Title: Affordability of Household Water Services in Great Britain
1Affordability of Household Water Services in
Great Britain
- Water Affordability in Scotland Conference
- April 2004
- Dr John W Sawkins and Mrs Valerie A Dickie
- Department of Economics,
- School of Management and Languages,
- Heriot-Watt University, Edinburgh
21. Introduction
- Recognition that affordability is an important
issue re household water services, begs the
questions. - How should we charge for water services?
- What principles should underpin charging?
- Determined (ultimately) by our (societal)
perception of household water services
31. Introduction
- Perceptions may differ between individuals,
communities, societies etc - Consider possible perceptions of household water
services (potable water and sanitation) - 2 models (due to Herrington 1996)
- 1. Social Service Model
- 2. Business or Public Corporation Model
42. Household Water Services Economic
Characteristics
- 1. Social Service Model
- stresses consumer rights to the service
- emphasis on public health benefits
- finance industry via general taxation
- scepticism over domestic metering
- concern over volumetric charging systems lest
universal access is compromised
52. Household Water Services Economic
Characteristics
- 2. Business or Public Corporation Model
- stresses commercial nature of industrys output
- services supplied in response to demand
- sympathy towards domestic metering, volumetric
charging and marginal cost pricing - finance industry via customer charges
- affordability problems to be dealt with via tax
and social security system
62. Household Water Services Economic
Characteristics
- Which model to employ?
- Classify household water services in two ways
- 1. Essential (Basic needs) use - drinking,
cooking, basic sanitation etc - 2. Discretionary (Luxury) use - garden,
leisure, luxury appliances - 1. Social Service Model?
- 2. Business or Public Corporation Model?
72. Household Water Services Economic
Characteristics
- Consensus in OECD countries
- access to (Essential / Basic Needs) household
water services is a prerequisite of participation
in, and cohesion of, civic society - access may be denied or limited if services are
not affordable - What is meaning of water affordability
- How is it measured?
- How might it be benchmarked?
83. Defining Affordability
- Definition
- synonymous with ability to pay (not
willingness to pay) - problem of subjectivity
- pragmatic solution to assume a negative
correlation between of household income spent
and ability to pay (affordability) - but how to define income (net or gross)? use of
expenditure data instead?
94. Measuring / Calibrating Affordability
- Calibration
- macro affordability measures (eg average water
charges to average household income) - obscures much important detail
- micro affordability measures
- can be disaggregated by income group, region,
family type etc - Use micro affordability measures, disaggregated
by region and income
104. Measuring / Calibrating Affordability
- Statistical Analysis
- use of Family Resources Survey 1997/8 and
2002/2003 - two snapshots
- income based (larger sample sizes than
expenditure surveys) - adjustments made for household composition
(equivalisation) - gross income estimates used (clean but not a
complete picture) - classify households by country and income decile
and Council Tax band
114. Measuring / Calibrating Affordability
- Results
- Table 1 (Scotland by income decile)
- rise in between years across all income groups,
most marked in lower deciles - Table 2 (England and Wales by income decile)
- slight fall in between these years
- note higher initial base than Scotland
- timing of Period Review 1999 one off price cut
- Similarity (for 2002/3) between Scot, Eng and
Wales
124. Measuring / Calibrating Affordability
- broad income bands obscure much detail
- decompose further by income and council tax band
- Table 3 (Scotland)
- rise in as move up CT bands
- note lowest income decile (G based on small
number of obs - 8) - Table 4 (England and Wales)
- similar pattern
- not as marked in lowest income decile (due in
part to use of rateable values not CT bands?)
134. Measuring / Calibrating Affordability
- General Observations
- proportion increases across bands and decreases
with higher income - similarity between Scot, Eng and Wales
- note pace of change in Scotland
- note position of those in lowest income decile
- Further work
- use of net income
- further analysis of lowest income decile
145. Benchmarking Affordability
- No commonly agreed water affordability benchmark
throughout the UK - Compare with fuel
- a fuel poor household spends 10 or more of its
income on all fuel use to heat its home to an
adequate standard - 10 cut off point derived from 1988 Family
Expenditure Survey data (average fuel spend of
lower 3 income deciles) - not rebased every year. Used as a fixed reference
point, interpreted by devolved administrations
155. Benchmarking Affordability
- Water (England and Wales)
- Water Affordability indicator in Quality of Life
Counts 1999 (latest DEFRA update 2004) - households spending more than 3 of income on
water and sewerage charges. See Table 5 - derivation of baseline? Illustrative?
Approximately twice median spend by households as
a percentage of disposable income
165. Benchmarking Affordability
- How useful?
- Timing of baseline crucial - what point in
investment / regulatory / pricing cycle? - Comparisons always relative to ..
- Applicability of Eng and Wales figures to
Scotland?
176. Conclusion
- Conclusion
- Proportion of household income spent on water and
sewerage charges increases across CT bands and
decreases with increasing income - In Scotland proportion of household income spent
on water and sewerage has risen rapidly in recent
years - Now similar to England and Wales
- Further work needed to establish whether position
of those in lowest income decile in Scotland is
worse than those in Eng and Wales
186. Conclusion
- Conclusion
- water charge affordability impinges on social
inclusion agenda of Scottish Executive - lack of clarity in perception of water services
- are household water services best understood
within social service model or business and
public corporation model..or both - are water service charges to be regarded
(explicitly) as an instrument of social policy? - Importance in Scottish Executives Principles of
Charging debate summer 2004