The World Bank, Washington, DC, United States of America.
John F. Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States of America.
PLoS One. 2022 Jun 15;17(6):e0269980. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0269980. eCollection 2022.
While poverty-targeted subsidies have shown promise as a means of reducing financial constraints on low-income populations to invest in new latrines, concerns have been raised about whether they may reduce demand for new latrines among non-eligible, non-poor populations, especially in geographically limited or closed markets. Using quasi experimental methods, we investigate the interaction effects of the "CHOBA" subsidy, a partial poverty-targeted monetary incentive to build a toilet, and a sanitation marketing program (SanMark) on new latrine uptake among households from different income segments in 110 rural villages across six Cambodian provinces. These programs were implemented either jointly with or independently. Overall, we find strong complementarity of the CHOBA subsidy with SanMark where the coupled implementation of the programs increased latrine uptake across all households as compared to exclusive deployment of the programs independently. Additionally, the CHOBA subsidy alone resulted in higher gains among the poor compared to SanMark suggesting that financial constraint is indeed a significant demand barrier for new latrines. The presence of the poverty-targeted subsidies did not reduce demand for new latrine purchases among ineligible households. Instead, we find some evidence for a positive spillover effect of subsidies on uptake of latrines among ineligible households in villages where both programs were implemented indicating that the presence of sanitation subsidies and the decision to purchase latrines among non-beneficiaries can be viewed as complements. We employ multivariate logistic regressions as well as further robustness checks to estimate the effects of the different interventions, with qualitatively consistent results.
虽然针对贫困人群的补贴已被证明是一种减少低收入人群投资新厕所的经济限制的有效手段,但有人担心,这些补贴可能会降低非贫困、非贫困人口对新厕所的需求,尤其是在地理上有限或封闭的市场中。我们使用准实验方法,调查了“CHOBA”补贴(一种针对贫困人口的部分货币激励措施,用于建造厕所)和卫生营销计划(SanMark)之间的交互效应,这些计划在柬埔寨六个省的 110 个农村村庄的不同收入群体的家庭中新厕所的采用情况。这些计划要么联合实施,要么独立实施。总体而言,我们发现 CHOBA 补贴与 SanMark 之间具有很强的互补性,与单独实施相比,这两个项目的联合实施增加了所有家庭的厕所采用率。此外,单独实施 CHOBA 补贴对贫困人口的收益高于 SanMark,这表明经济限制确实是新厕所需求的一个重要障碍。贫困定向补贴的存在并没有减少不符合条件的家庭对新厕所购买的需求。相反,我们发现,在实施这两个项目的村庄中,补贴对非受益家庭厕所采用率存在正向溢出效应的一些证据,这表明卫生补贴的存在和非受益人群购买厕所的决定可以被视为互补的。我们使用多元逻辑回归以及进一步的稳健性检查来估计不同干预措施的效果,结果定性上一致。