Electricity Sector Reform in Developing Countries : A Survey of Empirical Evidence on Determinants and Performance

Driven by ideology, economic reasoning, and early success stories, vast amounts of financial resources and effort have been spent on reforming infrastructure industries in developing countries. It is therefore important to examine whether evidence supports the logic of reforms. The authors review the empirical evidence on electricity reform in developing countries. They find that country institutions and sector governance play an important role in the success and failure of reform. And reforms also appear to have increased operating efficiency and expanded access to urban customers. However, the reforms have to a lesser degree passed on efficiency gains to customers, tackled distributional effects, and improved rural access. Moreover, some of the literature is not methodologically robust and on par with general development economics literature. Further, findings on some issues are limited and inconclusive, while other important areas are yet to be addressed. Until we know more, implementation of reforms will be more based on ideology and economic theory rather than solid economic evidence.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Jamasb, Tooraj, Mota, Raffaella, Newbery, David, Pollitt, Michael
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-03
Subjects:ALLOCATIVE EFFICIENCY, BENCHMARK, BENEFIT ANALYSIS, BUDGET CONSTRAINTS, BUREAUCRACY, CAPITAL COSTS, CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK, CONSUMER PROTECTION, CONSUMERS, DEBT, DEFICITS, DEREGULATION, DEVALUATION, DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, DEVELOPMENT AGENCIES, DEVELOPMENT ECONOMICS, DONOR AGENCIES, DUOPOLY, ECONOMETRIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC EFFICIENCY, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC IMPACT, ECONOMIC INEFFICIENCY, ECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, ECONOMIC PERFORMANCE, ECONOMIC POLICIES, ECONOMIC RISK, ECONOMIC THEORY, ECONOMICS LITERATURE, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, ELECTRICITY, ELECTRICITY GENERATION, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPIRICAL BASIS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, EMPIRICAL STUDIES, FINANCIAL RESOURCES, FISCAL RESPONSIBILITY, GDP, GROWTH RATE, HARD BUDGET CONSTRAINTS, IMPERFECT SUBSTITUTES, IMPORTS, INCOME, INFLATION, INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS, LEGISLATION, LESS DEVELOPED COUNTRIES, MACROECONOMIC CONDITIONS, MACROECONOMIC MANAGEMENT, MACROECONOMIC POLICIES, MACROECONOMIC POLICY, MANAGEMENT, MARKET ECONOMIES, MARKET POWER, MONOPOLIES, NATURAL MONOPOLIES, NATURAL MONOPOLY, OIL, PER CAPITA INCOME, PERFORMANCE EVALUATION, PERFORMANCE INDICATORS, PERFORMANCE MEASURES, PERVERSE INCENTIVES, POLICIES, POLICY MAKERS, PRICE CHANGES, PRICE LEVELS, PRICE SETTING, PRIVATE SECTOR, PROBABILITY, PRODUCERS, PRODUCTIVITY, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC DEBT, PUBLIC ENTERPRISES, PUBLIC OWNERSHIP, PUBLIC SECTOR, REFORM POLICY, REFORM PROCESS, REFORMS, REGRESSION ANALYSIS, REGULATORY FRAMEWORK, REVENUE ADEQUACY, SERVICE COVERAGE, SERVICE QUALITY, STATE OWNED ENTERPRISES, TECHNOLOGICAL PROGRESS, TELECOMMUNICATIONS, TELECOMMUNICATIONS REFORM, TRANSACTION COSTS, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, UTILITIES, VERTICAL INTEGRATION, WAR,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/03/5698417/electricity-sector-reform-developing-countries-survey-empirical-evidence-determinants-performance
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8978
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