Breaking down the history of water privatization in the Philipine
capital of Manila, this infographic explores the city’s varied success
with privatization using a timeline and a map.
In 1946, after three centuries of Spanish colonization and 47 years
of U.S. occupation, the Philippines achieved independence. In the
following decades of transition, however, the nation struggled with
devastating natural disasters. Typhoons, tsunamis, and earthquakes
battered an already politically and financially unstable country.
Recipients of nine conditional loans, called Structural Adjustment
Programs, from the World Bank, the economy of the Philippines was
drastically restructured to favor privatization beginning in the 1960s.
Bolstered by the perceived success of the privatization of electricity
from 1994 to 1998 by President Fidel Ramos, the administration decided
to also privatize the struggling Metropolitan Water and Sewerage System
(MWSS) in 1997. Following the Paris water privatization model in which
the utility split its jurisdiction in two to prevent monopoly, MWSS
granted Manila Water a concession for the East Zone and Maynilad Water
Services, Inc. the West Zone concession.
The infographic below explores the history of privatization in
Manila, as well as how effective the project has been for certain
regions in the metropolitan area.
This infographic breaks down the history of water privatization in the
Philipine capital of Manila. Explore privatization’s varied success,
depending on the metropolitan region.
By Amanda Northrop@circle of blue
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