4.6 Article

Willingness to pay for improvements in rural sanitation: Evidence from a cross-sectional survey of three rural counties in Kenya

Journal

PLOS ONE
Volume 16, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0248223

Keywords

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Funding

  1. United States Agency for International Development (USAID) [AID-615-TO-15-00001]
  2. KIWASH project

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This study evaluated the maximum willingness to pay for SAFI and SATO sanitation products by households in three counties in Kenya and identified the factors affecting their willingness to pay. The main determinants of households' willingness to pay for these sanitation products included proximity to the toilet, household income, type of sanitation product, household socioeconomic status, and satisfaction level with the current toilet. These findings suggest that increasing proximity to toilets, higher incomes, and providing financial support for poor households could potentially increase the demand for these sanitation technologies.
Poor sanitation worldwide leads to an annual loss of approximately $222.9 billion and is the second leading cause of Disability-Adjusted Life Years (DALY's) lost due to diarrhoea. Yet in Kenya, the slow rate and levels at which the household's access improved sanitation facilities remain a concern, and it is unknown if the cost of new technologies is a barrier to access. This study assessed the maximum willingness to pay (WTP) for SAFI and SATO sanitation products and identified those factors that affect the willingness to pay (WTP) valuation estimates by households in three counties in Kenya. It used quantitative economic evaluation research integrated within a cross-sectional survey. Contingent valuation method (CVM) was used to determine the maximum WTP for sanitation in households. We used the logistic regression model in data analysis. A total of 211 households were interviewed in each county, giving a total sample size of 633 households. The mean WTP for SAFI latrines was $153.39 per household, while the mean WTP for SATO pans and SATO stools was $11.49 and $14.77 respectively. For SAFI latrines, households in Kakamega were willing to pay $6.6 more than average while in Siaya, the households were willing to pay $5.1 less than the average. The main determinants of households WTP for the two sanitation products included household's proximity to the toilet (p = 0.0001), household income (beta =.2245741, p = 0.004), sanitation product (beta = -2968.091; p = 0.004), socioeconomic status (beta = -3305.728, p = 0.004) and a household's satisfaction level with the current toilet (beta = -4570.602; p = 0.0001). Increased proximity of households to the toilet, higher incomes, and providing loan facilities or subsidy to poor households could increase the demand for these sanitation technologies.

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