Power Sector Reform in Africa : Assessing Impact on Poor People

The goal of this study is to examine the impact of power sector reform on poor people in Africa by tracing the relationship between this process and certain key factors that directly affect the poor, such as access to electricity, the affordability of electricity services, quality, and reliability of supply, access to such social services as electrified clinics and schools, economic development, and net impacts on public finances. The study examines power sector reform in six African countries - Ghana, Mali, Namibia, South Africa, Tanzania, and Uganda - using sector-wide data. Broad trends across the case study countries suggest that the impacts of power sector reform on the poor are neither direct nor inevitable. Although the introduction of private actors may actually result in price increases and not necessarily expand access to electricity, reform also provides opportunities that would not otherwise exist to improve quality and reliability, expand networks, and re-direct public resources more transparently to the poor and rural communities.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Eberhardt, Anton, Clark, Alix, Wamukonya, Njeri, Gratwick, Katherine
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-08
Subjects:ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY, ACCESS TO ENERGY, BUDGET DEFICITS, BULK POWER, BULK SUPPLY, CENTRAL GOVERNMENT BUDGETS, CHARCOAL, COAL, COMMERCIAL ENERGY, CPI, CRUDE OIL, DEBT, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DIESEL ENGINES, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMISTS, ELECTRIC POWER, ELECTRIC POWER SECTOR, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY CONSUMPTION, ELECTRICITY DEMAND, ELECTRICITY INDUSTRY, ELECTRICITY PRICES, ELECTRICITY PRODUCTION, ELECTRICITY SECTOR, ELECTRICITY SUBSIDIES, ELECTRICITY SUPPLY, ELECTRICITY SYSTEMS, ELECTRICITY UTILITY, ELECTRIFICATION PROGRAMS, END-USE, ENERGY, ENERGY BALANCE, ENERGY DEPARTMENT, ENERGY DEVELOPMENT, ENERGY EFFICIENCY, ENERGY MIX, ENERGY POLICY, ENERGY PRICING, ENERGY SECTOR, ENERGY SECTOR MANAGEMENT ASSISTANCE, ENERGY SECTORS, ENERGY SERVICES, ENERGY SOURCES, ENVIRONMENTAL PERFORMANCE, EXCHANGE RATE, FIREWOOD, FISCAL DEFICITS, FUEL, FUELS, GAS RESERVES, GENERATION CAPACITY, GRID, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, HOUSEHOLD ENERGY, INCOME, INSTITUTIONAL CHANGE, LABOR PRODUCTIVITY, LIGHTS, LOW- INCOME COUNTRIES, LOW- INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, LOW-INCOME HOUSEHOLDS, MACROECONOMIC STABILITY, MARGINAL COST, MARGINAL COSTS, MONOPOLIES, NATURAL GAS, PEAK DEMAND, PER CAPITA INCOME, PETROLEUM, PLANNING, POPULATION DENSITIES, POPULATION GROWTH, POWER COMPANY, POWER PLANT, POWER POOL, POWER SECTOR REFORM, POWER SECTOR REFORMS, POWER SECTORS, POWER SUPPLY, POWER SYSTEM, POWER UTILITIES, PRIMARY ENERGY, PRIMARY ENERGY CONSUMPTION, PRIVATE OWNERSHIP, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTOR PARTICIPATION, PRODUCTIVITY, PUBLIC FINANCE, PUBLIC OWNERSHIP, PURCHASING POWER, RURAL CONSUMERS, RURAL HOUSEHOLDS, SOCIAL WELFARE, SOLAR ENERGY, SUSTAINABLE ENERGY, TRADITIONAL FUELS, TRANSMISSION COSTS, TRANSPARENCY, UTILITIES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/08/6280208/power-sector-reform-africa-assessing-impact-poor-people
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/18067
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!