|
LET THE POOR HAVE WATER,NOT IDEOLOGY - NEW PAPER |
|
August 13, 2007 Lima, Perú.- This year’s World Water Week will see activists
gather in Even though private water provision sees clean and safe water delivered
to millions around the world, many politicians and NGOs remain
irrationally opposed to the idea that profit should be made from
“essential resources” like water. According to the paper’s author, Alex Nash, a water engineer with
experience of both public and private sector water projects in
less-developed countries, this mindset is actively hindering universal
access to water, and with it the achievement of several Millennium
Development Goals. The truth is that many
public utilities in less-developed countries suffer from endemic
corruption and rarely deliver services equitably – even refusing to recognise and connect slum-dwellers: “The
reality of many state run utilities is not pretty. Bribes, extortion,
kickbacks, nepotism, patronage, shoddy technical standards; it’s all in
a day’s work.” Meanwhile, it is the private sector - from individual water porters to
larger companies - that fill in the gaps left by dysfunctional state
utilities. The World Bank estimates that in most cities in less developed countries,
more than half the population get their water from suppliers other than
the public utility. This is the case in many peri-urban areas, as in
Asunción “The
net result of these ideologues’ well-meaning efforts is a staunch
defence of the corrupt, lazy or incompetent utility managers and mayors.
It is a defence of the comfortable middle classes in developing countries
who have cheap water while their poorer compatriots queue and walk all
day.”
“Water Provision for the Poor- How ideology muddies the debate”, by Alex Nash, published 13 August 2007 by the Sustainable Development Network – available for download here The
26 sponsoring organisations of Ag
Bio World Foundation, Africa
Fighting Malaria, Alternate
Solutions Institute, Pakistan, www.asinstitute.org Asociación
de Consumidores Libres, Costa Rica, www.consumidoreslibres.org Association
for Liberal CEDICE,
Venezuela, www.cedice.org.ve
CEPPRO,
Paraguay, www.ceppro.org.py Centro
de Innovación y Desarrollo Humano, Uruguay, www.cidhu.org ESEADE
University, Argentina, www.eseade.edu.ar
Fundación
Atlas 1853, Argentina, www.atlas.org.ar Fundación
Libertad, Panamá, www.fundacionlibertad.org.pa
Free
Market Forum
on Instituto
Ecuatoriano de Economía Política, Ecuador, www.ieep.org.ec International
Policy Network, INLAP,
Costa Rica, www.inlap.org
Instituto
de Libre Empresa, Peru, www.ileperu.org Instituto
Liberdade, Brazil, www.il-rs.com.br
Instituto
Libertad y Progreso, Colombia, www.ilyp.net
Jerusalem
Institute for Market Studies, Liberty
Institute, Lion
Rock Institute, Zambia Institute for Public Policy
For more information: Caroline Boin, E-mail:
caroline@policynetwork.net Telf:
+44 (0)
207
836 0753 |
|
ILE'S OFFICE |
|
INSTITUTO DE LIBRE EMPRESA (ILE) Free Enterprise Institute Lima,
Perú SUPPORT US(click here) |