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PM Modi's Swachh Bharat Mission resulted in annual benefits of 53000 rupees per household

An international study on the Narendra Modi government's much talked about Swachh Bharat Mission has revealed that this scheme has resulted in annual benefits of more than 53,000 rupees per household in rural India.

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An international study on the Narendra Modi government's much talked about Swachh Bharat Mission has revealed that this plan is giving financial benefits to rural households across India. According to the international study, Swachh Bharat Mission has benefitted per household annually of more than 53,000 rupees. And this it says is through reduced diarrhoea incidents and from sanitation access time savings.

The study on Swachh Bharat Mission-Gramin (Clean India Mission-Rural) also found that financial returns on household spending over 10 years is 1.7 times the cost, while returns to society on total spending over ten 10 years is also 4.3 times the cost.

This is perhaps the first-ever economic analysis of the Swachh Bharat Mission scheme. This international study has been published in the latest October 2020 issue of ScienceDirect journal of global information analytics major Elsevier. The study also shows that the poorest have got a financial return of 2.6 and a societal return of 5.7 times the cost.

The survey was done on 10,051 rural households between 20th July to 11th August 2017 in 12 Indian states. These including Bihar, Uttar Pradesh, Jharkhand, Andhra Pradesh and Assam which collectively contributed 90 per cent of open defecation across the country that year.

Prime Minister Narendra Modi had launched the Swachh Bharat Mission on 2nd October 2014 on the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi. While announcing it PM Modi had said that India will be made open defecation free (ODF) by October 2019. It reached 100 percent target on October 2, 2019, from 38.7 per cent at the time of the launch, as per the mission's website. More than 10 crore household toilets have been built under this scheme since its launch.

'Financial commitments to households averaged USD 257 (nearly Rs 19,000) for investment and USD 37 (about Rs 2,700) for annual operations and maintenance while enjoying medical cost savings of USD 123 per year (about Rs 9,000) for 10 years, averaging an annual USD 60 (over Rs 4,000) financial return,' it stated.

It stated that more than two-thirds (69.5 per cent) of households received government subsidy with an average USD 183 (over Rs 13,000) support, and of these households, 63.8 per cent made their own investment to supplement the government subsidy, which averaged an additional USD 154 (over Rs 11,000).

'Annual benefits of US$ 727 per household are mainly from savings associated with reduced diarrhoea incidence (55 per cent) and from sanitation access time savings (45 per cent),' the study found.

The study also found that household sanitation has also led to USD 294 (over Rs 21,000) one-off property value benefit.

'Financial and non-financial commitments to households averaged USD 268 (Rs 19,700) for investment and USD 131 (Rs 9,600) for annual O&M (operations and maintenance) cost while enjoying economic benefits of USD 727 per year for 10 years, averaging an annual USD 599 (about Rs 44,000) economic return,' it stated.

It also found that substantial health benefits were due to the reductions in premature death, valued at USD 249 (about Rs 18,000) per year per household.

'Significant time is spent in accessing sanitation outside the house by those who do not have or use a household toilet. The value of time savings for a household where all members use the toilet is on average USD 325 (Rs 24,000) per household per year,' the study said.

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