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Electricity is one of the largest and most vital industries in the U.S. economy, with sales exceeding $200 billion annually. While electricity represents the backbone of commerce, industry, and household production, the structure of the industry has been changing in rather dramatic ways. After being heavily regulated for more than a century by local, state, regional, and federal authorities, deregulation is taking center stage. In general, deregulation results in lower prices, more product choices, and more rapid technological advances. Conversely, rate regulation has inherent flaws, including the encouragement of waste and inefficiency, and a retarding of innovation. There is little doubt to the contributors of this book that putting regulation aside offers enormous efficiency gains in the production of electricity. But can market forces handle the delicate matter of transmitting electricity when the simple model of supply and demand must be more precise than other goods and services? How much regulation does the electric industry need? The essays in this timely collection explore these difficult questions and propose a new, market-based plan to improve America's electrical future.Published in cooperation with The Independent Institute.
Andrew N. Kleit is professor of energy and environmental economics at the Pennsylvania State University. He has been an economist for the Federal Trade Commission and the Council of Economic Advisers. Dr. Kleit is the coeditor of Competition Policy Enforcement: The Economics of the Antitrust Process (1996).
Chapter 1 1 IntroductionChapter 2 2 Can Electricity Restructuring Survive? Lessons from California and PennsylvaniaChapter 3 3 The Role of Retail Pricing in Electricity RestructuringChapter 4 4 Using Experiments to Inform the Privatization/Deregulation Movement in ElectricityChapter 5 5 The Alberta ExperienceChapter 6 6 Transactions Costs and the Organization of Coordination Activities in Power MarketsChapter 7 7 Market-Based Transmission Investments and Competitive Electricity MarketsChapter 8 8 Checking for Market Power in Electricity: The Perils of Price-Cost MarginsChapter 9 9 The Role of Distributed Energy Resources in a Restructured Power IndustryChapter 10 10 Blackout Economics
The excellent book Electric Choices describes the promises of electricity deregulation, the mistakes made in the past, and the path to workable competition in this industry. Highly recommended.