
Alex Armand
Nova School of Business and Economics, CEPR, Institute for Fiscal Studies, and NOVAFRICA
Paul Atwell
University of Michigan
Joseph F. Gomes
IRES/LIDAM, UCLouvain, and CEPR
Yannik Schenk
IRES/LIDAM, and UCLouvain
Abstract
This study explores the interaction between the quality of public services, the implementation of user fees, and the resulting potential for exclusion, that can lead to negative externalities.
Our theoretical framework takes account of the possible externalities that result from excluded users accessing alternative options in the context of sanitation, i.e., open defecation, and challenges the conventional wisdom that higher quality unequivocally leads to increased use. Instead, it highlights the ambiguity that results from a simultaneous increase in usage due to improved services (quality effect) and a decrease caused by the fees (price-elasticity effect). We then provide empirical evidence from a randomized controlled trial, where we incentivized the quality of water and sanitation services in the two largest cities of Uttar Pradesh, India. We show that higher service quality increases fee compliance but excludes some users, leading to unintended negative health externalities. Our detailed data provides evidence that results are driven by changes in caretaker behaviour. This finding highlights the need to be cautious regarding user fees, especially for public services involving significant externalities, and in settings where the users are very poor.
ISSN 2183-0843
Working Paper No 2302
June 2023
Download this Working Paper here.