Abstract
An improved understanding of the sanitation enabling environment and status of market development ("sanitation economy") is crucial not only for advancing national and global sanitation goals, but also for attracting the financing necessary to drive meaningful progress in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). This need is particularly pressing as the sanitation sector faces a significant funding gap that must be bridged to meet the growing demands for sanitation services, infrastructure, and innovation. This paper reviews frameworks that assess the sanitation economy in LMICs with the aim of informing the development of more impactful future frameworks and the wider application of existing frameworks. Frameworks were identified through internet search and interviews with representatives of international sanitation sector organisations and universities. Thirty-nine frameworks were identified that have been or are currently being used in sanitation. Frameworks are diverse in the structure they adopt, their focus areas, the number of indicators, the number of countries covered, the frequency with which they have been applied, their reliance on primary versus secondary data sources, and their uptake and impact. Overall, use of the frameworks has been piecemeal and sporadic in LMICs. Only few frameworks have been picked up and applied by another organisation, although the results of some frameworks are widely used and cited. To ensure future efforts to measure and monitor the sanitation economy are evidence-based and make the best use of limited resources, frameworks currently in use should be independently evaluated and there should be greater collaboration and adoption of common frameworks.