Hensher et al., 2005
Water consumption and disposal are often taken for granted as essential services
with required levels of service quality, yet little is known about how much consumers are
willing to pay for specific service levels. As customers in many countries face changing levels of
water availability (especially shortages linked possibly to climate change and limited catch-
ment capacity), the need to assess the value (and hence benefit) to society of varying service
levels and prices in an effort to secure the provision of and disposal of water has risen on
public agendas. In an attempt to establish how much customers are willing to pay for specific
levels of service, we use a series of stated choice experiments and mixed logit models to
establish the willingness to pay to avoid interruptions in water service and overflows of
wastewater, differentiated by the frequency, timing and duration of these events. The empirical
evidence is an important input into the regulatory process for establishing service levels and
tariffs, as well as useful planning information for agencies charged with finding cost effective
ways of delivering services at prices that customers deem to be value for money.
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