India has the highest number of people defecating in the open, and the Indian Government is trying to eradicate by constructing toilets for its citizens. This paper is about whether the government is likely to succeed in its cleanliness drive mission by a supply-side policy. We examine the household preference and other the factors leading to open defecation in India. We examine preference for having a toilet in the household over the preference of other household durable goods. Our results suggest toilets get a lower preference—ranked 12, out of 21 different types of consumer durables we investigate. The results also indicate a strong case for imparting education and public awareness, especially, among the female cohort. We find the odds o...
By the end of the Millennium Development Goal's target year, 2015, India had been declared as a coun...
India has the largest number of people practising open defecation in the world; hence progress made ...
Although poor demand is often cited as the major factor for low toilet coverage in rural areas of In...
India has the highest number of people defecating in the open and the Indian Government is trying to...
Of all the countries in the world, India has the highest number of people practicing open defecation...
Using data from the Indian Human Development Survey, this chapter examines both toilet possession an...
In the latest post of our SDGs series (with Africa at LSE and the IGC), Britta Augsburg and Paul Rod...
“Sanitation for all” remains a challenge. In India, the national policies and programmes focussed on...
Sanitation hinders overall development process and poor sanitation practices deprive human access to...
Poor sanitation is an important policy issue facing India, which accounts for over half of the 1.1 b...
dissertationThe lack of use of improved sanitation toilets is an important impediment to health outc...
Across India, 4,19,092 toilets need to be built or repaired to ensure 100% sanitation coverage in sc...
In 2011, India had more phone users (around 54 per cent of households) and television access (33 per...
Female bargaining power in rural Haryana, as in much of northern India, is constrained by widespread...
Background: Faced with a massive shortfall in meeting sanitation targets, some governments have impl...
By the end of the Millennium Development Goal's target year, 2015, India had been declared as a coun...
India has the largest number of people practising open defecation in the world; hence progress made ...
Although poor demand is often cited as the major factor for low toilet coverage in rural areas of In...
India has the highest number of people defecating in the open and the Indian Government is trying to...
Of all the countries in the world, India has the highest number of people practicing open defecation...
Using data from the Indian Human Development Survey, this chapter examines both toilet possession an...
In the latest post of our SDGs series (with Africa at LSE and the IGC), Britta Augsburg and Paul Rod...
“Sanitation for all” remains a challenge. In India, the national policies and programmes focussed on...
Sanitation hinders overall development process and poor sanitation practices deprive human access to...
Poor sanitation is an important policy issue facing India, which accounts for over half of the 1.1 b...
dissertationThe lack of use of improved sanitation toilets is an important impediment to health outc...
Across India, 4,19,092 toilets need to be built or repaired to ensure 100% sanitation coverage in sc...
In 2011, India had more phone users (around 54 per cent of households) and television access (33 per...
Female bargaining power in rural Haryana, as in much of northern India, is constrained by widespread...
Background: Faced with a massive shortfall in meeting sanitation targets, some governments have impl...
By the end of the Millennium Development Goal's target year, 2015, India had been declared as a coun...
India has the largest number of people practising open defecation in the world; hence progress made ...
Although poor demand is often cited as the major factor for low toilet coverage in rural areas of In...