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This Finance Brief briefly summarises the history of water and sanitation services provision in the US, the UK, and South Korea, and considers whether this historical experience is relevant to low and middle-income countries today.

TitleUniversal water and sanitation : how did the rich countries do it?
Publication TypeBriefing Note
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsBisaga, I, Norman, G
Secondary TitleFinance brief / Public Finance for WASH
Issue2
Pagination2 p.
Date Published03/2015
PublisherPublic Finance for WASH, Water & Sanitation for the Urban Poor (WSUP)
Place PublishedLondon, UK
Publication LanguageEnglish
Abstract

In rich countries like the US and the UK, efforts to provide universal water and sanitation began in the 19th century, and have resulted in near-100% coverage. Today, low and low-middle-income countries face a challenge in many respects similar to that faced by these wealthier countries 150 years ago. So how exactly did the rich countries finance water and sanitation coverage? Was private enterprise the main driver, or was investment led by governments? This Finance Brief briefly summarises the history of water and sanitation services provision in the US, the UK, and South Korea, and considers whether this historical experience is relevant to low and middle-income countries today (author abstract)

Notes

Includes 16 ref.

URLhttps://www.publicfinanceforwash.org/resources/finance-brief-2-universal-water-and-sanitation-how-did-rich-countries-do-it
Citation Key79276

Themes

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