Working Paper - October 2025
Powering Livelihoods by Avoiding Household Damages: Household Willingness to Pay For Electricity Reliability in Sierra Leone
Authors estimate the marginal willingness to pay (WTP) for improved electricity service reliability in a
nationally representative sample 1,047 grid or mini-grid connected households in Sierra Leone, using
two complementary valuation approaches. Analyzing data from a discrete choice experiment, they
find that, on average, households exhibit strong preferences for shorter outages; fewer daytime and
evening outages, compared to nighttime outages; and prior notification, though there is heterogeneity
in the relative weights ascribed to each of these attributes. Next, in a consumer damage function
analysis, they estimate that damages are higher during long-duration and notified outages, particularly
for daytime and evening events, compared to those occurring only at night or over multiple periods.
Estimated marginal WTP for a one-hour reduction in outage duration ranges from 2.2 to 4.7 New
Leones (?USD 0.10–0.22). We integrate findings from both approaches to derive policy-relevant
insights on the value of reliability investments that reflect household preferences and reduce economic
losses in a context that is characterized by very low-quality power.
