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Household Willingness to Pay for solid Waste Disposal Services in Urban Ghana: The Kumasi Metropolis Situation
Abstract
Solid waste management has become inevitable in the global developmental processes. Thus, the
sustainability of funds to manage solid waste is paramount, and it is contingent on the willingness
of people to pay for improved solid waste disposal services. The paper, therefore, examined the
factors that influence the willingness to pay for solid waste disposal in the Kumasi Metropolis. A
sample size of 394 households was chosen using a simple random sampling technique. Logit
regression was used to estimate the impacts that respondents' perceptions of certain variables had
on residents’ willingness to pay for waste disposal services. These variables were: the effectiveness
of bye-laws, the quality of services, income, education, awareness of health hazards of
indiscriminate waste disposal, areas of residence and some socio-demographic variables. The
study revealed that payment for solid waste disposal was not uncommon in the study area. The
study found that area of residence, effective bye-laws, level of education and income were
statistically significant regarding willingness to pay for solid disposal services. However,
household size and respondents' awareness of health hazards of indiscriminate waste disposal did
not have any effect on respondents' willingness to pay for improved solid waste services. Following
from these results it is recommended that local government authorities should effectively
implement the sanitation bye-laws and re-institute the sanitation court to deal with cases of
improper solid waste disposal.
sustainability of funds to manage solid waste is paramount, and it is contingent on the willingness
of people to pay for improved solid waste disposal services. The paper, therefore, examined the
factors that influence the willingness to pay for solid waste disposal in the Kumasi Metropolis. A
sample size of 394 households was chosen using a simple random sampling technique. Logit
regression was used to estimate the impacts that respondents' perceptions of certain variables had
on residents’ willingness to pay for waste disposal services. These variables were: the effectiveness
of bye-laws, the quality of services, income, education, awareness of health hazards of
indiscriminate waste disposal, areas of residence and some socio-demographic variables. The
study revealed that payment for solid waste disposal was not uncommon in the study area. The
study found that area of residence, effective bye-laws, level of education and income were
statistically significant regarding willingness to pay for solid disposal services. However,
household size and respondents' awareness of health hazards of indiscriminate waste disposal did
not have any effect on respondents' willingness to pay for improved solid waste services. Following
from these results it is recommended that local government authorities should effectively
implement the sanitation bye-laws and re-institute the sanitation court to deal with cases of
improper solid waste disposal.