Value of Water: Evaluating the Pricelessness of Clean, Potable Water

Context:

  • A 2025 empirical study conducted in Odisha examines how households truly value clean, potable drinking water when access barriers are removed.
  • The findings challenge long-held assumptions that rural and low-income households undervalue safe water, offering key insights for water governance, public finance, and service delivery under GS 3 (Economy), GS 2 (Governance), and Prelims.

Key Highlights:

Study Objective and Approach

  • The study directly measured the economic value of clean water by observing actual household behaviour, rather than relying on indirect proxies.
  • It isolated the value of water independent of collection time, taste, labour, or unreliability.

Methodology and Design

  • Conducted across 99 villages in Odisha, where only 17% households had piped water connections (2021).
  • Used a Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) with three experimental arms:
    • Price Arm โ€“ to estimate Willingness to Pay (WTP).
    • Free-Water Arm โ€“ served as a benchmark.
    • Exchangeable Entitlement Arm โ€“ to measure Willingness to Accept (WTA).

Key Findings

  • WTP and WTA for clean water were significantly higher than earlier indirect estimates.
  • Many households preferred guaranteed clean water over equivalent cash transfers, underscoring its intrinsic value.
  • Home delivery reduced reliance on unsafe and irregular sources and significantly cut water collection time, especially for women.

Implications for Water Access

  • Previous studies underestimated waterโ€™s value because they conflated it with inconvenience, uncertainty, and treatment costs.
  • Reliable access reframes water not as a luxury, but as a highly valued essential service.

Relevant Prelims Points:

  • Issue: Chronic undervaluation of safe drinking water in policy design.
  • Causes:
    • Reliance on indirect valuation methods
    • Poor access infrastructure
    • Irregular supply systems
  • Key Concepts:
    • Willingness to Pay (WTP) โ€“ maximum price a consumer is willing to pay.
    • Willingness to Accept (WTA) โ€“ minimum compensation required to forgo a good.
    • Randomized Controlled Trial (RCT) โ€“ experimental evaluation method.
  • Benefits of Reliable Water Access:
    • Improved health outcomes
    • Time savings
    • Reduced household burden
  • Challenges:
    • Fiscal constraints
    • Scaling decentralized models
  • Impact:
    • Strong evidence base for public investment in water services.

Relevant Mains Points:

  • Facts & Data:
    • Only 17% piped water coverage in Odisha (2021).
    • High revealed WTP/WTA contradicts earlier assumptions.
  • Conceptual Linkages:
    • Water as a merit good and public service.
    • Links to SDG 6 โ€“ Clean Water and Sanitation.
  • Governance Perspective:
    • Shifting focus from technology adoption to service delivery.
    • Emphasis on dignity, ease, and reliability.
  • Economic Analysis:
    • Revealed preference methods provide better valuation than stated preferences.
  • Way Forward:
    • Support decentralized, home-delivery water models.
    • Provide targeted subsidies for universal access.
    • Integrate valuation evidence into cost-benefit analysis of water schemes.
    • Strengthen community-level delivery with accountability mechanisms.
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