Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton....

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Regulatory Preferences and Two- Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai
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Transcript of Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton....

Page 1: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity.

by

Micheal C Naughton.

Presented by Julius Kimutai

Page 2: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Introduction.

• The purpose of this paper is to develop and to demonstrate a method of deriving and testing regulatory preferences within and across customer classes.

• To assess the impact of this preferences on price structures and regulatory effectiveness in the electric utility industry.

• It employs Two-part tariff framework in the derivation of both intraclass(within customer class) and interclass(across customer class) preferences.

• As with optimal two-part tariffs, variable preferences are incorporated into a weighted social surplus function which regulators are assumed to maximize.

Page 3: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

1 . A m o d e l f o r r e g u l a t o r y p r i c i n g .

a. For residential customers(due to existence of income effects.)

Page 4: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

b. For no-residential customers (because of non-existence of income effects). The producer surplus of the regulated firm is defined as

Page 5: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

The Regulator’s Optimal Prices.

A. The weighted social surplus of consumer class i is given as:-

Page 6: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

B. The regulator is assumed to maximize the sum of the weighted consumer and producer surplus, prices are the solution to

Page 7: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Using Ramsey prices

Page 8: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

E s t i m a t i o n o f Demand Elasticities.A demand model is developed and used to derive estimates of Kwh output and connection demand elasticities with respect to the per-unit and fixed prices for each customer class. These estimates are used to generate regulator’s Ramsey numbers and to develop second-best efficient and monopoly price structures in the section that follow.

Page 9: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Sample Data and results.The models was fitted to 1980-cross section of privately owned electric utilities.

Page 10: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Estimation results.

• All elasticity estimates in the table are significant except for residential class cross elasticities.

• The also found out that output demand elasticities w.r,t per unit price are consistent with a range estimates by Taylor and Bohi.

• But connection demand elasticities w.r.t to the unit price.However, it makes intuitive sense that is less elastic in the residential class as compared to industrial and commercial class.

Page 11: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Regulatory preferences and price structures.

Page 12: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Explanations

Page 13: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Cntd.

Page 14: Regulatory Preferences and Two-Part Tariffs: The Case of Electricity. by Micheal C Naughton. Presented by Julius Kimutai.

Summary and conclusions