Abstract
Electricity is an important component of socio-economic development, but most studies of household electricity access focus exclusively on the presence or absence of a connection. Here we reach beyond connectivity by examining the relationship between various dimensions of the quality of electricity supply and a household’s subjective satisfaction with their electricity or lighting situation. Studying the results from a survey of 8,568 households in six large, energy-poor states from northern, central and eastern India, we find that household satisfaction responds strongly to the average hours of electricity available on a typical day. The positive effect of increasing the number of hours per day by one standard deviation on satisfaction is almost as large as that of electrifying a non-electrified household. These findings underscore the importance of moving from counting electricity connections to enhancing the quality of electricity supply.
Access options
Subscribe to Journal
Get full journal access for 1 year
$59.00
only $4.92 per issue
All prices are NET prices.
VAT will be added later in the checkout.
Rent or Buy article
Get time limited or full article access on ReadCube.
from$8.99
All prices are NET prices.
References
- 1
Greenstone, M. Evidence Paper: Energy, Growth and Development (International Growth Centre, 2014).
- 2
Cabraal, A. R., Barnes, D. F. & Agarwal, S. G. Productive uses of energy for rural development. Annu. Rev. Environ. Resour. 30, 117–144 (2005).
- 3
Khandker, S. R., Barnes, D. F. & Samad, H. A. Welfare Impacts of Rural Electrification: A Case Study from Bangladesh Working Paper 4859 (World Bank, 2009).
- 4
The Welfare Impact of Rural Electrification: A Reassessment of the Costs and Benefits Impact Evaluation Report by Independent Evaluation Group (World Bank, 2008).
- 5
Dinkelman, T. The effects of rural electrification on employment: new evidence from South Africa. Am. Econ. Rev. 101, 3078–3108 (2011).
- 6
World Energy Outlook 2014 (International Energy Agency, 2014).
- 7
World Energy Outlook 2002 (International Energy Agency, 2002).
- 8
Allcott, H., Collard-Wexler, A. & O’Connell, S. D. How do electricity shortages affect industry? Evidence from India. Am. Econ. Rev. 106, 587–624 (2016).
- 9
Lights out. The Economist (8 October 2011); http://www.economist.com/node/21531495
- 10
The future is black. The Economist (21 January 2012); http://www.economist.com/node/21543138
- 11
Protesting about power prices. The Economist (15 February 2013); http://www.economist.com/blogs/easternapproaches/2013/02/bulgarias-electricity-prices
- 12
Holding the ring. The Economist (11 January 2014); http://www.economist.com/news/americas/21593420-government-struggling-stay-its-feet-holding-ring
- 13
At least 21 hurt in guinea power outage riots. Modern Ghana (10 February 2014); https://www.modernghana.com/news/522217/at-least-21-hurt-in-guinea-power-outage-riots.html
- 14
Barnes, D. F. Electric Power for Rural Growth: How Electricity Affects Life in Developing Countries 2nd edn (Energy for Development, 2014).
- 15
McRae, S. Infrastructure quality and the subsidy trap. Am. Econ. Rev. 105, 35–66 (2015).
- 16
Angelou, N. et al. Global Tracking Framework Vol. 3 Working Paper 77889 (World Bank, 2013).
- 17
Libscomb, M., Mobarak, M. A. & Barham, T. Development effects of electrification: evidence from the topographic placement of hydropower plants in Brazil. Am. Econ. J. 5, 200–231 (2013).
- 18
van de Walle, D., Ravallion, M., Mendiratta, V. & Koolwal, G. Long-Term Impacts of Household Electrification in Rural India Working Paper 6527 (World Bank, 2013).
- 19
Chakravorty, U., Pelli, M. & Marchand, B. U. Does the quality of electricity matter? Evidence from rural India. J. Econ. Behav. Organ. 107, 228–247 (2014).
- 20
Aklin, M., Bayer, P., Harish, S. & Urpelainen, J. Quantifying slum electrification in India and explaining local variation. Energy 80, 203–212 (2015).
- 21
Munasinghe, M. The Economics of Power System Reliability and Planning: Theory and Case Study (World Bank and Johns Hopkins University Press, 1979).
- 22
Yardley, J. & Harris, G. 2nd day of power failures cripples wide swath of India. The New York Times (31 July 2012).
- 23
Adenikinju, A. F. Electric infrastructure failures in Nigeria: a survey-based analysis of the costs and adjustment responses. Energy Policy 31, 1519–1530 (2003).
- 24
Rud, J. P. Electricity provision and industrial development: evidence from India. J. Dev. Econ. 97, 352–367 (2012).
- 25
Palit, D., Bhattacharyya, S. C. & Chaurey, A. in Energy Poverty: Global Challenges and Local Solutions (eds Halff, A., Sovacool, B. K. & Rozhon, J. ) (Oxford Univ. Press, 2014).
- 26
O’Brien, R. M. A caution regarding rules of thumb for variance inflation factors. Qual. Quantity 41, 673–690 (2007).
Acknowledgements
We thank the Council on Energy, Environment and Water (CEEW) for their participation in this research project and MORSEL India for excellent data collection. This project was funded by the Shakti Sustainable Energy Foundation and ClimateWorks Foundation. We are grateful to S. P. Harish, P. Bayer, A. Zhang, D. Palit, U. Bhatt, M. Bhatia, and seminar audiences at Columbia University and CEEW for comments on previous drafts.
Author information
Affiliations
Contributions
All authors contributed to study design and data collection. M.A., C.-y.C. and J.U. conducted the data analysis and wrote the paper. All authors reviewed the manuscript.
Corresponding author
Ethics declarations
Competing interests
The authors declare no competing financial interests.
Supplementary information
Supplementary Information
Supplementary Note; Supplementary Tables 1–35; Supplementary Figures 1–3. (PDF 4855 kb)
Rights and permissions
About this article
Cite this article
Aklin, M., Cheng, Cy., Urpelainen, J. et al. Factors affecting household satisfaction with electricity supply in rural India. Nat Energy 1, 16170 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1038/nenergy.2016.170
Received:
Accepted:
Published:
Further reading
-
Flickering lifelines: Electrification and household welfare in India
Energy Economics (2021)
-
Experimental Validation of an IoT Based Device Selective Power Cut mechanism Using Power Line Carrier Communication for Smart Management of Electricity
Journal of Electrical Engineering & Technology (2021)
-
Energy access for marginalized communities: Evidence from rural North India, 2015–2018
World Development (2021)
-
Work, food, rent, television: The role of lifestyles and experiences on household energy behaviour in rural Lagos, Nigeria
Energy Research & Social Science (2021)
-
Advancing energy poverty measurement for SDG7
Progress in Energy (2020)