Non-market Allocation in Transport: A Reassessment of its Justification and the Challenge of Institutional Transition
Ulrich Blum
50 Years of Transport Research: Experiences Gained and Major Challenges Ahead,
2005
Abstract
Economic theory knows two systems of coordination: through public choice or through the market principle. If the market is chosen, then it may either be regulated, or it may be fully competitive (or be in between these two extremes). This paper first inquires into the reasons for regulation, it analyses the reasons for the important role of government in the transportation sector, especially in the procurement of infrastructure. Historical reasons are seen as important reasons for bureaucratic objections to deregulation. Fundamental economic concepts are forwarded that suggest market failure and justify a regulatory environment. The reasons for regulation cited above, however, may be challenged; we forward theoretical concepts from industrial organization theory and from institutional economics which suggest that competition is even possible on the level of infrastructure. The transition from a strongly regulated to a competitive environment poses problems that have given lieu to numerous failures in privatization and deregulation. Structural inertia plays an important role, and the incentive-compatible management of infrastructure is seen as the key element of any liberal transportation policy. It requires that the setting of rules on the meta level satisfies both local and global efficiency ends. We conclude that, in market economies, competition and regulation should not be substitutes but complements. General rules, an "ethic of competition" have to be set that guarantee a level playing field to agents; it is complimented by institutions that provide arbitration in case of misconduct.
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Quality of Service, Efficiency, and Scale in Network Industries: An Analysis of European Electricity Distribution
Christian Growitsch, Tooraj Jamasb, Michael Pollitt
IWH Discussion Papers,
No. 3,
2005
Abstract
Quality of service is of major economic significance in natural monopoly infrastructure industries and is increasingly addressed in regulatory schemes. However, this important aspect is generally not reflected in efficiency analysis of these industries. In this paper we present an efficiency analysis of electricity distribution networks using a sample of about 500 electricity distribution utilities from seven European countries. We apply the stochastic frontier analysis (SFA) method on multi-output translog input distance function models to estimate cost and scale efficiency with and without incorporating quality of service. We show that introducing the quality dimension into the analysis affects estimated efficiency significantly. In contrast to previous research, smaller utilities seem to indicate lower technical efficiency when incorporating quality. We also show that incorporating quality of service does not alter scale economy measures. Our results emphasise that quality of service should be an integrated part of efficiency analysis and incentive regulation regimes, as well as in the economic review of market concentration in regulated natural monopolies.
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Negotiated Third Party Access - an Industrial Organisation Perspective
Christian Growitsch, Thomas Wein
European Journal of Law and Economics,
2005
Abstract
In the course of the liberalization of European energy markets, the German government opted – diverging from all other European countries – for Negotiated Third-Party Access. In this article we analyze if, theoretically, this institutional regime can be superior to regulation. We review empirically whether certain aspects of the actual implementation, in particular publication of the network access charges for each network supplier, facilitated or inhibited competition. In the first place we reconsider previous research, showing that NTPA can – under certain conditions – be economically effective. Our empirical analysis shows that the duty of publishing access charges supported market transparency and imposed a regulatory threat, particularly to suppliers with significantly above-average charges. On the other hand observable price adjustments over time serve as an indicator of tacit collusion. Although the expensive suppliers cut their prices, the cheaper ones raised theirs.
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An analysis of household electricity price developments in Germany since liberalization
Christian Growitsch, Felix Müsgens
Externe Publikationen,
2005
Abstract
Despite the liberalization of energy markets in 1998, household electricity prices in 2004 are nearly the same as 1998, indicating a failure of market restructuring. However, such a general consideration is misleading for two main reasons. Firstly, the price development shows significant differences among the stages of the value chain. Secondly, the underlying cost structure might have changed from 1998 to 2004. While such effects can be expected to level out over time, they can distort the comparison of a small period of observation. For these reasons, we analyzed the different price components at a detailed level, finding a considerable price reduction of about 32% in generation and a much lower reduction of 13% in transmission and distribution tariffs. These decreases have been mostly compensated by a significant increase in taxes and subsidies (+56%).
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Network Access Charges, Vertical Integration, and Property Rights Structure
Christian Growitsch, Thomas Wein
Energy Economics,
No. 2,
2005
Abstract
After the deregulation of the German electricity markets in 1998, the German government opted for a regulatory regime called negotiated third party access, which would be subject to ex post control by the federal cartel office. Network access charges for new competitors are based on contractual arrangements between energy producers and industrial consumers. As the electricity networks are incontestable natural monopolies, the local and regional network operators are able to set (monopolistic) charges at their own discretion, limited only by their concerns over possible interference by the federal cartel office (Bundeskartellamt). In this paper we analyse if there is evidence for varying charging behaviour depending on a supplier`s economic independence (structure of property rights) or its level of vertical integration. For this purpose we hypothesise that incorporated and vertically integrated suppliers set different charges than independent utility companies. Multivariate estimations show a relation between network access charges and the network operator’s economic independence as well as level of vertical integration. On the low voltage level, for an estimated annual consumption of 1700 kW/h, vertically integrated firms set – as predicted by our hypothesis - significantly lower access charges than vertically separated suppliers, whereas incorporated network operators charge significantly higher charges compared to independent suppliers. There is insufficient evidence available to confirm these results for other consumptions or voltage levels.
