2007
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.1129044
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The Impact of Piped Water Provision on Infant Mortality in Brazil: A Quantile Panel Data Approach

Abstract: We examine the impact of piped water on the under-1 infant mortality rate (IMR) in Brazil using a novel econometric procedure for the estimation of quantile treatment effects with panel data. The provision of piped water in Brazil is highly correlated with other observable and unobservable determinants of IMR -the latter leading to an important source of bias. Instruments for piped water provision are not readily available, and fixed effects to control for time invariant correlated unobservables are invalid in… Show more

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Cited by 32 publications
(46 citation statements)
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“…These factors play an indispensable role in reducing infant mortality rate across developing nations ; Gamper‐Rabindran et al, ; Kumar & Vollmer, ; Prüss‐Üstün & Corvalán, ; Victora et al, ), who documented that safe drinking water, access to improved sanitation and healthcare facilities reduce infant mortality rate.…”
Section: Empirical Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…These factors play an indispensable role in reducing infant mortality rate across developing nations ; Gamper‐Rabindran et al, ; Kumar & Vollmer, ; Prüss‐Üstün & Corvalán, ; Victora et al, ), who documented that safe drinking water, access to improved sanitation and healthcare facilities reduce infant mortality rate.…”
Section: Empirical Results and Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For instance, the studies of Cutler and Miller (2005) as well as Watson (2006) suggest that the provision of improved sanitation and safe drinking water facilities have resulted in significant health improvements in developed economies. Similarly, Gamper-Rabindran, Khan, and Timmins (2010) examined the effect of piped water access on infant mortality rate. Their findings suggest that while the piped water provision reduces infant mortality, other public healthcare facilities also play a dominant role in reducing the mortality rate.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Focusing on another middle-income country, Gamper-Rabindran, Khan and Timmins (2010) present more heterogeneous findings. The marginal impact of piped water supply on infant mortality in Brazil is the largest in areas with high initial child mortality, unless 5 underdevelopment is excessive.…”
Section: Water Sanitation and Hygienementioning
confidence: 87%
“…All of these studies show that, in developing countries, the choice regarding a drinking water source has health implications: because most of the common diseases found in these countries are water-borne, their incidence can be drastically reduced by increasing the quality of water from the main sources that households use. In Brazil, the provision of piped water has significantly reduced infant mortality, especially in the most disadvantaged communities (Gamper-Rabindran et al 2010). In a review paper, Olmstead (2010) observes that the treatment of drinking water provides the highest net benefit of any environmental policy intervention.…”
Section: The Economics Of Water Qualitymentioning
confidence: 99%