Access
Sanitation is a public good, the responsibility for which is shared between households and the government. Interventions in the sector, therefore, must be designed with an eye toward reducing crowd out. We discuss the new findings on sanitation provision from the 12 papers in this special issue in the context of a simple model of household choice of levels of sanitation investment in the face of joint responsibility between the government and households over sanitation. The model provides micro-foundations for understanding when we should be particularly concerned about the potential for crowd-out together with intuition for the implications of the choice of intervention design between information, in-kind transfers, cash transfers, and subsidies. We use the framework of the model to discuss the findings of the papers in this special issue.
Authors

Associate Director
Britta Augsburg is Associate Director at IFS and leads the work on Human Capital Development.

Professor of Economics Brown University

Assistant Professor of Data Science University of Virginia

Research Fellow University of Virginia
Molly is an associate Professor of Economics and Public Policy Director, Center for Social Innovation UVA Batten School and a Research Fellow at IFS.
Journal article details
- DOI
- 10.1016/j.jdeveco.2024.103316
- Publisher
- Elsevier
- Issue
- Volume 171, October 2024
Suggested citation
Augsburg, B. et al (2024), 'Evidence on designing sanitation interventions', Journal of Development Economics, 171, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jdeveco.2024.103316
More from IFS
Understand this issue

Spending Review 2025: What it means and why it matters
We take a closer look at the Spending Review and what the policies mean for public services, investment and the wider economy.
12 June 2025

Sure Start’s wide-ranging and long-lasting benefits highlight the impact of integrated early years services
Over the long run, Sure Start’s financial benefits could be twice as high as its costs
22 May 2025

Simulated list size and performance against the 18-week target under a variety of treatment growth rate assumptions
Although performance improves in each case, in none of our scenarios does performance reach the 92% target by the end of the parliament.
20 March 2025
Policy analysis

Study of the Distributional Performance of Piped Water Consumption Subsidies in 10 Developing Countries
This paper provides new evidence on how effectively piped water consumption subsidies are targeting poor households in 10 low- and middle-income countries around the world.
1 June 2020

Increasing the adoption of safe sanitation infrastructure: Evidence from India
22 March 2023

Sustainable Total Sanitation in Nigeria
In November 2018, Nigeria declared that its water supply, sanitation and hygiene sector was in crisis. This was partly prompted by the fact that the country has struggled to make progress towards ending open defecation. Almost one in four Nigerians – around 50 million people – defecates in open areas.
11 June 2019
Academic research

Sanitation and marriage markets in India: Evidence from the Total Sanitation Campaign
This paper uses the Indian human development household survey (IHDS) to measure the additional value of sanitation within the marriage arrangement.
23 March 2023

Community matters: Heterogeneous impacts of a sanitation intervention
8 February 2023

Public service delivery, exclusion and externalities: Theory and experimental evidence from India
15 November 2023