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Economic Capability of East German Regions: Results of a Cluster Analysis
Franz Kronthaler
Regional Studies,
No. 6,
2005
Abstract
This paper analyses the economic capability of East German regions compared with West German regions. Based on new growth theory and new economic geography, and using relevant empirical literature, regions are clustered according to a set of growth factors. The clustering results find little evidence that the economic capability of East German regions is already comparable with West German regions. Economic disadvantages are particularly rooted in lower technical progress, a lack of entrepreneurship, lower business and industrial concentration, and a loss of human capital. However, there are a few East German regions with a high economic capability, but even those suffer from economic disadvantages such as lower technical progress, lower industrial activity and a poorer regional accessibility.
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IWH Industry Survey East Germany, March 2005: Economic slowdown does not continue
Sophie Wörsdorfer
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 4,
2005
Abstract
Das Geschäftsklima in der ostdeutschen Industrie hat sich laut Befragung des IWH unter rund 300 Unternehmen im März spürbar erwärmt. Sowohl die Einschätzungen der aktuellen als auch der zukünftigen Geschäfte fallen positiver als im Januar aus. Bereits zu Jahresbeginn hatten sich die Firmen zuversichtlicher über ihre Zukunftsperspektiven geäußert, während sich ihre Urteile zur wirtschaftlichen Lage noch verschlechterten. Nun deutet sich an, dass das verarbeitende Gewerbe die „Delle“ der letzten Monate überwunden hat, wenngleich die Komponenten des Geschäftsklimas den jeweiligen Saldenstand vom Vorjahr noch nicht wieder erreichten. Das Gros der Firmen – rund zwei Drittel – hat allerdings Lage und Aussichten wie in der vorangegangenen Befragung beurteilt, und die Unternehmen, die ihre Situation jeweils verbesserten oder verschlechterten, halten sich in etwa die Waage.
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Industries in east Germany: regional clusters
Franz Kronthaler
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 16,
2004
Abstract
In der Politik wird in letzter Zeit verstärkt darüber diskutiert, wie dem Aufbau Ost eine größere Dynamik verliehen werden könnte. Immer stärker in den Vordergrund der Debatte rückt dabei die Forderung, dass die Finanzhilfen sowohl regional als auch sektoral stärker konzentriert werden sollten. Dies war Anlass näher zu betrachten, wie die unternehmerischen Aktivitäten der einzelnen Branchen in Ostdeutschland räumlich verteilt sind und in welchen Bereichen die ostdeutschen Regionen Stärken aufweisen. Die Befunde der Untersuchung zeigen, dass in Ostdeutschland zahlreiche Branchen regional stark konzentriert sind und dass sich die wichtigsten Standorte des Produzierenden Gewerbes und der Unternehmensdienstleistungen auf Berlin und auf Regionen in Sachsen konzentrieren. Die Standorte knüpfen dabei in der Regel an den traditionellen Strukturen oder an spezifischen Potenzialen der Regionen an.
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The Impact of Technology and Regulation on the Geographical Scope of Banking
Hans Degryse, Steven Ongena
Oxford Review of Economic Policy,
No. 4,
2004
Abstract
We review how technological advances and changes in regulation may shape the (future) geographical scope of banking. We first review how both physical distance and the presence of borders currently affect bank lending conditions (loan pricing and credit availability) and market presence (branching and servicing). Next we discuss how technology and regulation have altered this impact and analyse the current state of the European banking sector. We discuss both theoretical contributions and empirical work and highlight open questions along the way. We draw three main lessons from the current theoretical and empirical literature: (i) bank lending to small businesses in Europe may be characterized both by (local) spatial pricing and resilient (regional and/or national) market segmentation; (ii) because of informational asymmetries in the retail market, bank mergers and acquisitions seem the optimal route of entering another market, long before cross-border servicing or direct entry are economically feasible; and (iii) current technological and regulatory developments may, to a large extent, remain impotent in further dismantling the various residual but mutually reinforcing frictions in the retail banking markets in Europe. We conclude the paper by offering pertinent policy recommendations based on these three lessons.
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Current Trends: IWH barometer for economic activity - East German economy finds it difficult to gather momentum
Udo Ludwig
Wirtschaft im Wandel,
No. 12,
2004
Abstract
In den ersten sechs Monaten dieses Jahres hat Ostdeutschland mit der konjunkturellen Entwicklung im Westen und im Ausland nicht mithalten können. Die Bruttowertschöpfung im Verarbeitenden Gewerbe ist zwar erneut gestiegen, das Wachstumstempo hat sich aber gegenüber dem zweiten Halbjahr 2003 verlangsamt. Die wirtschaftliche Belebung im nationalen und internationalen Umfeld hat direkt und über die Lieferbeziehungen zu Abnehmern in den alten Bundesländern nur einen Teil der ostdeutschen Industrie erfasst und hier vor allem die Hersteller von Vorleistungsgütern. Investitions- und Konsumgüterproduzenten haben dagegen die Schwäche der Inlandsnachfrage zu spüren bekommen.
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