The nonlinear progressive water pricing policy in Tunisia: equity and efficiency
Journal: Environmental Economics (Vol.8, No. 2)Publication Date: 2017-07-13
Authors : Younes Ben Zaied; Houssam Bouzgarrou; Nidhaleddine Ben Cheikh; Pascal Nguyen;
Page : 17-27
Keywords : panel cointegration; Tunisia; two-part tariffs; water pricing;
Abstract
Economic theory and recent empirical evidence show that nonlinear progressive water pricing policies are the most useful tool to reduce water demand in water stressed countries. The originality of our paper is to implement Pedroni (1999) panel cointegration tests, using databases on a breakdown of two consumption blocks (a lower and an upper block) from the Tunisian water regulator over 27 years. The results reveal that increasing block tariffs have been successful in managing scarce water in Tunisia. The authors observe that, in the long-run, proportion of subscribers in the upper water consumption block decreases when price increases, while in the lower block, which is composed essentially of low-income households characterized by inelastic water demand, proportion of subscribers is less elastic to price changes and still unchanged. This paper calls for the implementation of nonlinear progressive pricing to reduce demand by large consumers in order to promote efficiency in use and to promote the access of poor consumers to the resource in order to promote equity.
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Last modified: 2018-03-20 17:14:26