保持头脑清醒解释当地饮用水费用的差异

A. R. El-Khattabi, Kyra Gmoser‐Daskalakis, Gregory Pierce
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摘要

美国各地水费的上涨凸显了了解造成当地系统水费差异的因素的必要性。在本文中,我们研究了美国不同地区四个州(亚利桑那州、佐治亚州、新罕布什尔州和威斯康星州)1720 个供水系统的居民水费账单金额,以(1)研究在恒定的饮用水消费水平(每月 4000 加仑或 15.14 立方米)下,各州内部和各州之间以及合并的大都市统计区(MSA)内当地供水系统的水费账单是如何变化的,以及(2)研究当地供水系统水费账单与系统级特征之间的关系。我们发现,各州之间的水费中位数具有高度相似性,但各州内部在大都会统计区和地方系统范围内存在很大差异。我们的多变量分析表明,相对于营利性系统而言,市政所有系统的水费更有可能较低,而购买水和邻近系统水费较高等因素则与水费较高密切相关。尽管我们发现贫困程度较高的供水系统往往水费较高,但我们的结果也表明,为收入不平等程度较高和非白人人口比例较高的人口提供服务的地方供水系统往往水费较低。这些发现指出了未来的研究和数据需求,以便更好地为联邦、州和地方的水负担政策提供信息,并强调了在地方范围内研究和解决水负担问题的重要性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Keep your head above water: Explaining disparities in local drinking water bills
Rising water bills across the U.S. underscore the need to understand the factors that contribute to disparities in local system bills. In this paper, we examine residential water bill amounts from 1,720 systems in four states in different regions of the U.S. (Arizona, Georgia, New Hampshire and Wisconsin) to (1) examine how local system bills at a constant consumption level (4,000 gallons per month or 15.14m3) for drinking water vary within and across states, as well as within combined metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs), and (2) study the relationship between local system bills and system-level characteristics. We find a high degree of similarity in median bill amounts between states but substantial variation within them at the MSA and local system scale. Our multivariate analysis suggests that municipally-owned systems are more likely to have lower water bills relative to for-profit systems, while factors such as purchasing water and having neighboring systems with high bills significantly correlate with higher water bills. Though we find that water systems with high levels of poverty tend to have higher water bills, our results also suggest that local systems that serve populations with higher levels of income inequality and higher proportions of non-White population tend to have lower water bills. These findings point to future research and data needs to better inform federal, state and local water affordability policy and underline the importance of examining and addressing water affordability at local scales.
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