Study
| EST. READ TIME 1 MIN.Power Jolt Required: Measuring the Impact of Electricity Deregulation
This Alert sets out to measure the price and supply impacts of deregulation in the leading reform jurisdictions around the world.
Participants in electricity markets appear to be despondent. The public opinion fallout from the failed California market opening and corporate malfeasance at Enron has caused even industry insiders to believe that market-based policies may not work as expected.
For example, MacDonald writes that Although the jury is out on deregulation - whether in purgatory or another unpleasant place where the song never ends - it is clear that in most jurisdictions the process has not delivered significant benefits to the residential consumer.
Trebilcock and Hrab also recently repeat a Borenstein and Bushnell quote that shortrun benefits (of deregulation) are likely to be small or non-existent, and the long-run benefits, while compelling and supported in theory, may be very difficult to document in practice.
These pessimistic notes are out of keeping with the significant deregulation benefits that have accrued over the past several decades in telecommunications, natural gas transmission, and air, rail, and truck transportation, not to mention the worldwide successes achieved through privatization and alternative delivery.
This Alert sets out to measure the price and supply impacts of deregulation in the leading reform jurisdictions around the world.
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Mark Mullins
Mark Mullins is the former executive director of the Fraser Institute as well as the Institute's former director of Ontariopolicy studies. He has published numerous studies on government finance, tax policy, and value-for-money issues. Prior to joining the Fraser Institute in 2003, Dr. Mullins served as President of MSG Hedge Corporation, a privately owned consulting firm and as Senior Vice-President and Chief Economist at Midland Walwyn Capital Inc., where he was responsible for communicating the firm's outlook on the North American economy and financial markets. Dr. Mullins also brings extensive applied policy experience, having served as economic and fiscal policy advisor to the Canadian Alliance Party, the Progressive Conservative Party of Canada, and the Progressive Conservative Party of Ontario. Mark Mullins has an M.A. from the University of Western Ontario and a Ph.D. from the London School of Economics and has written extensively on subjects such as Canadian tax reform, health policies, and stock market and investment issues. He is a member of Ontario's Task Force on Competitiveness, Productivity and Economic Progress and a regular media commentator.… Read more Read Less…
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