Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities

There are three main issues in defining a utility regulator's role: the scope of its coverage, its role in relation to ministers, and its role in relation to other regulatory entities such as the competition agency or agencies dealing with environment or health and safety. The author makes a case for multi-industry agencies covering everything from power to water to transport. Multi-industry agencies have several advantages that are especially important for developing countries. They allow the pooling of scarce expertise. They reduce the risk of industry and political capture. They reduce the risk of inconsistency in regulatory approaches across sectors. And they help to deal with the blurring of industry boundaries as utilities enter one another's markets (as when power utilities enter telecommunications, and water and power utilities merge).

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smith, Warrick
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 1997-10
Subjects:TARIFFS, GAS UTILITIES, INDUSTRY, TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT, ANTITRUST, ANTITRUST REGULATION, CIVIL SERVICE, CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS, ECONOMIC REGULATION, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, ECONOMISTS, GAS, INFLATION, INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS, MARKET POWER, MONOPOLY, MONOPOLY POWER, NONCOMPLIANCE, POWER UTILITIES, PRIVATIZATION, QUALITY STANDARDS, REGULATOR, REGULATORS, REGULATORY AGENCIES, REGULATORY AGENCY, REGULATORY OBJECTIVES, SECTOR RESTRUCTURING, TAXATION, TRADEOFFS, TRANSPORT, UTILITY REGULATION, YIELDS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1997/10/693109/utility-regulators-roles-responsibilities
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11571
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spelling dig-okr-10986115712024-08-08T18:08:21Z Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities Smith, Warrick TARIFFS GAS UTILITIES INDUSTRY TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT ANTITRUST ANTITRUST REGULATION CIVIL SERVICE CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS ECONOMIC REGULATION ECONOMIES OF SCALE ECONOMISTS GAS INFLATION INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS MARKET POWER MONOPOLY MONOPOLY POWER NONCOMPLIANCE POWER UTILITIES PRIVATIZATION QUALITY STANDARDS REGULATOR REGULATORS REGULATORY AGENCIES REGULATORY AGENCY REGULATORY OBJECTIVES SECTOR RESTRUCTURING TAXATION TRADEOFFS TRANSPORT UTILITY REGULATION YIELDS There are three main issues in defining a utility regulator's role: the scope of its coverage, its role in relation to ministers, and its role in relation to other regulatory entities such as the competition agency or agencies dealing with environment or health and safety. The author makes a case for multi-industry agencies covering everything from power to water to transport. Multi-industry agencies have several advantages that are especially important for developing countries. They allow the pooling of scarce expertise. They reduce the risk of industry and political capture. They reduce the risk of inconsistency in regulatory approaches across sectors. And they help to deal with the blurring of industry boundaries as utilities enter one another's markets (as when power utilities enter telecommunications, and water and power utilities merge). 2012-08-13T15:25:36Z 2012-08-13T15:25:36Z 1997-10 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1997/10/693109/utility-regulators-roles-responsibilities Viewpoint. -- Note no. 128 (October, 1997) https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11571 English Viewpoint CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank application/pdf text/plain World Bank, Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
topic TARIFFS
GAS UTILITIES
INDUSTRY
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT
ANTITRUST
ANTITRUST REGULATION
CIVIL SERVICE
CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REGULATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ECONOMISTS
GAS
INFLATION
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLY
MONOPOLY POWER
NONCOMPLIANCE
POWER UTILITIES
PRIVATIZATION
QUALITY STANDARDS
REGULATOR
REGULATORS
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
SECTOR RESTRUCTURING
TAXATION
TRADEOFFS
TRANSPORT
UTILITY REGULATION
YIELDS
TARIFFS
GAS UTILITIES
INDUSTRY
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT
ANTITRUST
ANTITRUST REGULATION
CIVIL SERVICE
CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REGULATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ECONOMISTS
GAS
INFLATION
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLY
MONOPOLY POWER
NONCOMPLIANCE
POWER UTILITIES
PRIVATIZATION
QUALITY STANDARDS
REGULATOR
REGULATORS
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
SECTOR RESTRUCTURING
TAXATION
TRADEOFFS
TRANSPORT
UTILITY REGULATION
YIELDS
spellingShingle TARIFFS
GAS UTILITIES
INDUSTRY
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT
ANTITRUST
ANTITRUST REGULATION
CIVIL SERVICE
CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REGULATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ECONOMISTS
GAS
INFLATION
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLY
MONOPOLY POWER
NONCOMPLIANCE
POWER UTILITIES
PRIVATIZATION
QUALITY STANDARDS
REGULATOR
REGULATORS
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
SECTOR RESTRUCTURING
TAXATION
TRADEOFFS
TRANSPORT
UTILITY REGULATION
YIELDS
TARIFFS
GAS UTILITIES
INDUSTRY
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT
ANTITRUST
ANTITRUST REGULATION
CIVIL SERVICE
CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REGULATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ECONOMISTS
GAS
INFLATION
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLY
MONOPOLY POWER
NONCOMPLIANCE
POWER UTILITIES
PRIVATIZATION
QUALITY STANDARDS
REGULATOR
REGULATORS
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
SECTOR RESTRUCTURING
TAXATION
TRADEOFFS
TRANSPORT
UTILITY REGULATION
YIELDS
Smith, Warrick
Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
description There are three main issues in defining a utility regulator's role: the scope of its coverage, its role in relation to ministers, and its role in relation to other regulatory entities such as the competition agency or agencies dealing with environment or health and safety. The author makes a case for multi-industry agencies covering everything from power to water to transport. Multi-industry agencies have several advantages that are especially important for developing countries. They allow the pooling of scarce expertise. They reduce the risk of industry and political capture. They reduce the risk of inconsistency in regulatory approaches across sectors. And they help to deal with the blurring of industry boundaries as utilities enter one another's markets (as when power utilities enter telecommunications, and water and power utilities merge).
topic_facet TARIFFS
GAS UTILITIES
INDUSTRY
TELECOMMUNICATIONS ANTICOMPETITIVE CONDUCT
ANTITRUST
ANTITRUST REGULATION
CIVIL SERVICE
CUSTOMER SERVICE STANDARDS
ECONOMIC REGULATION
ECONOMIES OF SCALE
ECONOMISTS
GAS
INFLATION
INTERGOVERNMENTAL RELATIONS
MARKET POWER
MONOPOLY
MONOPOLY POWER
NONCOMPLIANCE
POWER UTILITIES
PRIVATIZATION
QUALITY STANDARDS
REGULATOR
REGULATORS
REGULATORY AGENCIES
REGULATORY AGENCY
REGULATORY OBJECTIVES
SECTOR RESTRUCTURING
TAXATION
TRADEOFFS
TRANSPORT
UTILITY REGULATION
YIELDS
author Smith, Warrick
author_facet Smith, Warrick
author_sort Smith, Warrick
title Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
title_short Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
title_full Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
title_fullStr Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
title_full_unstemmed Utility Regulators : Roles and Responsibilities
title_sort utility regulators : roles and responsibilities
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 1997-10
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1997/10/693109/utility-regulators-roles-responsibilities
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/11571
work_keys_str_mv AT smithwarrick utilityregulatorsrolesandresponsibilities
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