Access, Affordability, and Alternatives : Modern Infrastructure Services in Africa
Author(s)
Banerjee, SudeshnaUddin, Helal
Wodon, Quentin
Tsimpo, Clarence
Foster, Vivien
Diallo, Amadou
Pushak, Taras
Keywords
HOUSINGPOLICY MAKERS
SOURCE OF DRINKING WATER
CONNECTION CHARGES
TOILET FACILITIES
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
QUALITY OF SERVICE
URBAN AREAS
COMMUNITIES
URBAN DEVELOPMENT
URBANIZED COUNTRIES
POLICY FORMULATION
POLICY DECISIONS
URBAN WATER SUPPLY
LARGE CITIES
NUMBER OF HOUSEHOLDS
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
PIT LATRINES
POPULATION GROWTH
TRANSPORT
PUBLIC UTILITY
PRIVATE PARTICIPATION
DEMOGRAPHIC GROWTH
ACCESS TO INFRASTRUCTURE
HOUSEHOLD SIZE
MINORITY
NUMBER OF PERSONS
URBAN POPULATIONS
POPULATION CONNECTION
UTILITIES
DECLINES IN FERTILITY
HIV
TRUCKS
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
FUELS
PETROLEUM GAS
HOUSEHOLD CONNECTIONS
RATE OF GROWTH
LIVING STANDARDS
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
WATER SOURCES
SURFACE WATER
SEPTIC TANK
WASTE
HOUSEHOLDS
POPULATION DENSITIES
WORLD HEALTH ORGANIZATION
NATURAL GAS
COST RECOVERY
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE
DRIVERS
VULNERABLE GROUPS
POLICY IMPLICATIONS
URBANIZATION
RURAL AREAS
SEWERAGE SYSTEMS
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
RATE OF POPULATION GROWTH
RESPECT
LOW-INCOME COUNTRIES
NUMBER OF CONNECTIONS
GROWTH RATES OF POPULATION
SERVICE PROVISION
ECONOMIC RESOURCES
WATER SUPPLY
HOUSEHOLD INCOME
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
SIGNIFICANT POLICY
PURCHASING POWER
SANITATION SERVICES
INCOME INEQUALITY
WATER MARKET
HOUSEHOLD BUDGETS
LABOR MARKETS
ACCESS TO SAFE DRINKING WATER
BASIC SANITATION
PIT LATRINE
FIXED COSTS
ACCESS TO SERVICES
WATER USE
WATER SUPPLY FACILITIES
KNOWLEDGE BASE
WATER SERVICE
TV
NUMBER OF PEOPLE
PERFORMANCE OF SERVICE PROVIDERS
OFFICIAL DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
WELLS
RURAL POPULATION
TARIFF STRUCTURE
FLUSH TOILET
WEALTH
NUTRITION
SANITATION FACILITIES
LEGAL STATUS
WASTE COLLECTION
SEGMENTS OF SOCIETY
CELLULAR TELEPHONES
LIVING CONDITIONS
TRANSPORT POLICY
SANITATION FACILITY
BASIC SERVICES
QUALITY OF SERVICE DELIVERY
ACCESS TO SAFE WATER
DISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH
UTILITY SERVICES
TOILET FACILITY
SMALL TOWNS
RATES OF URBANIZATION
WATER SOURCE
PROGRESS
URBAN WATER
PURCHASING POWER PARITY
HEALTH OF WOMEN
TRUE
URBAN POPULATION
RADIO
DISSEMINATION
ECONOMIC GROWTH
UNIVERSAL ACCESS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
FUEL
NUMBER OF PEOPLE WITHOUT ACCESS
Full record
Show full item recordOnline Access
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12558Abstract
Africa lags well behind other developing regions in infrastructure access. The limited gains of the 1990s have not increased much in the 2000s. There is clear evidence that many countries are failing to expand services fast enough to keep ahead of rapid demographic growth and even faster urbanization. As a result, if present trends continue, Africa is likely to lag even further behind other developing regions, and universal access will be more than 50 years away in many countries. However, there is variation in performance across countries, even within the low and middle income brackets. A significant number of countries have succeeded in increasing the number of people who have access to water, electricity, and sanitation, by an annual average of 5-10 percent. Further investigation is warranted to explain what determines the superior performance of these countries.Date
2008-02Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/12558http://hdl.handle.net/10986/12558
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 UnportedCollections
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