in Bangladesh;Ahsan;Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine,2000

3. Providing Safe Water: Evidence from Randomized Evaluations;Ahuja;Annual Review of Resource Economics,2010

4. Evolution of Households’ Responses to the Groundwater Arsenic Crisis in Bangladesh: Information on Environmental Health Risks Can Have Increasing Behavioral Impact over Time;Balasubramanya;Environment and Development Economics,2014

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