Skip to main content
Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits

Water and sanitation

Publication ,  Chapter
Rijsberman, F; Zwane, AP
January 1, 2012

The challenge The world has met the MDG on water five years early according to the most recent Joint Monitoring Program update released in March 2012 but will miss its goal on basic sanitation by almost 1 billion people (WHO/UNICEF 2012). An astonishing one-third of the world population 2.5 billion people does not have access to basic sanitation and over 1 billion people defecate out in the open. In light of the evidence that the world community is making progress in the water sector and because sanitation is typically the neglected half of the water and sanitation challenge including in the 2008 Copenhagen Consensus Challenge Paper on water and sanitation (Whittington et al. 2008) this chapter redresses that imbalance and focuses primarily on sanitation and the question of whether and how it would be cost-effective to dramatically change levels of investment to solve this problem. The benefits of sanitation as a public health solution seem self-evident. Quotations like this from a Lancet editorial are easy to find: It is already well known that improved sanitation could prevent 1·5million deaths from diarrheal illnesses a year enhances dignity privacy and safety especially for women and girls benefits the economy – every dollar spent on sanitation generates economic benefits worth around nine more – and is better for the environment. (Lancet 2008) In the United States large public sector investments to provide clean water and sewerage were jointly responsible for most of the rapid decline in the child mortality rate in the early twentieth century (Cutler and Miller 2005) and more recently for substantial health improvements on Native American Indian reservations (Watson 2006).

DOI

Publication Date

January 1, 2012

Start / End Page

597 / 617
 

Citation

APA
Chicago
ICMJE
MLA
NLM
Rijsberman, F., & Zwane, A. P. (2012). Water and sanitation. In Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits (pp. 597–617). https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139600484.012
Rijsberman, F., and A. P. Zwane. “Water and sanitation.” In Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits, 597–617, 2012. https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9781139600484.012.
Rijsberman F, Zwane AP. Water and sanitation. In: Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits. 2012. p. 597–617.
Rijsberman, F., and A. P. Zwane. “Water and sanitation.” Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits, 2012, pp. 597–617. Scopus, doi:10.1017/CBO9781139600484.012.
Rijsberman F, Zwane AP. Water and sanitation. Global Problems Smart Solutions: Costs and Benefits. 2012. p. 597–617.

DOI

Publication Date

January 1, 2012

Start / End Page

597 / 617