Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review

The model of power sector reform that emerged during the 1990s placed considerable emphasis on the creation of an independent regulatory agency, with a strong orientation toward technically-driven tariff-setting procedures. Despite widespread uptak...

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Main Authors: Rodriguez Pardina, Martin, Schiro, Julieta
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/732921527773002514/Taking-stock-of-economic-regulation-of-power-utilities-in-the-developing-world-a-literature-review
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29890
id okr-10986-29890
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-298902022-03-13T01:39:33Z Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review Rodriguez Pardina, Martin Schiro, Julieta POWER UTILITIES REGULATION ELECTRIC UTILITIES POWER SECTOR REFORM REGULATION ELECTRICITY PRICING EMERGING MARKETS STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES ELECTRICITY TARIFFS The model of power sector reform that emerged during the 1990s placed considerable emphasis on the creation of an independent regulatory agency, with a strong orientation toward technically-driven tariff-setting procedures. Despite widespread uptake of regulation, implementation has proved to be challenging in the developing world. Regulators were seldom as independent as originally envisaged, with widespread divergence between the formal regulatory framework and the day-to-day practice of regulation. In practice, many developing countries operate with “advisory regulators” whose main role is to provide technical support to the ultimate political decision makers. Nevertheless, there is some evidence that regulation has had a positive performance impact, particularly where utilities are privatized and in middle-income settings. But the impact is more questionable in cases where regulation is primarily directed toward state-owned enterprises, which lack the commercial incentives to respond to regulatory instruments. On the choice of regulatory regimes, the ongoing debate between price cap and rate of return regulation suggests that the latter may be better suited to developing country environments where the priority is to provide predictable returns to support large capital investment programs. Furthermore, the advent of technological disruption in the power sector demands an adaptation of the way in which regulatory instruments are designed and applied. Regulators will need to pay closer attention to providing the right incentives for utilities to innovate and become more energy efficient, and for consumers to take economically grounded decisions on distributed generation. Finally, the literature leaves many important questions unanswered, such as how regulatory design affects regulatory effectiveness and the impact of tariff regulation on cost recovery. 2018-06-18T20:42:28Z 2018-06-18T20:42:28Z 2018-05 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/732921527773002514/Taking-stock-of-economic-regulation-of-power-utilities-in-the-developing-world-a-literature-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29890 English Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8461 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic POWER UTILITIES
REGULATION
ELECTRIC UTILITIES
POWER SECTOR REFORM
REGULATION
ELECTRICITY PRICING
EMERGING MARKETS
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
ELECTRICITY TARIFFS
spellingShingle POWER UTILITIES
REGULATION
ELECTRIC UTILITIES
POWER SECTOR REFORM
REGULATION
ELECTRICITY PRICING
EMERGING MARKETS
STATE-OWNED ENTERPRISES
ELECTRICITY TARIFFS
Rodriguez Pardina, Martin
Schiro, Julieta
Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 8461
description The model of power sector reform that emerged during the 1990s placed considerable emphasis on the creation of an independent regulatory agency, with a strong orientation toward technically-driven tariff-setting procedures. Despite widespread uptake of regulation, implementation has proved to be challenging in the developing world. Regulators were seldom as independent as originally envisaged, with widespread divergence between the formal regulatory framework and the day-to-day practice of regulation. In practice, many developing countries operate with “advisory regulators” whose main role is to provide technical support to the ultimate political decision makers. Nevertheless, there is some evidence that regulation has had a positive performance impact, particularly where utilities are privatized and in middle-income settings. But the impact is more questionable in cases where regulation is primarily directed toward state-owned enterprises, which lack the commercial incentives to respond to regulatory instruments. On the choice of regulatory regimes, the ongoing debate between price cap and rate of return regulation suggests that the latter may be better suited to developing country environments where the priority is to provide predictable returns to support large capital investment programs. Furthermore, the advent of technological disruption in the power sector demands an adaptation of the way in which regulatory instruments are designed and applied. Regulators will need to pay closer attention to providing the right incentives for utilities to innovate and become more energy efficient, and for consumers to take economically grounded decisions on distributed generation. Finally, the literature leaves many important questions unanswered, such as how regulatory design affects regulatory effectiveness and the impact of tariff regulation on cost recovery.
format Working Paper
author Rodriguez Pardina, Martin
Schiro, Julieta
author_facet Rodriguez Pardina, Martin
Schiro, Julieta
author_sort Rodriguez Pardina, Martin
title Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
title_short Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
title_full Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
title_fullStr Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
title_full_unstemmed Taking Stock of Economic Regulation of Power Utilities in the Developing World : A Literature Review
title_sort taking stock of economic regulation of power utilities in the developing world : a literature review
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2018
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/732921527773002514/Taking-stock-of-economic-regulation-of-power-utilities-in-the-developing-world-a-literature-review
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/29890
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