Surviving from garbage: the role of informal waste-pickers in a dynamic model of solid-waste management in developing countries

In developing countries, informal waste-pickers (known as scavengers) play an important role in solid waste management systems, acting in a parallel way to formal waste collection and disposal agents. Scavengers collect, from the streets, dumpsites, or landfills, re-usable and recyclable material th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Environment and development economics 2006-06, Vol.11 (3), p.371-391
Hauptverfasser: MORENO-SÁNCHEZ, ROCÍO DEL PILAR, MALDONADO, JORGE HIGINIO
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In developing countries, informal waste-pickers (known as scavengers) play an important role in solid waste management systems, acting in a parallel way to formal waste collection and disposal agents. Scavengers collect, from the streets, dumpsites, or landfills, re-usable and recyclable material that can be reincorporated into the economy's production process. Despite the benefits that they generate to society, waste-pickers are ignored when waste management policies are formulated. The purpose of this paper is to integrate the role of scavengers in a dynamic model of production, consumption, and recovery, and to show that, in an economy producing solid waste, efficiency can be reached using a set of specific and complementary policies: a tax on virgin materials use, a tax on consumption and disposal, and a subsidy to the recovery of material. A numerical simulation is performed to evaluate the impact of these policies on landfill lifetime and natural resource stocks. A discussion on the implementation of these instruments is also included.
ISSN:1355-770X
1469-4395
DOI:10.1017/S1355770X06002853