The Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)’s manifesto says it will “Create an open defecation-free India by awareness campaign and enabling people to build toilets in their home as well as in schools and public places,” and it sets the target of a Swachh Bharat by 2019.
It is right that the BJP should emphasise the importance of sanitation in today’s India, and should set goals by which to measure progress.
In order to deliver on this goal, though, the new government should learn from past failures, and recognise that policies to address open defecation should be tailored to Indians’ attitudes towards sanitation.
More recently, statements by Team Modi have suggested that the government may pursue a sanitation policy much the same as the United Progressive Alliance: a policy of building toilets. Although there are certainly some people who would benefit from such a scheme, the data suggest that most Indians could already afford to build a sanitary latrine if they wanted to.
Does this mean that there is nothing for the government to do to improve sanitation? Far from it!
Exactly because so many people in rural India are satisfied about defecating in the open, the new prime minister will only meet his goal if he can create a social movement that changes people’s attitudes, and builds demand for toilet use.
How do we know that money isn’t the problem? Nepal, for instance, has a gross domestic product per capita of roughly one-third of India’s. In the 2005-2006 Demographic and Health Surveys (DHS) for both countries, 47 per cent of households in India had a dirt floor compared to 73 per cent in Nepal.
Yet, sanitation facilities among the poor in Nepal were more prevalent than among the poor in India. Households with a dirt floor in Nepal were twice as likely to have a latrine compared to such households in India.
Moreover, Nepal’s rate of sanitation coverage has increased much more rapidly than India’s in the six years after these surveys. In 2005-2006, 55 per cent of households did not have a toilet, a statistic that had hardly changed in the 2011 Census.
In Nepal, however, 51 per cent did not have a toilet in the 2006 DHS, and since then, the lack of access to sanitation facilities decreased to 36 per cent in the 2011 DHS, a striking reduction in just five years.
What is remarkable is that much of Nepal’s improvement in sanitation did not come about because the government started building toilets for people. In fact, in Nepal’s Sanitation and Hygiene Master Plan, which was in the making for five years and ultimately finalised in 2011, there is no provision for subsidising toilet construction except for the ultra-poor.
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