Solid Waste Management in Ghana: Willingness to Pay for Improved Services.
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Date
2010-08-25
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Publisher
Assemblies of God Literature Centre Limited
Abstract
Recent rapid urbanization and changing lifestyles have created serious environmental problems in most cities in the developing world, especially in the area of solid waste management and financing. This study analyzes the factors that influences household’s willingness-to-pay for improved solid waste management. Using a stratified random sampling technique, a total of 920 households were selected for the study and then a logit model-based contingent valuation method employed to estimate their willingness-to-pay for improved services. The results indicated that all the variables but the household size had significant influence on respondents’ willingness-to-pay. It also revealed a potentially large market segment of households in low-income areas prepared to pay for improved services, which is yet to be tapped into. The study opined that with proper policies, the exploitation of this potential market can help disburden the authorities’ total municipal budget. It thus calls for policy interventions through the use of the socio-economic characteristics to draw comprehensive market segments for waste collection instead of the current zoning patterns which failed to take cognizance of intra-zonal differentials
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Keywords
Cost recovery, cross subsidization, internally generated revenue, service beneficiaries, service sustainability
Citation
Assemblies of God Literature Centre Ltd, pp. 87-112/ Ghana Geographical Journal: 2: 87-112