Have Consumers Benefited from the Reforms in the Electricity Distribution Sector in Latin America?

The authors bring new empirical evidence on the impact of the choice of ownership and regulatory regime on firms' productivity and prices paid by consumers. They collect the evidence from a sample of electricity distribution companies in Latin America. The authors rely on estimations of labor and operation and maintenance (O&M) input requirement functions using alternative econometric approaches. Their main conclusions are: 1) Private firms perform better (approximately 30 percent) than public firms. 2) The regulatory regimes matter, so that price-cap regulated firms do better than rate-of-return regulated firms, and firms regulated under hybrid regimes have intermediate performance. 3) Private firms operating under rate of return are at most as efficient as public firms. 4) There is no clear pattern of differences in electricity prices according to the regulatory regime. 5) Final prices fell in general but the drop did not match the productivity gains, implying that the operators and the state share some of the gains in the form of rents and higher tax revenue, respectively.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Estache, Antonio, Rossi, Martin
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, D.C. 2004-10
Subjects:AGRICULTURAL ECONOMICS, CONSUMER PRICE INDEX, CONSUMERS, DEREGULATION, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, ECONOMETRIC MODEL, ECONOMETRICS, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC BEHAVIOUR, ECONOMICS, EFFICIENCY LEVELS, ELASTICITIES, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, ENDOGENEITY, EXPENDITURES, GNP, GNP PER CAPITA, HORIZONTAL INTEGRATION, HOUSEHOLDS, INEFFICIENCY, LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, MONOPOLIES, NOISE, OUTPUTS, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE LEVELS, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTION FUNCTION, PRODUCTION FUNCTIONS, PRODUCTIVITY, PRODUCTIVITY GROWTH, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC UTILITY REGULATION, PURCHASING POWER, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, REGULATORY REGIMES, RENTS, TAX, TAX REVENUE, TECHNICAL CHANGE, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, UTILITIES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/10/5215591/consumers-benefited-reforms-electricity-distribution-sector-latin-america
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14230
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