International comparisons of electricity regulation
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
International comparisons of electricity regulation
Cambridge University Press, 2006, c1996
[Paperback re-issue]
- : paperback
Available at / 4 libraries
-
No Libraries matched.
- Remove all filters.
Note
"This digitally printed first paperback version 2006"--t.p. verso
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This book offers a most comprehensive characterization of the historical, institutional and economic forces affecting electricity regulation. Eminent economists organized by the University of California Energy Institute survey the USA, UK, Scandinavia, Latin America, France, Germany, Japan, Canada, New Zealand and Yugoslavia. Recent experiments with privatization, competition and restructuring in electricity are contrasted with instances where government ownership and traditional vertical integration still dominate. The introductory essay by Richard J. Gilbert, Edward P. Kahn and David Newbery synthesizes individual country studies. In any regulatory system, the government must bargain with investors and consumers to satisfy conflicting interests. The opacity of information about cost constrains this process. Governments also impose multiple political and economic objectives on the electricity industry, which further obscures cost conditions. Privatization and deregulation tend to reverse these effects. Few countries, however, have managed to sustain private ownership in the long run.
Table of Contents
- Preface
- 1. Introduction: international comparisons of electricity regulation Richard J. Gilbert, Edward P. Kahn and David M. Newbery
- 2. Regulation, public ownership and privatisation of the English electricity industry David M. Newbery and Richard Green
- 3. How should it be done? Electricity regulation in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Chile Pablo T. Spiller and Luis Viana Martorell
- 4. From club-regulation to market competition in the Scandinavian electricity supply industry Lennart Hjalmarsson
- 5. Competition and institutional change in the US electric power regulation Richard J. Gilbert and Edward P. Kahn
- 6. The Japanese electric utility industry Peter Navarro
- 7. Regulation of the market for electricity in the Federal Republic of Germany Jurgen Muller and Konrad Stahl
- 8. The evolution of New Zealand's electricity supply structure J. G. Culy, E. G. Read and B. D. Wright
- 9. Regulation of electric power in Canada Leonard Waverman and Adonis Yatchew
- 10. The French electricity industry Jean-Jacques Laffont
- 11. The Yugoslav electric power industry Srboljub Antic
- Index.
by "Nielsen BookData"